Morgenbladet is Norway's oldest daily newspaper, covering politics, culture and science, now a weekly news magazine primarily directed at well-educated readers. The magazine is notable for its opinion section featuring contributions exclusively from Norwegian academics and other intellectuals.
45-494: On its front page, Morgenbladet describes itself as "an independent newspaper about politics, culture and academics". It has been described as similar in character to the German Die Zeit and Danish Weekendavisen . Its target demographic is the well educated and culture-oriented, with 68% of readers having more than four years of university or college education. The newspaper aims to be "a meeting place for ideas,
90-415: A broadsheet weekly newspaper, now more highbrow in tone, with emphasis on culture, art, literature and anti- neoliberal politics, in the style of French monthly newspaper Le Monde diplomatique . In 2003 ownership once again changed, when the newspaper was bought by Fritt Ord (a free speech foundation), Forlagskonsult AS/Bjørn Smith-Simonsen and Dagsavisen . Alf van der Hagen became publisher, and
135-503: A cooperation with ZDF and broadcast their news in a display format called 100 Sekunden ( English: 100 seconds ). Starting 2018, the online presence of brand eins and Zeit Online were merged and are now marketed together. Between 2005 and 2009, Zeit Online introduced Zuender (igniter) which was an online platform for young adults in Germany between the ages of 16 and 25. Zeit Campus Online started in 2006 as an online version of
180-482: A font that is very frequently used in books. Die Zeit did not join the discussion about the return of the traditional German orthography , which was led by Der Spiegel , Süddeutsche Zeitung and Bild . Starting in 1999, the newspaper used its in-house orthography which derived from the traditional orthography as well as from the different versions of the reformed orthography, which were edited by Dieter E. Zimmer. Since 2007, Die Zeit refrained from using
225-419: A local section for Hamburg. In a survey of German literature blogs, the literature section of Zeit Online was rated as the best portal, better than the literature section of Der Spiegel , Süddeutsche Zeitung and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , amongst others. On 2 November 2012, Zeit Online launched a Content API which is available for software developers. Up to 2017, Die Zeit experienced
270-815: A project in cooperation with partners such as the German Football Association , the German Fire Department Association, the VZ-networks, the ZDF and the German Olympic Sports Confederation to start the online platform Netz gegen Nazis ( English: web against Nazis ). The web portal was subject to criticism from the journalists. This was based on the platform not providing new information and only arguing superficially. On 1 January 2009, Die Zeit withdrew their contribution to
315-458: A room for reflection and debate, and a place for the long thoughts that are a necessary part of a critical, public debate, but that falls outside of the rhythm of daily newspapers and online outlets". The newspaper is divided into four major sections: current events, ideas, culture and books. It was the first major news website in Norway to make the switch to encrypted-only access, through HTTPS . It
360-731: A significant increase in clicks on their website. In March 2017, Z+ was launched and so was a payment model for the new product. Since then, some of the content has only been available after payment. In January 2019, the website was visited 75.1 million times. On average, 2.34 pages were opened per visit. Gero von Randow, a former Die Zeit editor, was the editor-in-chief until February 2008. The journalist Wolfgang Blau took over his position in March of that year. When Blau joined The Guardian in April 2013, Jochen Wegner subsequently took over, and has been in charge since 15 March 2013. Before that, he had been
405-516: A step towards independence was taken, as the newspaper was published by the public company Dagsavisen AS, which is in turn was owned 100% by the foundation Stiftelsen Dagsavisen. As of 2016, this foundation only owns 9% of the shares of Dagsavisen directly, with the remaining 91% of the paper owned by Mentor Medier AS. This company also owns the Christian daily Vårt Land , and is partly owned by Christian groups such as Normisjon , Blå Kors and
450-615: A year since 2013. It contains articles from the weekly magazine which accompanies the newspaper, translated into English. A selection of stories are published in English. In June 2019, the Zeit Online was awarded with the Big Brother Award in the category consumer protection . Dagsavisen Dagsavisen is a daily newspaper published in Oslo , Norway . The former party organ of
