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Nieuwsblad van de stad en het district Roermond: 1856‑01‑05 De Gelderlander: Nijmegen: 111,311 Gelderland: DPG: De Batavier, Staat- en Letterkundig Weekblad: 1843‑08‑24 [8] De Stentor: Zwolle: 96,008 Gelderland (north), Overijssel (west) DPG: Overijsselsch Weekblad: 1790‑06‑05 Noordhollands Dagblad: Alkmaar: 95,767 North Holland ...
In 1974, De Telegraaf moved to a new location on the Basisweg. In 1995–1996 De Telegraaf had a circulation of 760,000 copies, making it the best-selling paper in the country. [3] De Courant/Nieuws van de Dag ceased publication in 1998. In 1999, the circulation of the paper was 808,000 copies, making it the ninth best-selling European newspaper.
Metro (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈmeːtroː] ⓘ) is a free Dutch newspaper, distributed daily since 1999, [2] mostly to commuters in high-traffic areas. Formerly owned by Metro International, in August 2012 the paper was taken over by the Telegraaf Media Group (TMG).
De Graaff said that the Amsterdam terminal expects 114 ships to stop there this year and 130 next year. The vote is the latest step in the Dutch capital's long-running campaign to reduce the ...
Amsterdam Sloterdijk is a major railway junction to the west of Amsterdam Centraal station. It is at a rail-rail crossing, with an additional chord (Hemboog).It is on the railway line from Amsterdam Centraal to Haarlem and the last station before the junction where the line Amsterdam Centraal-Zaandam diverges from it and on the crossing west branch of the Amsterdam–Schiphol railway line ...
In 2013, the paper was the second largest paid newspaper of the Netherlands after De Telegraaf. [8] After a merger with seven regional newspapers on 1 September 2005 and ongoing reduction in readership, it had an average circulation merger of 365,912 copies in 2014. [8] In 2017, it was down to 341,249 copies.
In 2015 the park underwent an extensive redesign and redevelopment, including the installation of an expansive children's play area and statues by artist Joep van Lieshout, which tells the story of the history of the neighbourhood, which in the 18th and 19th centuries was the heart of Amsterdam's timber and sawmill industry.
"Mokum" pasted over "Amsterdam" on a city limit sign in 1963 Mokum , without Aleph , is still commonly used as a nickname in the Netherlands for the city of Amsterdam . The nickname was first considered to be bargoens , a form of Dutch slang , but in the 20th century it lost its negative sound and is now used by Amsterdammers as a nickname for ...