U.K. newspapers
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National newspapers
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Traditionally newspapers could be split into "quality", "serious-minded" newspapers (usually referred to as broadsheets due to their large size) and tabloid, less serious newspapers. However, due to considerations of convenience of reading, particularly in cafés and on trains etc., The Independent and The Times have both recently switched to a 'compact'-sized format, traditionally used by tabloids. The Guardian switched in September 2005 to a Berliner format, a few centimetres wider than a compact, and about 10 centimetres (4 inches) taller.
Sunday "serious-minded" newspapers have tended to keep the broadsheet format due to considerations of size, as to maintain the same level of content in a tabloid paper would result in a single section many would find too thick, heavy and cumbersome. Conveniently fewer people read their Sunday newspaper on a crowded train. This is beginning to change, however, and the Independent on Sunday is now printed in compact format and The Observer in Berliner.
'Serious' papers
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Broadsheet format
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- Daily Telegraph (est. 1855) / The Sunday Telegraph (est. 1961) — owned by David and Frederick Barclay - generally taken to be a Conservative newspaper.
- Financial Times (est. 1888) — owned by Pearson PLC A business oriented daily.
- Sunday Times (est. 1822) — owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation
Berliner format
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- The Guardian (est. 1821) / The Observer (est. 1791) — owned by the Scott Trust; The Guardian became Berliner on 12 September 2005, followed by The Observer on 8 January 2006.
Compact format
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- The Independent (est. 1986) / Independent on Sunday (est. 1990) — owned by Tony O'Reilly; daily became compact only in May 2004, followed by Sunday edition in October 2005.
- The Times (est. 1785) — owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation; solely compact format available from November 2004.
Middle-market papers
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- Daily Express (est. 1900) / Sunday Express (est. 1918) — owned by Richard Desmond's Northern and Shell plc; broadsheet until 1977, now compact (format).
- Daily Mail (est. 1896) / Mail on Sunday (est. 1982) — owned by Lord Rothermere's Daily Mail and General Trust plc; broadsheet until 1971, now tabloid (format).
- Metro — owned by Daily Mail and General Trust plc; distributed free; working towards national status, wide availability in the major cities makes it the UK's 4th highest circulation paper.
Tabloids
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- Daily Star (est. 1978) / Daily Star Sunday
- The People (est. 1881) — owned by Trinity Mirror
- The Daily Mirror (est 1903) / Sunday Mirror (est. 1915) — owned by Trinity Mirror
- The Daily Sport / The Sunday Sport
- The Sun (est. 1964) / News of the World (est. 1843) — owned by News Corporation
Scottish serious papers
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Broadsheet format
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- The Herald (est. 1783) / Sunday Herald (est. 1999)
- Scotland on Sunday (est. 1988)
- The Press and Journal (est. 1748)
- Daily Telegraph has a daily Scottish edition.
- The Courier & Advertiser (est. 1801)
Compact format
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- The Scotsman (est. 1817) — stablemate of Scotland on Sunday, formerly a broadsheet
- The Times has a daily Scottish edition.
Scottish tabloids
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- Daily Record (est. 1842) / Sunday Mail — owned by Trinity Mirror
- The Sunday Post
- The Sun, Daily Mail and Daily Express all have daily Scottish editions.
Welsh serious papers
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- The Western Mail
- Y Cymro (weekly, Welsh language)
Planned newspapers
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- The World, an upmarket compact planned by Stephen Glover
- Life on Sunday, a mid-market Sunday tabloid.
- Y Byd, a daily Welsh language publication
Specialist newspapers
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- Desi Xpress (The UK's only national Asian entertainment weekly tabloid newspaper)
- Dziennik Polski (a daily newspaper aimed at Britain's Polish community, written in Polish)
- Lloyd's List (daily international maritime, shipping and transport newspaper)
- London Gazette (official notices have to be published here, it is the oldest surviving English newspaper)
- Private Eye
- Racing Post - (daily horse racing, greyhound racing and sports betting newspaper)
- The Baptist Times - Baptist/general Protestant newspaper
- The Catholic Herald - Catholic Newspaper
- The Economist (weekly news-focused magazine owned by Pearson PLC)
- The Jewish Chronicle (aimed at Britain's Jewish community)
- Mature Times - the UK's only campaigning newspaper for the over 50s.
