Tingakrossur was a
Faroese newspaper. The first copy of the paper was published on January 1, 1901[1][2] and it ceased publication in 1990. It was not published between 1955 and 1959.
Although the newspaper was initially written mainly in
Danish, it was autonomy oriented, and later it became the organ and party newspaper of the
Home Rule Party (
Faroese: Sjálvstýrisflokkurin) in 1906.[1] The avowed purpose of the paper was to promote education and fight against oppression. Poetry and prose held a central place in the newspaper, and the first Faroese novel,
Rasmus Rasmussen's Babelstornið (The Tower of Babel, 1909), was published serially in it.
The newspaper's name comes from the Faroese common noun tingakrossur '
bidding stick'. A cross-shaped bidding stick was carried to summon people to the
Løgting at
Tinganes.[3]
Many of the newspaper's editors were leading politicians in the Home Rule Party.
Editors
Kristin í Geil (a.k.a. Christen Holm-Isaksen), 1901–1911
^
abWylie, Jonathan. 1987. The Faroe Islands: Interpretations of History. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, p. 157.
^Hermansson, Nanna Stefania. 2010. A Bookcase in Kongsstiva in Nólsoy. In: Dorete—Her Book (= Annales Societatis Scientiarum Færoensis Supplementum 52), pp. 117–138. Tórshavn: Faroe University Press, p. 123.
^West, John Frederick. 1972. Faroe: The Emergence of a Nation. London: C. Hurst, p. 24.
Further reading
Søllinge, Jette D., & Niels Thomsen. 1989. De Danske aviser 1634–1989, vol. 2. Odense: Dagspressens fond i kommission hos Odense universitetsforlag, p. 692.
Thomsen, Niels, & Jette D. Søllinge. 1991. De Danske aviser 1634–1991, vol. 3. Odense: Dagspressens fond i kommission hos Odense universitetsforlag, pp. 694–695.