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"Portugal", Freedom of the Press, US: Freedom House, 2015, OCLC 57509361 in Portuguese Carlos Augusto da Silva Campos, ed. (1886), "Jornaes de Lisboa, Provincias e Ilhas" , Almanach Commercial de Lisboa (in Portuguese), pp. 437– 441
Between January and March 2003 its circulation was 142,000 copies, making it the best-selling newspaper in Portugal. [10] Expresso was again the best-selling newspaper in the country with a circulation of 118,000 copies in 2007. [19] Its circulation was 117,507 copies in 2008. [20] The 2011 circulation of the paper was 108,923 copies. [21]
Público is published in tabloid format [8] and has its headquarters in Lisbon. [9] The paper is known as a publication of the French school with extensive texts and few illustrations. Its first editor-in-chief was Vicente Jorge Silva, formerly sub-editor-in-chief at Expresso. José Manuel Fernandes also served as the editor-in-chief of the paper.
Lisbon is five hours ahead of the East Coast, so it will be 1 p.m. EST when Paramore kicks off the concert. Swift is expected to begin her set at 7:15 p.m. local time, which will be 2:15 p.m. EST.
The Imprensa Nacional–Casa da Moeda ("National Printing House and Mint", abbreviated as INCM), is the Portuguese mint and national press, owned by the Portuguese Government and administratively subordinated to the Portuguese Ministry of Finance. It is located in Lisbon in the São Mamede (Santo António) neighborhood.
The Lusa News Agency (Portuguese: Lusa – Agência de Notícias de Portugal, SA; lit. ' Lusa - Portuguese News Agency ') is the largest news agency in Portugal, as well as the largest news agency in the Portuguese language, incorporated on 28 November 1986 [1] under the name of Agência Lusa — Cooperativa de Interesse Público de Responsabilidade Limitada (Lusa Agency - Public Interest ...
Mass media in Portugal includes a variety of online, print, and broadcast formats, such as radio, television, newspapers, and magazines. During most of the 20th century, the Portuguese government censored the media until the " 1976 constitution guaranteed freedom of the press."
In Portugal, as in the rest of Europe, the printing press played a key role in its Renaissance. The first printing presses came to Portugal by the hand of Jewish printers via Italy. [ 17 ] The first book printed in Portuguese in Portugal was the Sacramental, printed in Chaves , in 1488, by Clemente Sanches de Vercial.