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Below is a list of newspapers in the Netherlands. ... De Telegraaf: Amsterdam: 385,501 Mediahuis: Courante uyt Italien, Duytslandt, &c. [3] 1618-06-18 or earlier
De Telegraaf (Dutch pronunciation: [də teːləˈɣraːf]; [1] English: The Telegraph) is the largest Dutch daily morning newspaper. [2] Paul Jansen has been the editor-in-chief since August 2015. [2] De Telegraaf is based in Amsterdam and is owned by the Belgian company Mediahuis.
In 2013, the paper was the second largest paid newspaper of the Netherlands after De Telegraaf. [8] After a merger with seven regional newspapers on 1 September 2005 and ongoing reduction in readership, it had an average circulation merger of 365,912 copies in 2014. [8] In 2017, it was down to 341,249 copies.
Metro (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈmeːtroː] ⓘ) is a free Dutch newspaper, distributed daily since 1999, [2] mostly to commuters in high-traffic areas. Formerly owned by Metro International, in August 2012 the paper was taken over by the Telegraaf Media Group (TMG).
It owns De Telegraaf, the most popular newspaper in the Netherlands, DFT, Telesport, Metro, Autovisie, Privé and Vrouw; regional newspapers including Haarlems Dagblad and Noordhollands Dagblad; digital brands including GeenStijl and Dumpert, and the national radio station Classic FM. In addition, Mediahuis Nederland owns dozens of other brands ...
WNL (Wakker Nederland) (English: Netherlands Awake): Right-wing conservative broadcaster initiated by the De Telegraaf newspaper group. Omroep ZWART (English: Broadcaster Black): Provisionally recognised as a left-wing, liberal broadcaster since 1 January 2022, also co-operates with BNNVARA on certain programming.
On 9 February 2012, the province of North Holland and the municipality of Amsterdam agreed to relocate approximately 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) of the A10 motorway underground in a tunnel. The metro platforms at Amsterdam Zuid would be moved further west, resulting in the tunnel used by Line 51 becoming useless and making the extension of the North ...
On 31 July 1982, the headquarters of the Labour Party in Amsterdam was bombed by a group called Militant Autonomen Front. [10] [12] On 5 November 1985, a group called Autonomous Cells Netherlands tried to kill mayor of Amsterdam, Ed van Thijn, by detonating a bomb at his house - blaming him for the death of a squatter called Hans Kok. The bomb ...