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The following is a list of newspapers and news publications in Madagascar. Most are headquartered in the city of Antananarivo . As of the mid-1960s, there were "18 dailies, 48 weeklies, 60 monthlies, 10 bimonthlies, and 19 quarterlies" in publication.
1083. ISBN 9781857431315. ISSN 0065-3896. Emma Hunter (2016). "Komkya and the convening of a Chagga public, 1953-1961". In Derek Peterson; et al. (eds.). African Print Cultures: Newspapers and Their Publics in the Twentieth Century. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-05317-9.
Auto Bild (automobile magazine) Bravo (teen magazine) Budapest (cultural life, buildings, history) The Budapest Times ( English, est. 1999, owned by BZT Media, right, conservatism - www .budapesttimes .hu) Cosmopolitan (women's magazine) Elle (fashion magazine) EuroXtrade (engineering and technology magazine)
The Malawi Broadcasting Corporation is a state-run radio and television company in Malawi. It was founded in 1964. It has two radio stations, Radio 1 and Radio 2, and transmits on FM, Medium Wave and Shortwave frequencies and Online. It also runs the national television station, Television Malawi. Its headquarters is in Blantyre, Malawi.
The first local newspaper in Bahrain was Al Bahrayn which was published between 1939 and 1944. [1] Bahrain's Information Affairs Authority reported that the number of newspapers in 1999 was four which were published in Arabic and English languages. [2] There were a total of 12 dailies and weeklies in the country in 2012.
The name Malawi is thought to derive from the word Maravi. The people of the Maravi Empire were iron workers. Maravi is thought to mean "Flames" and may have come from the sight of many kilns lighting up the night sky. A dynasty known as the Maravi Empire was founded by the Amaravi people in the late 15th century.
Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. 44: 107–114. doi: 10.1177/107769906704400114. S2CID 144431209. W. Joseph Campbell (1998). Emergent Independent Press in Benin and Côte D'Ivoire. Praeger Publishers.
Naye Prese, 1934–1993. Paris-Soir, 1923–1944. Le Père Duchesne, 1790–1794, edited by Hébert. Le Père Duchesne (other newspapers) Le Petit Parisien, 1876–1944. Le Temps, 1861–1942, compromised by collaboration during Vichy regime, replaced as the newspaper of record by the newly created Le Monde.
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