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Aftenposten

Aftenposten (Aftenpoſten in the masthead; Urban East Norwegian: [ˈɑ̂ftn̩ˌpɔstn̩]; Norwegian for "The Evening Post") is Norway's largest printed newspaper by circulation. It is based in Oslo. It sold 211,769 copies in 2015 (172,029 printed copies according to University of Bergen)[2] and estimated 1.2 million readers.[3] It converted from broadsheet to compact format in March 2005.[4][5] Aftenposten's online edition is at Aftenposten.no. It is considered a newspaper of record for Norway.

Aftenposten
The front page, 2 January 1879
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatCompact
Owner(s)Schibsted (99.99%)
Stiftelsen Tinius (0.01%)[1]
EditorTrine Eilertsen
Founded14 May 1860; 162 years ago (1860-05-14)
LanguageNorwegian
HeadquartersOslo, Norway
ISSN0804-3116
Websitewww.aftenposten.no

Aftenposten is a private company wholly owned by the public company Schibsted ASA.[6] Norway's second largest newspaper, VG, is also owned by Schibsted. Norwegian owners held a 42% of the shares in Schibsted at the end of 2015.[7]

The paper has around 740 employees. Trine Eilertsen was appointed editor-in-chief in 2020.

History and profile

Aftenposten was founded by Christian Schibsted on 14 May 1860[8] under the name Christiania Adresseblad. The following year, it was renamed Aftenposten. Since 1885, the paper has printed two daily editions. A Sunday edition was published until 1919, and was reintroduced in 1990. The Friday-morning edition carries the A-magasinet supplement, featuring articles on science, politics, and the arts. In 1886, Aftenposten bought a rotary press, being the first Norwegian newspaper in this regard.[9]

Historically, Aftenposten labelled itself as "independent, conservative",[8] most closely aligning their editorial platform with the Norwegian Conservative Party. This manifested itself in blunt anticommunism during the interwar era. During World War II, Aftenposten, due to its large circulation, was put under the directives of the German occupational authorities, and a Nazi editorial management was imposed. Its editor-in-chief was H. Nesse at that time, and he was arrested and imprisoned in Grini concentration camp.[10]

Aftenposten is based in Oslo.[8][11] In the late 1980s, Egil Sundar served as the editor-in-chief and attempted to transform the paper into a nationally distributed newspaper.[12] However, he was forced to resign from his post due to his attempt.[12]

Editions

In addition to the morning edition, Aftenposten published a separate evening edition called Aften (previously Aftenposten Aften). This edition was published on weekdays and Saturdays until the Sunday morning edition was reintroduced in 1990. The evening edition was only circulated in the central eastern part of Norway, i.e. Oslo and Akershus counties. Thus, it focused on news related to this area, in contrast with the morning edition, which focuses on national and international news. The evening edition was converted to tabloid format in 1997. From April 2006, the Thursday edition of Aften also included a special edition with news specific to a part of Oslo or Akershus, called Lokal Aften ("Local Evening"). This edition had eight versions, with each subscriber receiving the version which is most relevant to the area in which he or she lives. In areas not covered by any of the eight versions (for example Romerike and Follo), the version for central Oslo was distributed. From May 2009, Aften was only printed and distributed Tuesday through Thursday. The publication of Aften ended on 20 December 2012.[13]

Aftenposten started its online edition in 1995.[14]

Controversies

Aftenposten opposed the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky in 1935.

In 1945, Aftenposten published an obituary of Adolf Hitler in which the 86-year-old Nobel-laureate novelist Knut Hamsun referred to Hitler as "a warrior for humankind and a preacher of the gospel of justice for all nations".[15] At that time, Aftenposten was under the censorship of the German occupying forces.

Historically, Aftenposten has not received the same number of lawsuits or as much attention from the Norwegian Press Complaints Commission as some of the larger tabloids.[citation needed] However, there are exceptions. In 2007, Aftenposten alleged that Julia Svetlichnaya, the last person to interview the murdered Russian national Alexander Litvinenko, was a Kremlin agent. London correspondent Hilde Harbo admitted having allowed herself to be fed disinformation emanating from the Russian emigrant community without investigating the matter properly.[16] Aftenposten eventually had to apologize and pay Svetlichnaya's legal costs.

