Anandabazar Patrika
Front page of 5 March 2009 | |
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | ABP Group |
Editor | Aveek Sarkar |
Founded | 13 March 1922 |
Political alignment | Independent[1] |
Language | Bengali |
Headquarters | 6, Prafulla Sarkar Street, Kolkata-700001 |
Circulation | 1,146,171 Daily[2] (as of November 2015) |
Sister newspapers |
The Telegraph Ebela |
OCLC number | 187024438 |
Website |
www |
Ananda Bazar Patrika (Bengali: আনন্দবাজার পত্রিকা, Bengali pronunciation: [anɔnd̪ɔbadʒar Pɔt̪rika]) is an Indian Bengali language daily newspaper published in Kolkata, New Delhi and Mumbai by the ABP Group. According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, it has a circulation of 1.14 million copies as of November 2015.[2] Presently, the newspaper is edited by Aveek Sarkar. Its main competitors are Bartaman, Sangbad Pratidin, Ei Samay Sangbadpatra.
History
The paper was founded in 1922 by its inaugural editor Prafulla Kumar Sarkar and the founder proprietor, Suresh Chandra Majumdar. It was first printed on 13 March 1922 and was against British rule.[3]
Timeline
- 1922 – First published as a four/page evening daily. A cartoon strip appears. Printer’s line appears; an amendment of the Press Act makes it mandatory. Becomes a six-pager.
- 1923 – Becomes a morning daily. Ties up with Reuters, Associated Press and the Free Press of India. A bi-weekly Anandabazar starts for suburban readers.
- 1925 – First byline appears: Our special correspondent. Becomes a 16-page paper. A new Saturday section, Shanibarer Chithi, starts. It evolves into Rabibashoriyo. First 120-page special supplement on Calcutta Congress; sold out within two hours. Second edition printed on demand.
- 1926 – First Puja special issue, Sharadiya shankhya.
- 1930 – Birth of Ananda Press. Faced with a restrictive Press Ordinance, goes out of circulation for a few months (May 2 – October 31).
- 1932 – Office moves to 1 Burman Street, near Burrabazar. Circulation soars. The company invests in a fast-paced rotary machine.
- 1940 – Anandamela, the children’s section appears in Anandabazar Patrika.
- 1942 – Dailies not printed to protest against regulations imposed on newspapers (August 21 – September 5). Lack of newsprint during World War II results in abridged dailies (June 1 – March 30, 1943).
- 1951 – Delhi edition of Hindusthan Standard published.
- 1954 – Becomes the largest circulated newspaper in the country published from one location, according to the Press Commission report.
- 1955 – The ABP Group has a new home, a new building at Sooterkin Street (later renamed Prafulla Sarkar Street). Ananda Press begins publishing Anandabazar Patrika from 6 Sooterkin Street.
- 1960 – Entertainment section Anandalok introduced.
- 1963 – Anandabazar Patrika and Desh jointly publish the first large-scale readership survey in India — nine years before the first NRS survey.
- 1965 – Colloquial Bengali in narrative prose begins. Formal Bengali only in the editorials now.
- 1972 - Launched Business Standard Newspaper.
- 1973 – Birth of Sunday, an English magazine.
- 1975 – Phototypesetting introduced. Anandalok magazine is born. Business Standard, the business daily, is born. Popular section, Anandamela, is now a magazine.
- 1978 – Sportsworld is launched.
- 1979 – The ABP Group celebrates 200 years of printing and publishing in Bengal with a grand exhibition at the Maidan.
- 1981 – Phototypesetting starts in Bengali. Businessworld, a fortnightly business magazine enters the fray.
- 1982 – Printing takes a giant leap forward with the first full offset printing of Anandabazar Patrika. The Telegraph is born. The first in India to have a modular layout. The last issue of Hindusthan Standard is printed.
- 1983 – The first colour printing (the features section).
- 1984 – News comes to a standstill as ABP faces a 51-day strike
- 1993 – The district pages of the Anandabazar Patrika are launched.
- 1995 – Weekly Knowhow supplement comes out with The Telegraph.
- 1996 – Weekly Telekids and ETC supplements come out. ABP creates a programme to run Bengali with all its conjuncts on Windows 95.
- 2000 – Anandabazar Patrika’s internet edition is launched. The Telegraph in Schools (TTIS) is born.
- 2001 – Prestige software introduced to upgrade page production. Kolkata section appears in Anandabazar Patrika. The beginning of customised split editions.
- 2002 – The first INFOCOM — an IT exposition organised jointly by NASSCOM and Businessworld, takes an initial step towards becoming a giant annual event.
- 2003 – A new-look Anandabazar Patrika hits the stands. Unish Kuri magazine is launched. ABP enters electronic space. Adds STAR News to its bouquet. The Telegraph wins the SNAP certificate — the first non-US newspaper to do so.
- 2004 – The Telegraph appears in a new international look. Prastuti comes out with Anandabazar Patrika. Launch of Unish Kuri Career. ABP claims a place in the highly acclaimed IFRA-International Newspaper Colour Quality Club (INCQC) for The Telegraph for 2004–2006. Computer to plate technology (CTP) introduced in printing.
- 2005 – Boier Desh hits the stands. The Telegraph wins the SNAP certificate again. STAR Ananda, the 24-hour national news channel in Bengali, begins broadcasting. Anandabazar Patrika reaches the one-million circulation benchmark. Anandabazar Patrika wins the SNAP certificate. The Telegraph wins the Bronze award for the Best in Print at the Asia Media Awards. Hey Ya is launched.
- 2010 - In September 2010, Time Inc. entered into a license agreement with ABP Group, one of India’s largest media conglomerate to publish Fortune India magazine.This magazine is publishing the famous Fortune India 500 list every year.[4]
- 2012 - ABP Group launches Ebela, a Bengali tabloid.
Through the years
The Saturday section called "Shanibarer Chithi" and the Sunday section "Rabibasariyo" came into being in 1925 only. The Robibasorio section still appears in the same name, though the Saturday supplement has changed its name to "Patrika". In 1926, the first festival issue - Puja special issue was published - Sharadiya Sankhya. Sharadiya Sankhya is still published regularly. In 1940, a children's section under the name "Anandamela", was introduced. In 1960, an entertainment section mainly composed of movie news, called "Anandalok" was introduced. In 1965, the language of reporting changed to colloquial Bengali (Chalit Bhasha) though the editorial continued to be written in formal Bengali (Sadhu Bhasha). In 1954, Anandabazar Patrika received special honours when the Press Commission report declared it to be the largest circulated newspaper in the country, published from a single location. In 1984, the Patrika publication was closed for 51 days due to a strike. The internet edition of the newspaper was launched in the year 2001.[5]
See also
References
- ↑ "World Newspapers and Magazines: India". Worldpress.org. Retrieved 2014-11-10.
- 1 2 "Submission of circulation figures for the audit period July - December 2015" (PDF). Audit Bureau of Circulations. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
- ↑ "Ananda Bazar Patrika Uniqueness: red ink printing" (PDF). Media Mimansa. 2009.
- ↑ India magazine
- ↑ http://archives.anandabazar.com/oldarchives.html?date=01&month=01&year=101
External links
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