495-457: Is centrist and liberal or left-liberal . Die Zeit often publishes dossiers, essays, third-party articles and excerpts of lectures of different authors emphasising their points of view on a single aspect or topic in one or in consecutive issues. It is known for its very large physical paper format ( Nordisch ) and its long and detailed articles. Die Zeit is divided into different sections, some of which are: The masthead lettering in
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#1732855694195540-878: Is generally considered to be among the German newspapers of record and is known for its long and extensive articles. The first edition of Die Zeit was first published in Hamburg on 21 February 1946. The founding publishers were Gerd Bucerius , Lovis H. Lorenz , Richard Tüngel and Ewald Schmidt di Simoni . Another important founder was Marion Gräfin Dönhoff , who joined as an editor in 1946. She became publisher of Die Zeit from 1972 until her death in 2002, together from 1983 onwards with former German chancellor Helmut Schmidt , later joined by Josef Joffe and former German federal secretary of culture Michael Naumann . The paper's publishing house, Zeitverlag Gerd Bucerius in Hamburg,
585-560: Is owned by the Georg von Holtzbrinck Publishing Group and Dieter von Holtzbrinck Media . The paper is published weekly on Thursdays. As of 2018, Die Zeit has additional offices in Brussels , Dresden , Frankfurt, Moscow, New York City, Paris, Istanbul , Washington, D.C., and Vienna . In 2018, it re-opened an office in Beijing. The paper is considered to be highbrow . Its political direction
630-456: Is still prohibited to this day. To avoid another prohibition, Zeit Magazin changed its masthead on 27 June 1946, into the Coat of arms of Bremen : The key and the golden crown of the city coat of arms, which was approved by Wilhelm Kaisen , the mayor of Bremen . This happened as a result of the mediation from Josef Müller-Marein who later became the editorial director of Die Zeit . The design with
675-542: Is the most widely read German weekly newspaper. It reached 520,000 copies in the first quarter of 2013. Zeit Online is run by Zeit Online GmbH, a fully owned subsidiary of the publishing company Zeitverlag . The independent editorial office consists of around 70 editors, graphic designers and technicians. Upon 1 February 2009, Zeit Online , Tagesspiegel Online and zoomer.de were merged into Zeit Digital with one joint editorial office in Berlin . Only some editors as well as
720-463: The Bremer Schlüssel in its masthead was also designed by Carl Otto Czeschka and is used as the logo of the whole publishing group today. With the demand from Ernst Samhaber, the Hamburg artist Alfred Mahlau had created the whole first edition which had a five-column break. The edition was printed in the printing house Broscheck in Hamburg. At the same time, Czeschka had also drawn the headlines of
765-455: The Hamburg crest, was used from the first edition (published on 21 February 1946) to the 12th edition (published on 9 May 1946). Other than the official coat of arms this crest featured peacock's feathers with little hearts on them. Additionally, the position of the lions' legs first resembled those of the old great coat of arms. The positions were changed in 1952. Regardless of this tiny difference,
810-542: The Norwegian Labour Party , the ties loosened over time from 1975 to 1999. It has borne several names, and was called Arbeiderbladet from 1923 to 1997. Eirik Hoff Lysholm is editor-in-chief. The newspaper depends on economic support from the Norwegian Government. Dagsavisen was established by Christian Holtermann Knudsen in 1884 under the name Vort Arbeide ('Our Work' in archaic Riksmål ), and
855-600: The Norwegian Lutheran Mission . The largest owner is Mushom Invest (10%). Stiftelsen Dagsavisen controls 6% of the shares in Mentor Medier AS. The newspaper depends on economic support from the Norwegian Government. The newspaper changed to tabloid format in 1990, having used the Berliner format since 1976. In 1997 it launched its Internet version, and also started publishing on Sundays. The Sunday edition
900-655: The Labour Party. The radical wing spearheaded by Martin Tranmæl and Kyrre Grepp had assumed control over the party at the 1918 national convention. The party aligned itself with the Comintern . As a result, a moderate wing broke out in 1921 to form the Social Democratic Labour Party . Nonetheless, Social-Demokraten remained affiliated with the Labour Party, as Martin Tranmæl assumed the editorship in 1921. In 1923,
945-422: The board of directors appointed the editor-in-chief. In 1974, Tor and Trygve Bratteli , aided by Jens Chr. Hauge , forced Hirsti out of his job. Arbeiderbladet was formally owned by the Labour Party until 1991, when a separate, but affiliated, entity Norsk Arbeiderpresse took over. The labour-inspired name Arbeiderbladet was changed in 1997, to the neutral Dagsavisen ('The Daily Newspaper'). In 1999
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#1732855694195990-533: The crest was viewed as the great Hamburg coat of arms by the Hamburg Senate and was therefore considered a national emblem. Upon this, the crest was revised: An open gate was supposed to be incorporated to represent the cosmopolitanism of the hanseatic city. However, the Senate also declined this version that was printed in editions 13 to 18, as it was viewed a misuse of a national emblem for commercial purposes, which
