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7.379 Founded by S. P. Adithanar: 7 Lokmat: Marathi: Various cities in Maharashtra and Goa: 6.285 Lokmat Media Limited 8 Rajasthan Patrika: Hindi: Various cities in Rajasthan & Delhi: 5.863 Rajasthan Patrika Pvt. Ltd. 9 The Times of India: English: Various cities and states 5.560 The Times Group: 10 Mathrubhumi: Malayalam: Kerala, Chennai ...
Rajasthan Patrika prints editions in New Delhi and the seven cities of Chhattisgarh (in Bilaspur, Jagdalpur and Raipur), Gujarat (in Ahmedabad and Surat), Karnataka (in Bangalore and Hubli), Madhya Pradesh (under the shorter name of Patrika in Bhopal, Gwalior, Indore, Jabalpur, Ujjain and eight other cities), Rajasthan in (Jaipur, Jodhpur, Kota, Gangapur City and 13 other cities) and in Tamil ...
Hindi-language newspapers have the largest circulation, followed by English and Telugu. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Newsstand and subscription prices often cover only a small percentage of the cost of producing newspapers in India, and advertising is the primary source of revenue.
epaper.dainiknavajyoti.com Dainik Navajyoti ( Hindi : दैनिक नवज्योति , romanized : Dainik Navajyoti , lit. 'The Daily New Light') is a Hindi language daily newspaper published in Rajasthan from Jaipur , Jodhpur , Ajmer , Udaipur & Kota .
Punjab Kesari (lit. ' The Lion of Punjab ') is a Hindi-language newspaper published from many centres in Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh and Delhi in India.It is owned by the Punjab Kesari group (The Hindsamachar Ltd.).
Karpoor Chandra Kulish (20 March 1926 – 17 January 2006) was the founder of Rajasthan Patrika, a Hindi language newspaper of Rajasthan, India. [1] Born in Jain family, State Rajasthan Soda village in Malpura tehsil in Tonk district in 1926 he started his career in journalism as an employee in a newspaper. On 7 March 1956, Kulish started his ...
The largest circulated daily newspapers in Sawai Madhopur are the Rajasthan Patrika and Dainik Bhaskar. The All India Radio (A.I.R./ Akashvani ) and the local FM radio station, 101.5 MHz broadcast programs in Hindi and Rajasthani .
Patrika is the romanisation of a term that translates to "publication", "periodical" or "letter" in several Indian languages, and may refer to: Newspapers [ edit ]