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Newspaper Language City Average issue readership [6] 2019 (in millions) Owner 1 Dainik Jagran: Hindi: Various cities and states 16.872 Jagran Prakashan Limited: 2 Dainik Bhaskar: Hindi: Various cities and states 15.566 D B Corp Ltd. 3 Hindustan: Hindi: Various cities and states 13.213 HT Media: 4 Amar Ujala: Hindi: Various cities and states 9. ...
India has the second-largest newspaper market in the world, with daily newspapers reporting a combined circulation of over 240 million copies as of 2018. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] There are publications produced in each of the 22 scheduled languages of India and in many of the other languages spoken throughout the country .
Amar Ujala (lit. ' The Immortal Brightness ' ) is a Hindi-language daily newspaper published in India which was founded in 1948. It has 22 editions in six states and two union territories covering 180 districts.
The Hindi daily news papers include Amrit Vichar, [47] Dainik Jagran, Amar Ujala and The Hindustan. Prominent English dailies like The Times of India, The Hindustan Times, The Young Turk and Indian Express have fewer readers. The local Urdu newspaper is Rampur ka elaan. It is published from Rampur since 1991. [48]
Aj (Hindi: आज, romanized: Āja, lit. 'Today') is a Hindi language daily broadsheet newspaper in India, currently published from 12 cities in the Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand states. The main edition is published in Varanasi. The newspaper was founded by a freedom fighter named Shiv Prasad Gupta.
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Rajasthan Patrika, Catch News, Balhans, Chotu Motu, Radio FM Tadka, Patrika TV Kumar, Chandran M. V. Shreyams Kumar (P) Mathrubhumi, Mathrubhumi News [21] Janata Dal (Secular) Kerala/B. J. P Maheshwari Rajul Maheshwari Amar Ujala [22] B. J. P Mappillai Kandathil Varghese Mappillai: The Malayala Manorama Company [23] [24] Malayala Manorama: Maran
Halla Bol ("Raise Your Voice") was a campaign started in 1994 by then Chief minister of Uttar Pradesh and leader of Samajwadi Party Mulayam Singh Yadav against two Hindi newspapers, Dainik Jagran and Amar Ujala, which together they shared nearly 70 per cent of the Uttar Pradesh state's Hindi newspaper readership.