In 2011 the newspaper was criticized by Jon Hustad for publishing conspiracy theories that promoted the false claim that convicted Soviet spy Arne Treholt was innocent, based entirely on a book by convicted fraudster Geir Selvik Malthe-Sørenssen that was revealed to be based on a fabricated source.[17] In a study dated 2016 Aftenposten was found to contain the epithet Negro (Norwegian: neger) at the highest frequency in the period between 1970 and 2014 with 674 references.[18] In 2021 the paper was criticized by the youth organization of the National Association for Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals and Transgender People for allegedly publishing articles that promoted transphobic conspiracy theories about trans women.[19]

Editorial line

Aftenposten had a conservative stance and supported the political party Høyre[20] until the breakdown of party press system in the country.[6] Following this, the paper positioned itself as an independent centre-right newspaper.[6]

Language

From its establishment in 1860 until 1923, Aftenposten was published in the common Dano-Norwegian written language used in both Norway and Denmark, which was generally known as Danish in Denmark and as Norwegian in Norway, and which only occasionally included minor differences from each other in vocabulary or idiom. In 1923 Aftenposten adopted the Norwegian spelling standard of 1907, which mainly replaced the "soft" consonants (e.g. d, b) characteristic of Danish pronunciation (but also used in some Norwegian dialects) with "hard" consonants (e.g. t, p) characteristic of Eastern Central Norwegian pronunciation, but which was otherwise mostly identical with Danish. In 1928 Aftenposten adopted the most conservative variant of the spelling standard of 1917, which is largely similar to the "moderate Bokmål" or "Riksmål" standard used today.

During the Norwegian language struggle from the early 1950s, Aftenposten was the main newspaper of the Riksmål variety of Norwegian, and maintained close ties to the Riksmål movement's institutions, recognising the Norwegian Academy for Language and Literature as the sole authoritative body for regulating the Norwegian language as used by the newspaper. Due to its status as the country's largest and most influential newspaper, Aftenposten therefore had a significant influence on the developments that took place during the Norwegian language struggle. The "moderate" or "conservative" Riksmål language used by Aftenposten was mainly associated with a conservative stance in Norwegian politics, and was contrasted with the "radical" Samnorsk language, an attempt to merge Bokmål with Nynorsk which was promoted by socialist governments in the 1950s. By 1960 it had become apparent that the Samnorsk attempt had failed, and as a result, Aftenposten's Riksmål standard and the government-promoted Bokmål standard have in the following decades become almost identical as the Bokmål standard has incorporated nearly all of Riksmål. As a consequence, Aftenposten decided to describe its language as "Moderate Bokmål" from 2006, and published its own dictionary, based on Riksmål and Moderate Bokmål, but excluding "radical" (i.e. similar to Nynorsk) variants of Bokmål.

The online version of the paper for some years during the early 2000s had an English section. To cut costs, Aftenposten stopped publishing English-language articles in early November 2008. Archives of past material are still available online.[21]

Circulation

Aftenposten (morning paper)

Aftenposten 1980–2015

Numbers from the Norwegian Media Businesses' Association, Mediebedriftenes Landsforening 1980–2009:

  • 1980: 223,925
  • 1981: 227,122
  • 1982: 230,205
  • 1983: 232,459
  • 1984: 233,998
  • 1985: 240,600
  • 1986: 252,093
  • 1987: 260,915
  • 1988: 264,469
  • 1989: 267,278
  • 1990: 265,558
  • 1991: 269,278
  • 1992: 274,870
  • 1993: 278,669
  • 1994: 279,965
  • 1995: 282,018
  • 1996: 283,915
  • 1997: 286,163
  • 1998: 288,078
  • 1999: 284,251
  • 2000: 276,429
  • 2001: 262,632
  • 2002: 263,026
  • 2003: 256,639
  • 2004: 249,861
  • 2005: 252,716
  • 2006: 248,503
  • 2007: 250,179
  • 2008: 247,556
  • 2009: 243,188
  • 2010: 239,831
  • 2011: 235,795
  • 2012: 225,981
  • 2013: 214,026
  • 2014: 221,659
  • 2015: 211,769