1035-584: The dentist immediately ' ). In reality however, the format is not bigger than that of a dozen other German newspapers . Die Zeit is printed by the Frankfurter Societäts-Druckerei GmbH in Mörfelden-Walldorf. The Deutscher Pressevertrieb , based in Hamburg, is in charge of the distribution of the newspapers. The Zeitmagazin was first published as a supplement in 1970 and later discontinued in 1999. Die Zeit then introduced
1080-460: The editor-in-chief at Focus Online from 2006 to 2010. Being part of the same publishing group, Die Zeit and Berliner Tagesspiegel decided to cooperate in September 2006. Since then, they have been exchanging and sharing some of their online content. Zeit has similar relationships with other German online news portals such as Handelsblatt and Golem.de . In June 2008, Zeit Online started
1125-637: The first edition for the different sections of the newspaper. The articles of Die Zeit and, especially the leading articles on the first page, are traditionally longer and more detailed than the ones of a daily newspaper. However, in the past few years many articles have been noticeably shorter and include more pictures. Since the redesign by Mario Garcia in January 1998, the headlines have been printed in Tiemann-Antiqua . The running texts are printed in Garamond ,
1170-459: The in-house orthography and started following the recommendations of the Duden . The nordisch format , a trademark of the newspaper, has always been addressed in literature and cabaret—mostly in satirical form. According to Hanns Dieter Hüsche Die Zeit is " so groß, wenn man die aufschlägt, muss der Nachbar gleich zum Zahnarzt " ( lit. ' so big, if you open it, the neighbour must go to
1215-406: The leading conservative news outlet in Norway. It was read by most people of authority and became the newspaper of high-ranking bureaucrats. It was soon challenged by new competition: Aftenposten (1860), catering to the merchant class, and Verdens Gang (1868) and Dagbladet (1869), representing opposition to the ruling classes. Connections to the conservative party grew even stronger after
1260-462: The new chief editor Rolv Werner Erichsen was sent to the Grini detention camp by the German occupying force in 1943, the newspaper was discontinued for the remainder of the war. After the war Morgenbladet struggled to survive, partly because it refused to give in to commercialism and carry ads. The conservative and libertarian business organisation Libertas owned the newspaper from 1983 to 1987. It
1305-418: The newspaper reintroduced the tabloid format. Anna B. Jenssen replaced van der Hagen as publisher in September 2012. During the period 2003 to 2014, the circulation more than trebled, reaching 29,382 in 2014, which makes it the largest weekly newspaper in Norway by circulation, and the ninth largest of all newspapers. In a string of purchases from 2013 to 2016, NHST Media Group bought more than 90 percent of
1350-478: The newspaper. The name was changed from Vort Arbeide to Social-Demokraten ('The Social Democrat') in 1886. The next year, the Norwegian Labour Party was founded, and Social-Demokraten became its official party organ. Carl Jeppesen took over as editor-in-chief. In 1894 the newspaper was published on a daily basis, and in 1904 the financial balance was positive. Around 1920 there were tensions in
1395-410: The occupation, was promoted from news editor as he succeeded Martin Tranmæl as editor-in-chief in 1949. At that time, the editor-in-chief was elected by the national convention of the Labour Party, and the editor-in-chief was also an ex officio member of the party's central committee. This practice continued with editors-in-chief Reidar Hirsti and Einar Olsen , until abolished in 1975. From this point,
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1440-406: The printed magazine Zeit Campus . In 2007, Zeit Online started a cooperation with the music magazine Intro , the union Gesicht Zeigen! (show face!) and the agency WE DO as well as the moderators Markus Kavka, Ole Tillmann and Klaas Heufer-Umlauf . The project is called Störungsmelder (trouble report) and is directed against right-wing extremism. On 5 May 2008, Zeit Online started
1485-587: The project and handed over administration to the Amadeu Antonio Foundation . The project has since been renamed to Belltower.News . On 27 July 2015, the publishing house started a new online format called ze.tt , aimed at young readers who spend a large amount of time on social-media. Die Zeit has published Zeitmagazin International (sometimes also referred to as The Berlin State of Mind ) twice
