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Keralapress (Kerala Press Service)(Kepra) commenced operation as a mail service giving news about Malayali activities in Madras to the Malayalam daily Malayala Rajyam published from Kollam. In 1942 the operation was shifted to Quilon where the founder was a practicing lawyer and the correspondent of The Hindu the English daily.
Malayalam: Kottayam: 1,920,096 1,971,773 Malayala Manorama Company Limited 3 The Times of India: ... "Highest Circulated Daily Newspapers 2018 (language wise)" (PDF).
Rajyasamacharam was the first newspaper in Malayalam. This was started by Hermann Gundert under the Christian missionaries of Basel Mission in June 1847 from Illikkunnu in Thalassery. Pashchimodayam was the second newspaper in Malayalam. It started in October 1847 from Thalassery.
Samakalika Malayalam Vaarika: Weekly Print The New Indian Express: Risala Weekly: Weekly Print Islamic Publishing Bureau Sunni Students Federation: Ezhuthu Chinthikkunna Hrudayangalkku: Monthly Print Loyola Research Institute of Peace and International Relations Vachakam : Weekly Print & Online Vachakam News Ltd.
As of 31 March 2018, there were over 100,000 publications registered with the Registrar of Newspapers for India. [1] India has the second-largest newspaper market in the world, with daily newspapers reporting a combined circulation of over 240 million copies as of 2018.
Janayugom is a Malayalam daily newspaper published in Kerala, India.It is the official organ of the Kerala State Council of the Communist Party of India.It is the first newspaper in India using free software. [1]
Samakalika Malayalam Vaarika is a Malayalam language newsweekly and website published by The Express Publications Madurai (P) Ltd, publisher of The New Indian Express daily. The publication, conceived as a newsweekly, is a leading voice in the cultural and political sphere of Kerala .
It became a daily newspaper in 1939. [1] The daily played a significant role in the development of the Muslim community of north Kerala. [5] It moved its headquarters to Calicut in 1946. [1] C. H. Muhammed Koya, the future Education Minister of Kerala, served as a sub-editor and the editor of Chandrika in the 1940s. [3]