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De Telegraaf was the eighth top European newspaper with a circulation of 807,000 copies in 2001. [5] It added a Sunday edition on 21 March 2004. The Sunday edition was dropped on 27 December 2009. Circulation was 488,902 copies in 2013. [6] De Telegraaf changed from broadsheet to compact format in October 2014.
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.
It descended further until it withdrew from newspaper circulation audits in 2020. [100] The bulk of its readership has moved online; the Telegraph Media Group reported a subscription number of 1,035,710 for December 2023, composed of 117,586 for its print edition, 688,012 for its digital version and 230,112 for other subscriptions. [101]
Newspaper Direct offers a kind of virtual newspaper kiosk where the user can choose the paper. The company offers titles from eighty countries. The Dutch newspapers involved are: AD, Telegraaf, de Volkskrant, NRC and Het Nederlands Dagblad. Company Press Display offers a similar service. Examples of newspapers on e ink:
Telegraph (Bulgarian newspaper), a Bulgarian national daily newspaper published in Sofia; The Telegraph, is an Indian national daily newspaper founded in 1982; The Daily Telegraph (Napier, New Zealand), New Zealand, published 1871–1999; De Telegraaf, Dutch newspaper, founded 1893; Hongkong Telegraph, Hong Kong newspaper published 1881–1924
The latter two newspaper won in consecutive years (2012, 2013) the prestigious award for being the best nationwide newspaper in Europe at the European Newspaper Award. Smaller Protestant communities have their own paper, like the Nederlands Dagblad and the Reformatorisch Dagblad. The business community has the Het Financieele Dagblad.
De Telegraaf, came in broadsheet but changed to tabloid in 2014. [6] In Norway, close to all newspapers have switched from the broadsheet to the tabloid format, which measures 280 x 400 mm. The three biggest newspapers are Dagbladet, VG, and Aftenposten. In Poland, the newspaper Fakt, sometimes Super Express is considered as tabloid. [7]
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 ...