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24sata is a daily newspaper in Croatia. [2] It was launched by Styria Medien AG, an Austrian media group, in March 2005. [3] [4] Its first editor-in-chief, Matija Babić, [5] announced that the new newspaper would target "young, urban and modern" audiences.
24sata (est. 2005, based in Zagreb; number one tabloid in the country in terms of circulation) 24sata.hr; Jutarnji list (est. 1998, based in Zagreb) jutarnji.hr; Novi list (est. 1900, based in Rijeka; the oldest Croatian newspaper still in existence) novilist.hr; Slobodna Dalmacija (est. 1943, based in Split) slobodnadalmacija.hr
Jutarnji list (lit. ' The Morning Paper ' ) is a Croatian daily newspaper, founded and continuously published in Zagreb since 6 April 1998, by EPH (Europapress holding, owned by Ninoslav Pavić ) which eventually changed name in Hanza Media , when bought by Marijan Hanžeković. [ 3 ]
Jutarnji list and Večernji list counted upon 16% of market share each (2005), before the arrival of 24 Sata. In 2009, they had an estimated volume of 100,000 copies sold per day. Jutarnji list started in 1997, published by Europapress Holding (EPH), who one year later sold 50% to WAZ. EPH remains the main published on the Croatian market, with ...
Nedjeljni Jutarnji is the weekly Sunday edition of Jutarnji list, one of the two prominent dailies in Croatia. Nedjeljni is principally concerned with life, culture, politics and style. Founded by Tomislav Wruss in 2003 [ 1 ] in the long tradition of Croatian Sunday papers such as Nedjeljna Dalmacija , it was brasher and less polite than the ...
24 sata (meaning "24 hours" in Croatian) is the name of two daily newspapers (both of which spell their names 24sata): 24sata (Croatia) , Croatian daily tabloid owned by the Austrian Styria group 24 sata (Serbia) , Serbian free weekly owned by the Swiss Ringier group
Index.hr is a Croatian tabloid online newspaper, [1] [3] launched in December 2002 and based in Zagreb. It was founded by Matija Babić and was originally designed as a news aggregation website, providing news content from Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, and Slovenia. The website quickly grew in popularity and over time, more original ...
It is considered that Glas Slavonije is successor of Hrvatski list, a newspaper from Osijek published from 1920 to 1945. The first issue of Glas Slavonije was published in 1943. [ 2 ]