1530-506: The same year as the Labour Party renounced the Comintern and the communist wing broke away, Social-Demokraten changed its name to Arbeiderbladet (lit. 'The Worker Paper') in 1923. The factionalism was contrary to the goal of Christian Holtermann Knudsen, who wanted to unite the fledgling labour movement. In 1940, upon the German invasion and subsequent occupation of Norway , Arbeiderbladet
1575-482: The section Leben ( English: Lifestyle ). Since 24 May 2007, Die Zeit reintroduced the Zeitmagazin . For the supplement's 40th birthday, Die Zeit published a 100-page anniversary issue, including 40 different covers – one for each year. The 1993 circulation of Die Zeit was 500,000 copies. With a circulation of 504,072 for the second half of 2012 and an estimated readership of slightly above 2 million, it
1620-599: The shares in Morgenbladet AS. From 2016, Morgenbladet ' s headquarters are co-located with NHST Media Group and Dagens Næringsliv at Akerselva Atrium. Numbers from the Norwegian Media Businesses' Association, Mediebedriftenes Landsforening . Die Zeit Die Zeit ( German pronunciation: [diː ˈtsaɪt] , lit. ' The Time ' ) is a German national weekly newspaper published in Hamburg in Germany. The newspaper
1665-641: The technology and the marketing departments remained in Hamburg . Zoomer.de was discontinued in February 2009, and the editorial office of Tagesspiegel Online was handed back to Tagesspiegel in September 2009. In 2017, Die Zeit was among the most quoted sources in German Misplaced Pages. At present, it is one of the 100 most visited websites in Germany. The content is categorized into four section groups that each consist of one or more sections, as follows: Since April 2014, Zeit Online has also been publishing
1710-558: The turn of the century. C. J. Hambro , who later went on to be chairman of the Conservative party for eight years and president of the Storting for eighteen years, was editor of Morgenbladet from 1913 to 1919. After resisting the directions imposed by the occupants during World War II , its chief editor Olaf Gjerløw and news editor Fredrik Ramm were arrested by the Germans in 1941. When
1755-588: The weekly Die Zeit with its elegant font was designed by Carl Otto Czeschka in 1946. Czeschka was inspired by the British daily newspaper The Times which shows the British national coat of arms in between The and Times . This was not only for graphic reasons, it also represented the founder's self-conception which he published in an editorial called " Unsere Aufgabe " ("Our Mission") on 21 February 1946. The very first version of Czeschka's design, which included
1800-452: Was affiliated with the trade union center Fagforeningernes Centralkomité . Holtermann Knudsen also had to establish his own printing press since the existing printing presses did not want to be affiliated with a labourers’ newspaper. The fledgling project was marred by economic problems, and the burden of writing, editing, and printing lay chiefly on Knudsen. In 1885 the newly founded association Socialdemokratisk Forening formally took over
1845-445: Was also the first to sell individual articles with Bitcoin . European Newspaper Award named it weekly newspaper of the year for 2018, the jury commending its "unmistakable profile content- and designwise". The newspaper receives some economic support from the Norwegian Government. Morgenbladet was founded in 1819 by the book printer Niels Wulfsberg . The paper is the country's first daily newspaper; however, Adresseavisen
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1890-433: Was discontinued in 2007 due to economic problems. It is widely accepted that Dagsavisen would face drastic problems if the distinctively Norwegian press support were to cease. Dagsavisen is published six days a week. Dagsavisen had a circulation of 28,337 in 2009, making it the fifth largest Oslo-based newspaper, after Verdens Gang , Aftenposten , Aften , Dagbladet and Dagens Næringsliv . It
1935-428: Was founded earlier. For a long time, Morgenbladet was also the country's top-ranking newspaper by circulation. Adolf Bredo Stabell , chief editor from 1831 to 1857, made Morgenbladet an important force of opposition, both in politics and literature. Among its writers during this period was the author Henrik Wergeland . The leadership of Christian Friele , from 1857 to 1893, turned Morgenbladet into
1980-470: Was relaunched as an independent commentary newspaper in 1987 under editor Hans Geelmuyden , who resigned along with most of the editorial staff after numerous conflicts with the owner Hroar Hansen . From 1988 on, Hansen aligned the newspaper with the Norwegian Progress Party . This era came to an end in 1993, when Morgenbladet was bought by Truls Lie . Lie turned the newspaper back into
2025-454: Was stopped by the Nazi authorities. The only legal party in Norway during the occupation, Nasjonal Samling , evicted Arbeiderbladet from its premises, using it as headquarters for its party organ Fritt Folk . Arbeiderbladet 's printing press was also utilized by Fritt Folk . Only in 1945, upon the liberation of Norway, did Arbeiderbladet resume publication. Olav Larssen , imprisoned during
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