Aften (evening paper) - now defunct

Numbers from the Norwegian Media Businesses' Association, Mediebedriftenes Landsforening: 1989–2009:

Aften 1989–2009.
  • 1939: 78,700
  • 1989: 193,932
  • 1990: 192,896
  • 1991: 195,022
  • 1992: 197,738
  • 1993: 198,647
  • 1994: 188,544
  • 1995: 186,003
  • 1996: 188,635
  • 1997: 191,269
  • 1998: 186,417
  • 1999: 180,497
  • 2000: 175,783
  • 2001: 167,671
  • 2002: 163,924
  • 2003: 155,366
  • 2004: 148,067
  • 2005: 141,612
  • 2006: 137,141
  • 2007: 131,089
  • 2008: 124,807
  • 2009: 111,566

Aftenposten.no, online newspaper

The online newspaper Aftenposten.no had an average of 827,000 daily readers in 2015, an increase from 620.000 in 2010.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 April 2016. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  2. ^ "medienorge". medienorge. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  3. ^ "Aftenposten har det høyeste avisopplaget i Norge". Aftenposten. 3 March 2016. from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  4. ^ Ingrid Brekke (4 May 2013). "Tabloid i form, men ikke i sjel". Aftenposten (in Norwegian). from the original on 16 January 2014. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  5. ^ "Norway: leading daily's successful switch to compact". Editors Weblog. 22 March 2005. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  6. ^ a b c Stig A. Nohrstedt; et al. (2000). "From the Persian Gulf to Kosovo — War Journalism and Propaganda" (PDF). European Journal of Communication. 15 (3). (PDF) from the original on 22 December 2015.
  7. ^ . www.schibsted.com. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 29 April 2018.
  8. ^ a b c Bernard A. Cook (2001). Europe Since 1945: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. p. 935. ISBN 978-0-8153-4058-4.
  9. ^ Svennik Hoyer. "The Political Economy of the Norwegian Press" (PDF). Scandinavian Political Studies. Danish Royal Library: 85–141.
  10. ^ Joachim Joesten (Autumn 1942). "The Lights Went Out". The Virginia Quarterly Review. 18 (4): 551. JSTOR 26448498.
  11. ^ (PDF). Schibsted Media Group. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2015.
  12. ^ a b Sigurd Allern (2002). "Journalistic and Commercial News Values. News Organizations as Patrons of an Institution and Market Actors". Nordicom Review. 2 (2).
  13. ^ "Historien sett gjennom Aften-øyne". Aftenposten. 20 December 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  14. ^ "Online Journalism Atlas: Norway". Online Journalism. 25 January 2008. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
  15. ^ Gibbs, Walter (27 February 2009). "Norwegian Nobel Laureate, Once Shunned, Is Now Celebrated". The New York Times. p. C1. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on 8 December 2014. [I]n Oslo last week . . . at the National Library was the 7 May 1945, edition of a . . . newspaper whose lead article on Hitler's death was by Knut Hamsun. As most collaborators lay low, preparing alibis, Hamsun wrote, 'He was a warrior, a warrior for mankind, and a prophet of the gospel of justice for all nations'.
  16. ^ . Aftenposten. 9 December 2006. Archived from the original on 14 February 2008. Retrieved 1 February 2009.
  17. ^ Hustad, Jon (17 June 2011). "Konspirasjonsteoretikarane". Dag og tid.
  18. ^ Paul Thomas (2016). "Papa, Am I a Negro? The Vexed History of the Racial Epithet in Norwegian Print Media (1970–2014)". Race and Social Problems. 8 (3): 233. doi:10.1007/s12552-016-9179-4. hdl:10642/4424. S2CID 152211098.
  19. ^ Stenslie, Sol. . Archived from the original on 1 November 2021. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  20. ^ Rolf Werenskjold (2008). "The Dailies in Revolt". Scandinavian Journal of History. 33 (4): 417–440. doi:10.1080/03468750802423094. S2CID 142265516.
  21. ^ Aftenposten. 5 November 2008. Archived from the original on 8 December 2008. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
  22. ^ "medienorge". from the original on 6 April 2016.

