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The circulation of NRC Handelsblad in 2014 was 188,500 copies, putting it in 4th place among the national dailies. [9] In 2015 the NRC Media group was acquired by the Belgian company Mediahuis. In 2022, when it stopped producing evening editions, the paper shortened its official name to NRC, by which it had already been known colloquially.
Nieuws- en Advertentieblad voor de Provincie Drenthe (Assen) 1823‑04‑01 Brabants Dagblad 's-Hertogenbosch: 92,318 North Brabant (center/northeast) DPG: Eerste 's-Hertogenbossche Dinsdagse Courant: 1771‑07‑02 Tubantia: Enschede: 85,096 Overijssel (east) DPG: Tubantia, Volkscourant voor Twenthe: 1872‑01‑06 Eindhovens Dagblad ...
Since the 1950s the newspaper market has been in decline in Belgium. [1] The number of national daily newspapers in the country was 50 in 1950, [1] whereas it was 30 in 1965. [2]
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: Dutch Newspaper NRC Handelsblad on the Ilead [15] Several newspapers on Amazon's Kindle [16]
Heldring started to write columns in Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant (NRC) in 1953. From 1960 onwards, his column was called Dezer dagen (Our Days). In 1968, he became the editor-in-chief of the NRC, which merged with Algemeen Handelsblad in 1970 to form NRC Handelsblad. He stayed on as editor-in-chief until 1972.
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.
When De Tijd stopped being produced as a daily newspaper, Elias became the education editor for the NRC Handelsblad. At both papers he wrote a column called "Notebook" ("Cahier"), which was influential. [5] Elias also wrote regularly about concentration camps, partly based on his own experiences at Buchenwald.
It was founded on 20 May 1959, as a weekly called Hollands Weekblad.Its founding editor was K. L. Poll, who for decades was also its only editor (he was also editor for the Algemeen Handelsblad, later merged into NRC Handelsblad [1]).