Sweden Newspapers

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History

The first newspaper in Sweden was Ordinari Post Tijdender an official publication of the Swedish government used to post government proclamations and news from official correspondents. It was renamed Post- och Inrikes Tidningar in 1821, and discontinued publication in 2007. In 1766 the Law on the Freedom of Printing (Tryckfrihetsförordningen) established freedom of the press in Sweden. The first daily newspaper was Dagligt Allehanda, published in Stockholm from 1769-1849. Dagens Nyheter began publication in 1864 as a low-cost, mass-appeal, newspaper. Despite declining readership and an increasing shift to online journalism newspapers in Sweden have high circulation.[1]

Current Newspapers

Newspapers currently being published include:

Resources

Libraries and Archives

The Kungliga Bibliotek (National Library of Sweden/Royal Library) in Stockholm has copies of most newspapers published in Sweden since 1645.

Online Collections

  • 24 Swedish newspapers (1749–1918) - This site is closed and has been replaced by Svenska Dagstidningar
  • DN.arkivet - Digitized version 1864-1992 of the daily Dagens Nyheter $
  • eHP - Hallandsposten - Digitized version 1910- of the daily Hallandsposten $
  • National Library of Sweden Svens­ka webb­tid­ning­ar
  • Nordic Newspapers from OldNews.com™ at MyHeritage — index & images ($)
  • Svenska Dagbladet - historiskt sidarkiv - Digitized version 1884- of the daily Svenska Dagbladet. The current issue is added daily. $
  • Svenska Dagstidningar - Over 400 Swedish contemporary and historical newspapers from 1645 onwards. 19 million pages of which 1,8 millions are Public domain. Free up to 1902; from 1903, free access limited to the National Library of Sweden and 15 university libraries in Sweden.

Sources

References

  1. Wikipedia contributors, "Wikipedia:Svenska dagstidningar," in Wikipedia: Den fria encyclopedin, https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Svenska_dagstidningar, accessed 18 November 2020.