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This list of newspapers in Spain includes daily, weekly Spanish newspapers issued in Spain. In 1950 the number of daily newspapers in circulation in Spain was 104; by 1965 this figure had fallen to 87. [1] In 1984, in the period following the transition to democracy, the number of daily newspapers had risen to 115. [2]
EuroWeekly News is Spain's largest group of free English language newspapers and has been operating since 2002. The publication is owned by a board of directors. [1] The group consists of six newspapers that cover Costa Blanca North, Costa Blanca South, Almeria, Axarquia Costa Tropical (east of Málaga), the Costa del Sol and Mallorca.
La Vanguardia (Catalan: [lə βəŋˈɡwaɾðiə]; Spanish: [la βaŋˈɡwaɾðja], lit. ' The Vanguard ') is a Spanish daily newspaper, founded in 1881.It is printed in Spanish and, since 3 May 2011, also in Catalan (Spanish copy is automatically translated into Catalan).
El Mundo (Spanish pronunciation: [el ˈmundo]; lit. ' The World '), before El Mundo del Siglo Veintiuno, is the second largest printed daily newspaper in Spain. The paper is considered one of the country's newspapers of record along with El País and ABC.
It is the second-most circulated daily newspaper in Spain as of December 2017. [8] El País is the most read newspaper in Spanish online and one of the Madrid dailies considered to be a national newspaper of record for Spain (along with El Mundo and ABC). [9] In 2018, its number of daily sales were 138,000. [10]
CTXT was founded by fourteen journalists from a variety of newspapers in Europe, including El País, El Mundo, and La Repubblica.It was created to be a platform for journalists to write with full independence, without serving corporate, political or editorial interests. [2]
Diario 16 (Spanish for "Daily 16" or "Newspaper 16") is a Spanish-language online newspaper published in Madrid, Spain, since 2015. [2] It is considered a follow-up of the namesake defunct newspaper; [3] its new motto is "El diario de la Segunda Transición" (Spanish for "The newspaper of the Second Transition"). [1]
العربية; Aragonés; Asturianu; বাংলা; Brezhoneg; Català; Čeština; Cymraeg; Dansk; Deutsch; Ελληνικά; Español; Esperanto; Euskara; فارسی