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On 6 August 1960, the 25th anniversary of The Times of Malta, Strickland wrote that The Times of Malta, whilst originally the Constitutionalist political party's paper, had become a national newspaper. The paper gained a reputation for objective reporting whilst upholding its own strongly held editorial opinion.
The Malta Independent on Sunday: Daily: English: 1992: Standard Publications: Nationalist Party: Times of Malta, Sunday Times of Malta: Daily: English: 1935: Allied Newspapers: Nationalist Party: Established in 1929 as Times of Malta Weekly: Malta Today, Malta Today on Sunday: Biweekly: English: 1999: Media Today: Malta Labour Party and ...
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf, gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
Malta Today; T. Times of Malta This page was last edited on 8 January 2024, at 23:00 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4 ...
Strickland founded a newspaper group in Malta with her father and her stepmother, Lady Strickland, DBE (Margaret, daughter of Edward Hulton).In 1935 she became editor of The Times of Malta and "Il Berqa" before taking over as Managing Director of the Group on the death of her father in 1940.
The Journal de Malte was Malta's first newspaper, and it was published between July and September 1798 during the French occupation of Malta.Written in French and Italian, a total of ten issues of the newspaper are believed to have been published, although only seven seem to still survive today and it is unclear if the other three are lost or if they were ever actually published at all.
The Journal de Malte, a newspaper which was published during the French occupation of Malta in 1798, is regarded as the predecessor of the Malta Government Gazette. [2] [3] After British rule was established in Malta in 1800, a number of newspapers were published by the government under different titles: Foglio d'Avvisi (1803–1804), L'Argo (1804), Il Cartaginese (1804–1805) and the ...
In 2010, MaltaToday launched its internet news portal, and is the second most popular local news portal. [4] The current editorial lineup includes Kurt Sansone as Executive Editor, with Saviour Balzan as Managing Editor. The online editor is Karl Azzopardi. The print edition also includes a food magazine called Gourmet Today. [5]