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This is a list of newspapers in Italy, ordered according to category/scope and circulation. The daily print newspapers in Italy were 107 in 1950, whereas there were 78 in 1965. [ 1 ]
In Italy there are many magazines. In the late 1920s there were nearly one hundred literary magazines. [1] Following the end of World War II the number of weekly magazines significantly expanded. [2] [3] From 1970 feminist magazines began to increase in number in the country. [4] The number of consumer magazines was 975 in 1995 and 782 in 2004. [5]
It is the most read free daily newspaper in Rome and Milan and one of the most read nationally. It is also one of two major free newspapers in Italy, the other being Leggo. In the period of 2001-2002 Metro had a circulation of 414,000 copies. [1] In 2012 the circulation of the paper was 1,463,000 copies. [2]
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]
The Italian release of James Mangold’s Bob Dylan biopic “A Complete Unknown” is prompting local media to claim that, unlike in the movie, Dylan traveled to Italy in 1962 in pursuit of Suze ...
Perugia was an Umbrian settlement [11] but first appears in written history as Perusia, one of the 12 confederate cities of Etruria; [11] it was first mentioned in Q. Fabius Pictor's account, used by Livy, of the expedition carried out against the Etruscan League by Fabius Maximus Rullianus [12] in 310 or 309 BC.
When Laura Pantoja immigrated to Santa Ana from Mexico City in the early 1990s, she could choose from about a dozen local newspapers in her native language. Column: The death of California's ...
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]