Further reading

  • Merrill, John C. and Harold A. Fisher. The world's great dailies: profiles of fifty newspapers (1980) pp 37–43

External links

  • Official website   (in Norwegian)

aftenposten, aftenpoſten, masthead, urban, east, norwegian, ˈɑ, ˌpɔstn, norwegian, evening, post, norway, largest, printed, newspaper, circulation, based, oslo, sold, copies, 2015, printed, copies, according, university, bergen, estimated, million, readers, co. Aftenposten Aftenpoſten in the masthead Urban East Norwegian ˈɑ ftn ˌpɔstn Norwegian for The Evening Post is Norway s largest printed newspaper by circulation It is based in Oslo It sold 211 769 copies in 2015 172 029 printed copies according to University of Bergen 2 and estimated 1 2 million readers 3 It converted from broadsheet to compact format in March 2005 4 5 Aftenposten s online edition is at Aftenposten no It is considered a newspaper of record for Norway AftenpostenThe front page 2 January 1879TypeDaily newspaperFormatCompactOwner s Schibsted 99 99 Stiftelsen Tinius 0 01 1 EditorTrine EilertsenFounded14 May 1860 162 years ago 1860 05 14 LanguageNorwegianHeadquartersOslo NorwayISSN0804 3116Websitewww wbr aftenposten wbr noAftenposten is a private company wholly owned by the public company Schibsted ASA 6 Norway s second largest newspaper VG is also owned by Schibsted Norwegian owners held a 42 of the shares in Schibsted at the end of 2015 7 The paper has around 740 employees Trine Eilertsen was appointed editor in chief in 2020 Contents 1 History and profile 2 Editions 3 Controversies 4 Editorial line 5 Language 6 Circulation 6 1 Aftenposten morning paper 6 2 Aften evening paper now defunct 6 3 Aftenposten no online newspaper 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory and profile EditAftenposten was founded by Christian Schibsted on 14 May 1860 8 under the name Christiania Adresseblad The following year it was renamed Aftenposten Since 1885 the paper has printed two daily editions A Sunday edition was published until 1919 and was reintroduced in 1990 The Friday morning edition carries the A magasinet supplement featuring articles on science politics and the arts In 1886 Aftenposten bought a rotary press being the first Norwegian newspaper in this regard 9 Historically Aftenposten labelled itself as independent conservative 8 most closely aligning their editorial platform with the Norwegian Conservative Party This manifested itself in blunt anticommunism during the interwar era During World War II Aftenposten due to its large circulation was put under the directives of the German occupational authorities and a Nazi editorial management was imposed Its editor in chief was H Nesse at that time and he was arrested and imprisoned in Grini concentration camp 10 Aftenposten is based in Oslo 8 11 In the late 1980s Egil Sundar served as the editor in chief and attempted to transform the paper into a nationally distributed newspaper 12 However he was forced to resign from his post due to his attempt 12 Editions EditIn addition to the morning edition Aftenposten published a separate evening edition called Aften previously Aftenposten Aften This edition was published on weekdays and Saturdays until the Sunday morning edition was reintroduced in 1990 The evening edition was only circulated in the central eastern part of Norway i e Oslo and Akershus counties Thus it focused on news related to this area in contrast with the morning edition which focuses on national and international news The evening edition was converted to tabloid format in 1997 From April 2006 the Thursday edition of Aften also included a special edition with news specific to a part of Oslo or Akershus called Lokal Aften Local Evening This edition had eight versions with each subscriber receiving the version which is most relevant to the area in which he or she lives In areas not covered by any of the eight versions for example Romerike and Follo the version for central Oslo was distributed From May 2009 Aften was only printed and distributed Tuesday through Thursday The publication of Aften ended on 20 December 2012 13 Aftenposten started its online edition in 1995 14 Controversies EditAftenposten opposed the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky in 1935 In 1945 Aftenposten published an obituary of Adolf Hitler in which the 86 year old Nobel laureate novelist Knut Hamsun referred to Hitler as a warrior for humankind and a preacher of the gospel of justice for all nations 