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Cartea Neagră (Anul I, No. 1 Duminica 1 Maiu 1916 – This Is Only A Copy/Replica)

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Price: £20.00
Author: Al. Tissescu
Year: 1916
Edition: Year one, number one.
Publisher: Cartea Neagra
Condition: Excellent
Pages: 12

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Cartea Neagră is a bold Romanian magazine branding itself a “revista de chirurgie socială.” Its striking cover shows a stern gentleman confronted by an unseen hand, suggesting satire, critique, and social diagnosis. Edited by Al. Tissescu, it promises sharp commentary, exposing what “the journalist knows” and how power shapes truth.

30 January 2026

This is a magazine about Romanian history, and it’s not for propaganda purposes.
This number of the magazine is the only one in the market.
Year one number one.

Cartea Neagră (1916): Romania’s “Social Surgery” Magazine That Came With a Scalpel and a Wink

In 1916, while Europe was busy inventing new ways to panic (hello, WWI), Romania also had a different kind of battlefield: public life. And Cartea Neagră (“The Black Book”) showed up like a friendly troublemaker in a crisp suit—calling itself a “revistă de chirurgie socială” (“social surgery magazine”). Translation: We’re not here to gossip—we’re here to operate.

What You’ll Find Inside (Fast)

  • Investigations, trials, accusations—served hot, in columns.
  • Lists of “speculators” (yes, with names and addresses—no subtweets in 1916).
  • Satire and cartoons that sting like cheap cologne.
  • A weekly rhythm (it literally says it appears every Saturday) and a very approachable price: 15 bani.

Why This Magazine Was Weirdly Ahead of Its Time

Calling a publication “social surgery” is a bold branding move—like naming your blog “Emotional Dentistry.” But it makes sense: Cartea Neagră treats corruption, profiteering, and institutional rot as diseases. And the “treatment” is exposure.

General culture footnote for your next dinner party: 1916 is the year Romania entered WWI (August), and wartime economies tend to breed both heroes and opportunists—exactly the kind of characters this magazine loved to dissect.

The Juiciest Pages (According to the Scans)

One spread dives into a major case—formatted like a courtroom drama you can read on a tram.
It even includes portraits—printed with captions, like early true-crime magazines.
And because seriousness without humor is just paperwork, it also throws in caricature energy.

The “Name-and-Shame” Moment: Speculators of the Capital

One section bluntly targets profiteers—people allegedly gaming prices during hard times. The tone is basically: “We brought receipts. And ink.”

What Cartea Neagră Teaches Us Today

That journalism doesn’t need a podcast mic to be dramatic. In 1916, a few pages, sharp prose, and the courage to print uncomfortable details were enough to make power sweat.

And honestly? The magazine’s message still lands: when society gets sick, truth-telling is a form of medicine—sometimes messy, sometimes hilarious, and occasionally necessary.

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