Lidové noviny
Czech daily newspaper From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Czech daily newspaper From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lidové noviny (People's News, or The People's Newspaper, Czech pronunciation: [ˈlɪdovɛː ˈnovɪnɪ]) is a daily newspaper published in Prague, the Czech Republic. It is the oldest Czech daily still in print, and a newspaper of record.[2][3] It is a national news daily covering political, economic, cultural and scientific affairs, mostly with a centre-right,[1][3] conservative view.[2] It often hosts commentaries and opinions of prominent personalities from the Czech Republic and from abroad.
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Berliner |
Owner(s) | Mafra |
Publisher | Lidové noviny AS |
Editor | Petr Bušta |
Founded | 1893 |
Political alignment | right of center, liberal conservative, formerly pro-ODS, now pro-ANO 2011[1] |
Language | Czech |
Headquarters | Karla Engliše 519/11, Prague |
Circulation | 43,171 (as of 2011) |
ISSN | 1213-1385 |
Website | lidovky |
Lidové noviny was founded by Adolf Stránský in 1893[4] in Brno.[5] Its high prestige was due to the number of famous Czech personalities that were contributing—writers, politicians and philosophers—and its attention toward foreign politics and culture. It was also the first Czech daily publishing political cartoons. Its publication was interrupted during World War II. It changed its name to Svobodné noviny after the liberation before returning to the original name from May 9, 1948. It was closed down in 1952.[2]
In 1987 a group of political dissidents led by Jiří Ruml, Jiří Dienstbier, Ladislav Hejdánek, and Jan Petránek recommenced the publication in a monthly samizdat version.[2][6] In the autumn two "zero editions" were published and in January 1988 the first edition was issued.[7] The paper has its headquarters in Prague.[7] Since November 1989 it is being published legally and since the spring 1990 as a daily. Some years later it was merged with dissolving Lidová demokracie, from which they inherited the blue colour of the title.
In 1998 Lidové noviny became part of the German group Rheinisch-Bergische Druckerei und Verlagsgesellschaft GmbH[8] (the publisher of the daily Rheinische Post in Germany) and its Czech subsidiary Mafra a.s., that is also publisher of the second largest Czech daily Mladá fronta Dnes, the Czech edition of the freesheet Metro, the TV music channel Óčko, the radio stations Expresradio and Rádio Classic FM and the weekly music magazine Filter. In 2013, MAFRA a.s. became a subsidiary of the Agrofert group, a company owned by the Czech Prime Minister (as of 2018), Andrej Babiš.[9] The publisher of the daily is Lidové noviny AS.[10] The paper is published in Berliner format.[11]
In July 2024 it was announced the publishing of printed Lidové Noviny will cease at the end of August 2024.[12][13]
Lidové noviny had a circulation of 270,000 copies in June 1990.[14] The circulation of the paper was 91,000 copies in 2002.[11] In October 2003, the paper had a circulation of 77,558 copies.[10] In December 2004 the paper had a circulation of 70,593 copies.[15] It was 72,000 copies for 2004 as a whole.[16]
The 2007 circulation of the paper was 70,680 copies. In 2008 it had a circulation of 70,413 copies[17] and reached up to 232,000 readers per day.[2] The circulation of Lidové noviny was 58,543 copies in 2009, 49,920 copies in 2010 and 43,171 copies in 2011.[17] By 2024, the circulation fell to 17,514 copies.[12]
Among the contributors and editors of the "old" Lidové noviny, there were Karel Čapek, Josef Čapek, Jaromír John, Richard Weiner, Eduard Bass, Karel Poláček, Rudolf Těsnohlídek, Leoš Janáček, Jiří Mahen, Jan Drda, Václav Řezáč and the presidents Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk and Edvard Beneš.
This list includes only editors-in-chief of the new Lidové noviny.
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