15 At that time Aftenposten was under the censorship of the German occupying forces Historically Aftenposten has not received the same number of lawsuits or as much attention from the Norwegian Press Complaints Commission as some of the larger tabloids citation needed However there are exceptions In 2007 Aftenposten alleged that Julia Svetlichnaya the last person to interview the murdered Russian national Alexander Litvinenko was a Kremlin agent London correspondent Hilde Harbo admitted having allowed herself to be fed disinformation emanating from the Russian emigrant community without investigating the matter properly 16 Aftenposten eventually had to apologize and pay Svetlichnaya s legal costs In 2011 the newspaper was criticized by Jon Hustad for publishing conspiracy theories that promoted the false claim that convicted Soviet spy Arne Treholt was innocent based entirely on a book by convicted fraudster Geir Selvik Malthe Sorenssen that was revealed to be based on a fabricated source 17 In a study dated 2016 Aftenposten was found to contain the epithet Negro Norwegian neger at the highest frequency in the period between 1970 and 2014 with 674 references 18 In 2021 the paper was criticized by the youth organization of the National Association for Lesbians Gays Bisexuals and Transgender People for allegedly publishing articles that promoted transphobic conspiracy theories about trans women 19 Editorial line EditAftenposten had a conservative stance and supported the political party Hoyre 20 until the breakdown of party press system in the country 6 Following this the paper positioned itself as an independent centre right newspaper 6 Language EditFrom its establishment in 1860 until 1923 Aftenposten was published in the common Dano Norwegian written language used in both Norway and Denmark which was generally known as Danish in Denmark and as Norwegian in Norway and which only occasionally included minor differences from each other in vocabulary or idiom In 1923 Aftenposten adopted the Norwegian spelling standard of 1907 which mainly replaced the soft consonants e g d b characteristic of Danish pronunciation but also used in some Norwegian dialects with hard consonants e g t p characteristic of Eastern Central Norwegian pronunciation but which was otherwise mostly identical with Danish In 1928 Aftenposten adopted the most conservative variant of the spelling standard of 1917 which is largely similar to the moderate Bokmal or Riksmal standard used today During the Norwegian language struggle from the early 1950s Aftenposten was the main newspaper of the Riksmal variety of Norwegian and maintained close ties to the Riksmal movement s institutions recognising the Norwegian Academy for Language and Literature as the sole authoritative body for regulating the Norwegian language as used by the newspaper Due to its status as the country s largest and most influential newspaper Aftenposten therefore had a significant influence on the developments that took place during the Norwegian language struggle The moderate or conservative Riksmal language used by Aftenposten was mainly associated with a conservative stance in Norwegian politics and was contrasted with the radical Samnorsk language an attempt to merge Bokmal with Nynorsk which was promoted by socialist governments in the 1950s By 1960 it had become apparent that the Samnorsk attempt had failed and as a result Aftenposten s Riksmal standard and the government promoted Bokmal standard have in the following decades become almost identical as the Bokmal standard has incorporated nearly all of Riksmal As a consequence Aftenposten decided to describe its language as Moderate Bokmal from 2006 and published its own dictionary based on Riksmal and Moderate Bokmal but excluding radical i e similar to Nynorsk variants of Bokmal The online version of the paper for some years during the early 2000s had an English section To cut costs Aftenposten stopped publishing English language articles in early November 2008 Archives of past material are still available online 21 Circulation EditAftenposten morning paper Edit Aftenposten 1980 2015 Numbers from the Norwegian Media Businesses Association Mediebedriftenes Landsforening 1980 2009 1980 223 925 1981 227 122 1982 230 205 1983 232 459 1984 233 998 1985 240 600 1986 252 093 1987 260 915 1988 264 469 1989 267 278 1990 265 558 1991 269 278 1992 274 870 1993 278 669 1994 279 965 1995 282 018 1996 283 915 1997 286 163 1998 288 078 