- The Morning Star (originally aligned to the Communist Party of Great Britain, now an independent socialist newspaper)
- The Muslim News - Muslim newspaper
- The Sportsman
- The Stage (weekly newspaper covering entertainment issues, focused primarily on the theatre)
- The Tablet - Catholic Newspaper
- The Universe - Catholic newspaper
- The Voice (a weekly tabloid newspaper aimed at the British Afro-Caribbean community)
Regional newspapers
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England
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- Birmingham Mail
- Birmingham Post
- Cambridge Evening News
- Cornish Guardian
- Derby Evening Telegraph
- Eastern Daily Press (owned by Archant)
- East Anglian Daily Times (owned by Archant)
- Essex Chronicle
- The Journal (North East England)
- Lancashire Evening Post
- Leicester Mercury
- Lincolnshire Echo
- Liverpool Echo
- Manchester Evening News
- Medway News
- Newcastle Evening Chronicle
- Nottingham Evening Post
- Northern Echo (North East England)
- North West Enquirer
- Oxford Mail
- Oxford Times
- Reading Chronicle
- Sheffield Star
- Shropshire Star
- Sunday Independent (England) (South West England)
- Sunday Sun (North East England)
- The Asian Today (Midlands) (owned by Urban Media)
- Yorkshire Post
- Western Daily Press
- Western Morning News
Wales
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- Liverpool Daily Post (Welsh edition)
- Llanelli Star
- North Wales Weekly News [1]
- South Wales Echo
- South Wales Evening Post
- South Wales Argus
Scotland
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- West Highland Free Press
- Greenock Telegraph
- Shetland Times
- The Courier, Dundee based daily newspaper
- The Press and Journal, Aberdeen based daily newspaper
Northern Ireland
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- The Belfast Telegraph
- The Irish News
- The (Belfast) News Letter (est. 1737, the oldest continually published English language daily newspaper still in existence)
Local newspapers
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Most towns and cities in the UK have at least one local newspaper, such as the Evening Post in Bristol and The Echo in Cardiff. However, they are not known nationally for their journalism in the way that (despite much syndication) city-based newspapers in the USA are (e.g. The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe). A major exception to this pattern was the well-regarded Manchester Guardian, which dropped the 'Manchester' from its name (1959) and relocated its main operations to London (1964). The group continues to produce a Mancunian paper, the Manchester Evening News.
England
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- Abingdon
- Accrington
- Alton
- Ascot
- Banbury
- Barnsley
- Basingstoke
- Bracknell
- Bradford
- Braintree, Essex
- Braintree and Witham Times
- Bridport (Dorset)
- Birmingham
- The Birmingham Post (mornings)
- The Evening Mail (evenings)
- Forward (Birmingham), formerly the Birmingham Voice (published 20 times a year by Birmingham City Council)
- The Sports Argus (Saturday evenings)
- The Sunday Mercury (Sunday mornings)
- See also [2]
- Bolton
- Brighton
- Burnley
- Bury
- Cambridge
- Chester
- Chester Evening Leader
- Chester Chronicle (weekly)
- Chester and District Standard (weekly; free)
- Chester Mail (weekly; free)
- Chesterfield
- Chorley
- Chorley Citizen (weekly; free)
- Chorley Guardian (weekly)
- Cobham
- Cobham News & Mail weekly
- Colchester
- Coventry
- Coventry Citizen (weekly; free)
- Coventry Evening Telegraph (daily)
- Coventry Observer (weekly; free)
- Crawley
- Crewe
- Crewe Chronicle (weekly)
- South Cheshire Mail (weekly, free)
- Crewe Guardian (weekly, free)
- Croydon
- Croydon Advertiser (weekly, also editions in NE Surrey)
- Derby
- Derby Evening Telegraph
- Derby Express (weekly; free)
- Derby Trader (weekly; free)
- Durham
- Esher
- Esher News & Mail weekly
- Exeter
- Express and Echo (locally known as the "Suppress and Distort")
- Flying Post
- Furness
- Gloucestershire
- Goole
- Goole Times
- Goole, Howden, Thorne Courier (owned by Johnston Press)
- Grantham
- Guildford
- Halifax
- Henley-on-Thames
- Hereford
- Hertfordshire
- Hemel Hempstead and Berkhamsted Gazette (owned by Johnston Press)
- Herald Express, Hemel Hempstead (owned by Johnston Press)
- Watford Observer
- Welwyn Hatfield Times
- Hartlepool
- Heywood
- Holmfirth
- Holme Valley Express
- Hucknall and Bulwell Dispatch
- Huddersfield
- Huddersfield Daily Examiner
- Colne Valley Chronicle
- Huddersfield & District Chronicle
- Huddersfield Weekly News (free)
- Ipswich
- Evening Star (owned by Archant)
- Isle of Wight
- Isle of Wight County Press
- Wight Insight (journal of Isle of Wight Council)
- Kendal
- Kent
