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Name Language Type Area reporting covers ABS-CBN News: English/Filipino: Daily: National Bulatlat [5]: English: Daily: National Cebu Daily News (CDN Digital) English
Samakalika Malayalam Vaarika: Weekly Print The New Indian Express: Risala Weekly: Weekly Print Islamic Publishing Bureau Sunni Students Federation: Ezhuthu Chinthikkunna Hrudayangalkku: Monthly Print Loyola Research Institute of Peace and International Relations Vachakam : Weekly Print & Online Vachakam News Ltd.
Rajyasamacharam was the first newspaper in Malayalam. This was started by Hermann Gundert under the Christian missionaries of Basel Mission in June 1847 from Illikkunnu in Thalassery. Pashchimodayam was the second newspaper in Malayalam. It started in October 1847 from Thalassery.
Malayala Manorama is a morning newspaper in Malayalam published from Kottayam, Kerala, India by the Malayala Manorama Company Limited.Currently headed by Mammen Mathew, it was first published as a weekly on 14 March 1888, and currently has a readership of over 8 million (with a circulation base of over 1.9 million copies).
Madhyamam (meaning Medium) is a Malayalam-language newspaper published in Kerala, India, since 1987. [1] It was founded by Ideal Publications Trust run by the Jamaat-e-Islami Hind wing in Kerala. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It has nine editions in India (seven in Kerala and one each in Mangalore [ 4 ] and Bangalore) and its Persian Gulf edition Gulf Madhyamam ...
Janmabhumi is an Indian Malayalam-language daily newspaper, owned by Mathruka Pracharanalayam Ltd. and headquartered in Kochi, Kerala. It was launched as an evening paper from Kozhikode on 28 April 1977. [3] From 14 November 1977 onwards it was upgraded to a daily newspaper publishing from Ernakulam. Currently Janmabhumi has nine editions. [4]
It publishes online daily newspaper and weekly magazines such as Mangalam Weekly, Kanyaka and Cinema Mangalam in Malayalam. They also publish some magazines in Kannada language. Printed from Kottayam, Kochi, Kozhikode, Thiruvananthapuram, Idukki, Kannur and Thrissur, Mangalam is the sixth most circulated Malayalam daily. [1]
It became a daily newspaper in 1939. [1] The daily played a significant role in the development of the Muslim community of north Kerala. [5] It moved its headquarters to Calicut in 1946. [1] C. H. Muhammed Koya, the future Education Minister of Kerala, served as a sub-editor and the editor of Chandrika in the 1940s. [3]