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This is a list of defunct newspapers of Belgium. Le Communiste [1] Écho de la Sambre [1] Gazette van Ghendt [2] Ghendtsche Post-Tydinghen; Het Volk [3] L'Indépendance Belge [4] La Libre Belgique (1940–44) [5] Nieuwe Tijdinghen; Le Pays Réel [6] Le Vingtième Siècle [7] La Voix des Belges [8] Volk en Staat; Het Vrije Woord [9
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 number became 33 in 1980. [1] There were 32 newspapers in the country in 1995. [3] It was 23 in 2000. [1] Below is a partial list of newspapers published in Belgium:
This is a list of supermarket chains in Belgium. As of 2011, in Belgium three major groups form more than two thirds of the market: Colruyt group 27%, Delhaize 22.5% and Carrefour 22%. Then there are Aldi 11%, Lidl 5.6% and Makro 4.5%. [1]
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The database shows the most important specifications of each newspaper, such as title, date, and place of publication. Keywords indicate the type of newspaper (with a focus on e.g. trade, sports, or advertising) or the social community at which the newspaper was aimed (e.g. catholic, liberal, or socialist community). Seeing that newspapers were ...
Founded in 1962 as a weekly magazine, it is the oldest media outlet in English in Belgium and remains one of the oldest English-language publications in Continental Europe. Today it claims a monthly online audience of 150,000 unique readers [ 1 ] mostly from the large expatriate community of the European Union 's capital.
La Meuse was launched in 1856. [1] [2] The paper has its headquarters in Liège [3] and is owned by the Rossel group which also owns Le Soir and La Lanterne, among others.[4] [5] La Meuse is published by Rossel et Cie S.A. [6] in tabloid format. [4]
The Namur daily newspaper Vers l'Avenir has been published since 19 November 1918. It succeeded the Catholic daily L'Ami de l'Ordre , published from August 6, 1839 to November 18, 1918. [ 1 ] Namur was occupied by the German Army in August 1914, early in the First World War , and though the German administration permitted L'Ami de l'Ordre to ...