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The paper aimed at providing news about trade, share holding and banking. [10] Later its coverage was expanded to cover political news. [10] At the peak of its influence—from the time of the Boer War, when it championed the Boer cause in South Africa, through World War I—it was edited by Charles Boissevain. The paper had a liberal stance. [4]
NRC Next (Dutch pronunciation: [ˌɛnɛrseːˈnɛkst]; stylized as nrc•next) was a Dutch daily newspaper published in the Netherlands by Mediahuis. The first edition was released on 14 March 2006. It was stopped in March 2021. NRC Next was a morning edition tabloid, and its primary target group are young higher educated people.
Rack with Dutch newspapers. Below is a list of newspapers in the Netherlands. Newspapers in the Netherlands are issued every day, with the exception of Sunday and some general holidays. The total number of printed daily newspapers is 27 in 2019, down from 35 in 2009. [1] Of the 27 dailies, 10 are national, 16 regional and 1 local.
They entered into a collaboration around their paper and digital publishing activities. [1] Corelio took 62% of the shares, Concentra the remaining 38%. In 2015, Mediahuis acquired the Dutch NRC Media group. [3] In 2017 it acquired the Dutch Telegraaf Media Groep and VP Exploitatie joined as third shareholder. [1] It took 16.7% of the enlarged ...
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De Correspondent is a Dutch news website based in Amsterdam, Netherlands. It was launched on 30 September 2013 after raising more than €1 million in a crowdfunding campaign in eight days. [ 1 ] The website distinguishes itself by rejecting the daily news cycle and focusing on in-depth and chronological coverage on a topical basis, led by ...
Dutch-language newspapers published in the United States (1 P) Pages in category "Dutch-language newspapers" The following 60 pages are in this category, out of 60 total.
The paper was founded in 1944 as a semi-resistance paper during World War II called Reformatie Stemmen (Reformatory Voices). After the war it was renamed De Vrije Kerk (The Free Church) and later Gereformeerd gezinsblad (Reformed Family Paper). In 1959 it became a daily newspaper. The paper obtained its current name in 1967.