- Kent Messenger (several local editions)
- Medway News
- King's Lynn
- Lynn News & Advertiser (Tues & Fri)
- The Citizen ( Weekly, Free )
- Kingston upon Hull
- Lancaster
- Leeds
- Leek
- Leicester
- Liverpool
- London - See List of newspapers in London for a more complete list
- Evening Standard (published by Daily Mail and General Trust plc)
- The Metro
- thelondonpaper, a free evening London newspaper
- Fulham & Hammersmith Chronicle
- Ealing Gazette
- Croydon Advertiser
- South London Press (Dulwich, Southwark, and Streatham)
- Surrey Mirror Advertiser
- Enfield Gazette
- Hounslow Borough Chronicle
- Harrow & Wembley Observer
- Surrey Herald
- Uxbridge Gazette
- Hounslow, Chiswick & Whitton Informer
- Bexley Mercury
- Barking & Dagenham Yellow Advertiser
- The Press (Barnet and Hendon)
- The Wharf (Canary Wharf)
- Kensington & Chelsea Informer
- Croydon Post
- Ealing Leader
- Ealing Informer
- Enfield Advertiser
- Sutton & Epsom Post
- Lewisham & Grenwich Mercury
- Haringey Advertiser
- Harrow Leader
- Harrow Informer
- Ilford & Redbridge Yellow Advertiser
- Kingston Informer
- Mitcham, Morden & Wimbledon Post
- Havering Yellow Advertiser (Romford)
- Richmond and Twickenham Times
- Staines Informer
- Staines Leader
- Streatham, Clapham & Wews Norwood Post
- Uxbridge & Hillingdon Leader
- Brent & Wembley Leader
- Loughborough
- Loughton
- Loughton Guardian (part of the Newsquest group
- Manchester
- Market Harborough
- Middlesbrough
- Middleton, Greater Manchester
- Molesey
- Molesey News & Mail weekly
- Newbury
- Newcastle upon Tyne
- North Yorkshire
- North Yorkshire News(free)
- ny times (free)
- The Advertiser (free)
- Norwich
- Norwich Evening News (daily)
- The Advertiser (Archant) (weekly, free)
- The Pink'Un (weekly, football)
- Nottinghamshire
- Chad (Chronicle Advertiser, Mansfield)
- Nottingham Evening Post
- Newark Advertiser
- Oldham
- Ormskirk
- Oxford
- Peterborough
- The Evening Telegraph (daily, owned by Johnston Press) Peterborough Today - home of The Evening Telegraph
- Plymouth
- Portsmouth
- Sports Mail (weekly, football)
- Reading
- Rochdale
- Salford
- Scarborough
- Selby
- Sheffield
- Shrewsbury
- Skipton
- Southport
- Stockport
- Slough
- Sleaford
- Stoke-on-Trent
- Sunderland
- Swindon
- Tameside (metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester)
- Tamworth
- Taunton
- The Somerset County Gazzette (Weekly; Focus exclusively on Taunton)
- The Taunton Times (Weekly; free)
- Vale of Belvoir
- The Village Voice (monthly; free)
- Melton Times
- Wakefield
- Wakefield Express
- Wakefield Express Extra (weekly; free)
- Walton
- Walton News & Mail weekly
- Warrington
- Weybridge
- Weybridge News & Mail weekly
- Wigan
- Wokingham
- Worcestershire
- Kidderminster Shuttle (weekly; free)
Northern Ireland
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- Andersonstown News
- Antrim Times
- Armagh Standard and Ulster Gazette
- Bangor Spectator
- Belfast News
- Community Telegraph
- Derry Journal
- Derry News
- Down Recorder
- East Belfast Observer
- Fermanagh Herald
- Impartial Reporter
- Larne Times
- Londonderry Sentinel
- Newtownabbey Times
- Newtownards Chronicle
- North Belfast News
- Shankill Mirror
- South Belfast News
- Tyrone Constitution
- Ulster Star
- Ulster Herald
Scotland
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- Glasgow
- Edinburgh
- Aberdeen
- Evening Express, the tabloid sister paper to the Press and Journal
- Dundee
- Evening Telegraph tabloid sister paper of the Courier
- Fife
- Fife Free Press, weekly broadsheet newspaper for Kirkcaldy
- Glenrothes Gazette(Leslie and Markinch News),tabloid sister weekly paper of Fife Free Press
- East Fife Mail, tabloid weekly sister paper of Fife Free Press for Levenmouth area
- Inverness
- Orkney
Wales
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Papurau Bro
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Papurau Bro (Area Papers) are Welsh language newspapers produced nominally monthly (typically 10 issues a year with a summer break) which cover the news in a small area -- a town, group of parishes, one or a few valleys, etc., with a circulation of perhaps a few thousand each. There are between 50 and 60 Papurau Bro which cover the whole of Wales, plus the Welsh communities of Liverpool and London. Papers are frequently named after local features, connections, crafts, etc, or in dialect (clebran, clecs, clochdar, and clonc all imply gossip). The first "papur bro" (Y Dinesydd) appeared in 1973 in Cardiff, and the following decade saw the establishment of most of the others. Much of the work of producing the papers is done voluntarily (aside from the printing), although financial support is given by Bwrdd yr Iaith (Welsh Language Board). Some of the papers listed may have ceased publication.