1999 284 251 2000 276 429 2001 262 632 2002 263 026 2003 256 639 2004 249 861 2005 252 716 2006 248 503 2007 250 179 2008 247 556 2009 243 188 2010 239 831 2011 235 795 2012 225 981 2013 214 026 2014 221 659 2015 211 769 Aften evening paper now defunct Edit Numbers from the Norwegian Media Businesses Association Mediebedriftenes Landsforening 1989 2009 Aften 1989 2009 1939 78 700 1989 193 932 1990 192 896 1991 195 022 1992 197 738 1993 198 647 1994 188 544 1995 186 003 1996 188 635 1997 191 269 1998 186 417 1999 180 497 2000 175 783 2001 167 671 2002 163 924 2003 155 366 2004 148 067 2005 141 612 2006 137 141 2007 131 089 2008 124 807 2009 111 566 Aftenposten no online newspaper Edit The online newspaper Aftenposten no had an average of 827 000 daily readers in 2015 an increase from 620 000 in 2010 22 See also EditList of Norwegian newspapers List of non English newspapers with English language subsections Radio GagaReferences Edit Aftenposten AS Oslo Roller og kunngjoringer Archived from the original on 8 April 2016 Retrieved 30 March 2016 medienorge medienorge Retrieved 13 December 2016 Aftenposten har det hoyeste avisopplaget i Norge Aftenposten 3 March 2016 Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 13 December 2016 Ingrid Brekke 4 May 2013 Tabloid i form men ikke i sjel Aftenposten in Norwegian Archived from the original on 16 January 2014 Retrieved 14 June 2013 Norway leading daily s successful switch to compact Editors Weblog 22 March 2005 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 5 February 2015 a b c Stig A Nohrstedt et al 2000 From the Persian Gulf to Kosovo War Journalism and Propaganda PDF European Journal of Communication 15 3 Archived PDF from the original on 22 December 2015 Aksjonaerer Schibsted www schibsted com Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 29 April 2018 a b c Bernard A Cook 2001 Europe Since 1945 An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 935 ISBN 978 0 8153 4058 4 Svennik Hoyer The Political Economy of the Norwegian Press PDF Scandinavian Political Studies Danish Royal Library 85 141 Joachim Joesten Autumn 1942 The Lights Went Out The Virginia Quarterly Review 18 4 551 JSTOR 26448498 Annual report 2012 PDF Schibsted Media Group Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 26 March 2015 a b Sigurd Allern 2002 Journalistic and Commercial News Values News Organizations as Patrons of an Institution and Market Actors Nordicom Review 2 2 Historien sett gjennom Aften oyne Aftenposten 20 December 2012 Retrieved 14 October 2019 Online Journalism Atlas Norway Online Journalism 25 January 2008 Retrieved 13 January 2015 Gibbs Walter 27 February 2009 Norwegian Nobel Laureate Once Shunned Is Now Celebrated The New York Times p C1 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 8 December 2014 I n Oslo last week at the National Library was the 7 May 1945 edition of a newspaper whose lead article on Hitler s death was by Knut Hamsun As most collaborators lay low preparing alibis Hamsun wrote He was a warrior a warrior for mankind and a prophet of the gospel of justice for all nations Svetlichnaja and Litvinenko Clarifications Aftenposten 9 December 2006 Archived from the original on 14 February 2008 Retrieved 1 February 2009 Hustad Jon 17 June 2011 Konspirasjonsteoretikarane Dag og tid Paul Thomas 2016 Papa Am I a Negro The Vexed History of the Racial Epithet in Norwegian Print Media 1970 2014 Race and Social Problems 8 3 233 doi 10 1007 s12552 016 9179 4 hdl 10642 4424 S2CID 152211098 Stenslie Sol Pride er knapt over for Aftenposten igjen lar en sinna mann spre hysteri og konspirasjonsteorier om transkvinner i idrett Archived from the original on 1 November 2021 Retrieved 17 March 2022 Rolf Werenskjold 2008 The Dailies in Revolt Scandinavian Journal of History 33 4 417 440 doi 10 1080 03468750802423094 S2CID 142265516 So long farewell Aftenposten 5 November 2008 Archived from the original on 8 December 2008 Retrieved 20 November 2008 medienorge Archived from the original on 6 April 2016 Further reading EditMerrill John C and Harold A Fisher The world s great dailies profiles of fifty newspapers 1980 pp 37 43External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aftenposten Official website in Norwegian Portals Economics Journalism Panama Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aftenposten amp oldid 1133869807, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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