List of newspapers in Portugal
Below is a list of newspapers published in Portugal.
National
The number of national daily newspapers in Portugal was 32 in 1950, whereas it was 27 in 1965.[1]
Newspaper | Frequency | Est. | Headquarters | Circulation | Orientation[3] | Owner | Website |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A Bola | sports, daily | 1945 | Lisbon | N/A | Sociedade Vicra Desportiva | http://www.abola.pt/ | |
Correio da Manhã | daily | 1979 | Lisbon | 107,020 | Right | Cofina | http://www.cmjornal.xl.pt/ |
Destak | daily, free | 2001 | Lisbon and Porto | 69,190 | Cofina | http://www.destak.pt/ | |
Diário de Notícias | daily | 1864 | Lisbon | 16,705 | Centrist | Global Media Group | http://www.dn.pt |
Expresso | weekly | 1973 | Lisbon | 99,311 | Centre-right | Impresa (Sojornal) | http://expresso.sapo.pt/ |
i | daily | 2009 | Lisbon | N/A | Right | Newshold | http://www.ionline.pt/ |
Jornal de Letras | cultural, biweekly | 1981 | Lisbon | 7,094 | Impresa | http://visao.sapo.pt/jornaldeletras | |
Jornal de Negócios | economics, daily | 1998 | Lisbon | 10,811 | Centrist | Cofina | http://www.jornaldenegocios.pt/ |
Jornal de Notícias | daily | 1888 | Porto | 57,378 | Centrist | Global Media Group | http://www.jn.pt/ |
O Jogo | sports, daily | 1985 | Porto | 24,555 | Global Media Group | http://www.ojogo.pt/ | |
O Jornal Económico | economics, weekly | 2006 | Lisbon | N/A | Luís Figueiredo | http://www.jornaleconomico.sapo.pt/ | |
Público | daily | 1990 | Lisbon and Porto | 31,828 | Centre-left | Sonae | http://www.publico.pt/ |
Record | sports, daily | 1948 | Lisbon | 50,346 | Cofina | http://www.record.xl.pt/ | |
Sol | weekly | 2006 | Lisbon | N/A | Right | Newshold | http://sol.sapo.pt |
Vida Económica | economics, weekly | 1933 | Porto | 5,960 | Grupo Vida Económica | http://www.vidaeconomica.pt/ | |
Online newspapers | |||||||
Eco | economics | 2016 | Lisbon | N/A | Swipe News, SA. | https://eco.pt/ | |
Diario Digital | 1999 | Lisbon | N/A | Caneta Electrónica | http://diariodigital.sapo.pt/ | ||
Jornal Digital | 1998 | Lisbon | N/A | http://www.jornaldigital.com/ | |||
Observador | 2014 | Lisbon | N/A | Luís Amaral | http://observador.pt/ | ||
PT Jornal | 2012 | Maia | N/A | Pedro Gonçalves | http://ptjornal.com/ | ||
Political newspapers
- Avante!, aligned with the Portuguese Communist Party
- Esquerda Socialista
- Liberdade
- Portugal Socialista, aligned with the Socialist Party
- Povo Livre, aligned with the Social Democratic Party
Regional
- A Voz de Trás-os-Montes, Vila Real
- Correio Alentejo, Castro Verde (2006–)
- Correio do Minho, Braga (1926–)
- Defesa de Espinho, Espinho (1932–)
- Diário As Beiras, Coimbra (1986–)
- Diário Cidade, Câmara de Lobos (2007–)
- Diário da Região, Setúbal (2011–)
- Diário de Aveiro, Aveiro (1985–)
- Diário de Coimbra, Coimbra (1930–)
- Diário de Leiria, Leiria (1988–)
- Diário de Notícias da Madeira, Funchal (1876–)
- Diário de Viseu, Viseu (1998–)
- Diário do Alentejo, Beja
- Diário do Minho, Braga (1920–)
- Diário do Sul, Évora (1969–)
- Diário dos Açores, Ponta Delgada (1870–)
- Diário Insular, Angra do Heroísmo (1946–)
- Jornal barlavento, Portimão (1975–)
- Jornal da Bairrada, Oliveira do Bairro (1945–)
- Jornal da Madeira, Funchal (1932–)
- Jornal de Peniche, Peniche (2007–)
- Jornal do Fundão, Fundão (1946–)
- Mais/Semanário, Póvoa de Varzim and Vila do Conde
- O Açoriano Oriental, Ponta Delgada (1835–); the oldest Portuguese daily still published
- O Comércio de Guimarães, Guimarães (1884–)
- O Ribatejo, Santarém
- O Setubalence, Setúbal (1855–)
- Reconquista, Castelo Branco (1945–)
- Região Sul, Loulé (1993–)
- Semanário Grande Porto, Porto (2010–)
- Setúbal na Rede, (1998-)[4]
Defunct newspapers
- 24 Horas, Lisbon (tabloid)[5]
- A Capital, Lisbon (1968–2005)
- Combate, (1974-1978)
- Comércio do Porto, Porto (1854–2005)
- Diário Popular, Lisbon (1943–1991)
- Global Notícias (daily, free) (2007-2010)[5]
- Notícias de Évora, Évora (1900-1992)
- Notícias de Tarde, (1981-1984)[6]
- O Independente, Lisbon (1988–2006)
- O Século, Lisbon (1880–1978)
- Semanário Económico, Lisbon (folded 2009)
- Tal & Qual, (1980–2007), Friday tabloid
- Metro, (2004-2016)[7]
- Diário Económico (1989-2016)[8]
See also
References
- ↑ Pippa Norris (Fall 2000). "Chapter 4 The Decline of Newspapers?". A Virtuous Circle: Political Communications in Post-Industrial Societies (PDF). New York: Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 6 October 2013.
- ↑ Circulação e Tiragens - APCT
- ↑ Televisões, Rádios, Jornais e Revistas
- ↑ João Canavilhas (2012). "From Remediation to Convergence: Looking at the Portuguese media" (PDF). Brazilian Journalism Research. 8 (1). Retrieved 15 June 2015.
- 1 2 Roy Greenslade (1 July 2010). "Two Portuguese newspapers close". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
- ↑ Rui Alexandre Novais; Hugo Ferro (2013). "Media Stratups in a Creative Destructive Scenario" (PDF). II. International Conference on Communication, Media, Technology and Design. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
- ↑ "Cofina Media vai fechar o jornal gratuito Metro". Observador. 1 September 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
- ↑ Was economic and daily newspaper founded in 1989, it ceased printing newspapers in March 2016 and focused all their coverage in on-line themes. In October 2016, the on -line newspaper closed.
External links
- Banca de Jornais Sapo
- The Portuguese-American Journal (PAJ) is an online interactive publication dedicated to the Portuguese-American heritage with the purpose of informing and offering an insight into the Portuguese-American experience. New material is added to the PAJ daily. - Portuguese American Journal
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