- Yr Angor (The Anchor)- Aberystwyth, Comins Coch, Llanbadarn Fawr, Penparcau and Waunfawr
- Yr Angor - Merseyside Welsh Community
- Yr Arwydd (The Signal) - Bodafon mountain area, Anglesey
- Y Barcud (The Kite) - Tregaron and District, Ceredigion
- Y Bedol (The Horseshoe) - Ruthin and District, Denbighshire
- Y Bigwn (The Thorn) - Denbigh
- Y Blewyn Glas (The Blue Grass) - Dyfi valley, Machynlleth, Powys
- Y Cardi Bach (The Little Cardi) - Whitland, Carmarthenshire
- Y Clawdd (The ####) - Wrexham and District
- Clebran (The Tattler) - y Frenni
- Clecs Y Cwm A'r Dref (Valley and Town Gossip) - Neath and District
- Clochdar (Cackle) - Cynon Valley, Aberdare, Rhondda Cynon Taf
- Clonc (Gossip) - Lampeter and District
- Cwlwm (The Knot) - Carmarthen
- Dail Dysynni (Leaves of the Dysynni) - Dysynni valley, Tywyn, Gwynedd
- Y Dinesydd (The Citizen) - Cardiff and District
- Y Ddolen (The Link) - Ystwyth to Wyre valleys, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion
- Eco'r Wyddfa (The Snowdon Echo) - Llanrug, Llanberis and Llanddeiniolen parishes, Gwynedd
- Y Fan A'r Lle - Brecon and District
- Y Ffynnon (The Spring) - Eifionydd, Garndolbenmaen, Gwynedd
- Y Gadlas (The Barnyard) - The district between the Conwy and Clwyd valleys
- Y Gambo (The Horse-cart) - Southwest Ceredigion
- Y Garthen (The Coverlet) - Teifi valley, Ceredigion
- Y Glannau (The Riverbanks) - Lower Vale of Clwyd, St Asaph.
