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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.
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 ...
Metro follows the format of other free newspapers by Metro International, the first one of which appeared in Stockholm in 1995. The Dutch Metro was the fourth of those, and first appeared on 21 June 1999; it is published five days a week, and for a brief period had a Saturday edition as well. [3]
This page was last edited on 29 August 2004, at 02:31 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may ...
The Amsterdam Rams achieved a respectable 3rd place in the Olympic Stadium in Amsterdam, with the Finnish Taft Vantaa claiming 1st place. 1987 saw the NAFF run a full Dutch competition with no less than 3 divisions. This season also saw the debut of Dutch officiating crews, supported by officials from the US airbase in Soesterberg.
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 ...
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Javier de Burgos's division is practically the same as the short-lived 1822 territorial division of Spain, dating from the "Liberal Trienium" (Trienio Liberal), but without the provinces of Calatayud, Vierzo, and Játiva; also, in contrast to the 1822 division, several provinces were given names other than those of their capitals.