- Glo Man (Small Coal) - Aman valley, Carmarthenshire
- Y Glorian (The Scales) - Top of the Rhondda valley, Tonpentre, Rhondda
- Y Glorian - Llangefni, Anglesey
- Goriad (The Key) - Bangor and Port Dinorwic
- Yr Hogwr (The Sharpener) - Bridgend area
- Llafar Bro (Area Speech) - Blaenau Ffestiniog and District, Gwynedd
- Llais (The Voice) - Tawe valley, Swansea
- Llais Aeron (The Voice of Aeron) - Aeron valley, Ceredigion
- Llais Ardudwy (The Voice of Ardudwy) - Ardudwy, Gwynedd
- Llais Ogwan (The Voice of Ogwen) - Ogwen valley, Bethesda, Gwynedd
- Llanw LLю (The Flow of LL10 (postcode area)) - Llyn peninsula, Pwllheli, Gwynedd
- Lleu - Dyffryn Nantlle, Caernarfon
- Y Llien Gwyn (The White Sheet) - Fishguard and District, Pembrokeshire
- Y Lloffwr (The Gleaner) - Dinefwr area, Carmarthen
- Nene - Ponciau, Penycae, Johnstown and Rhosllannerchrugog, Wrexham
- Yr Odyn (The Kiln) - Conwy valley, Llanrwst, Conwy
- Papur Fama (Moel Famau mountain Paper) - Mold and District, Flintshire
- Papur Menai (The Menai Paper) - Menai straits east of Penmon, Anglesey
- Papur Pawb (Everybody's Paper) - Talybont, Taliesin, Tre'r Ddol, Ceredigion
- Papur Y Cwm (The Valley Paper) - Gwendraeth valley, Llanelli, Carmarthenshire
- Y Pentan (The Ingle-nook) - Conwy Valley and estuary (web page)
- Pethe Penllyn (Penllyn Things) - Five parishes of Penllyn, Bala, Gwynedd
- Plu'r Gweunydd (Cotton Grass) - Y Foel, Llangadfan, Llanerfyl, Llanfair Caereinion, Adfa, Cefn Coch, Llwydiarth, Llangynyw, Dolanog, Rhiwhiraeth, Pontrobert, Meifod and Welshpool, Powys
- Y Rhwyd (The Net) - North west Anglesey
- Seren Hafren (The Star of the Severn) - Severn Valley, Newtown, Powys
- Tafod-Elai (The Tongue of the Ely) - Taff Ely, Cardiff
- Tafod Tafwys (The Tongue of the Thames) - for Welsh learners in London
- Y Tincer (The Tinker) - Mouths of the Glyn, Llangorwen, Tirymynach, Tremeurig and Borth valleys, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion
- Tua'r Goleuni (Towards the Light) - Rhymney valley, Caerphilly
- Wilia - Swansea and District
- Yr Wylan (The Seagull) - Penrhyndeudraeth, Porthmadog, Beddgelert and District, Gwynedd
- Yr Ysgub (The Wheatsheaf) - Ceiriog, Tanat and Cain valleys, Powys
Restricted circulation newspapers
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Corporate newspapers
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- Ariel – BBC
University newspapers
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- Gaudie – University of Aberdeen
- Impact – University of Bath
- Redbrick – University of Birmingham
- The Cambridge Student – University of Cambridge
- Varsity – University of Cambridge
- gair rhydd – Cardiff University
- The Demon – De Montfort University
- Student Times – University of Dundee
- Palatinate – Durham University
- The Saint – University of St Andrews
- Concrete – University of East Anglia
- Student – University of Edinburgh
- Exeposé – University of Exeter
- The Universe – University of Hertfordshire
- Felix – Imperial College London
- InQuire – University of Kent
- Liverpool Student – University of Liverpool and Liverpool Hope University
- London Student – University of London
- The Beaver – London School of Economics
- Student Direct – University of Manchester
- The Courier – Newcastle University
- OBScene – Oxford Brookes University
- The Oxford Student – University of Oxford
- The Cherwell – University of Oxford
- SPARK – University of Reading
- The Wessex Scene – University of Southampton
- Seren (English-language) and Y Ddraenen (Welsh-language) – University of Wales, Bangor
- The Waterfront – University of Wales, Swansea
- The Warwick Boar – University of Warwick
- Nouse, Vision – University of York
Defunct newspapers
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- Anti-Jacobin
- The Sunday Correspondent
- Bell's Life In London and Sporting Chronicle (1822-1866) aka Bell's Life.
- Bell's Weekly Messenger
- Black Dwarf
- The Children's Newspaper (1919-1965)
- Daily Courant (est. 1702)
- Daily Chronicle
- Daily Herald
- Daily News
- Daily Post
- Daily Sketch
- Daily Worker
- Despatch (Birmingham)
- Edinburgh Courant (1705-1720)
- Empire News
- The European
- Evening News
- Examiner
- Exchange Herald
- The Graphic
- Labour Elector
- Leeds Mercury (est. 1718)
- Leeds Times
- Liverpool Mercury
- Manchester Chronicle
- Manchester Herald
- Manchester Gazette
- Manchester Observer
- Morning Chronicle
- Morning Post
- News Chronicle
- News on Sunday
- Northern Star
- The Northern Whig
- North Briton
- Pall Mall Gazette
- Political Register
- The Post
- Poor Man's Guardian
- Red Republican
- Republican
- Reynolds' News (became the Sunday Citizen in its last five years of existence from 1962 to 1967)
- Sheffield Register
- Sporting Life (1859-1998)
- Star
- Sunday Correspondent
- Sunday Graphic
- Sunday Dispatch
- The Asian Leader
- Today
- The Week
- Weekly Review
- Workers' Dreadnought
Credit and categories
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