Argia (magazine)
Categories | Newsmagazine |
---|---|
Frequency | Weekly |
Publisher | Komunikazio Biziagoa S.A.L. |
First issue | 1 January 1919 |
Country | Basque Country |
Language | Basque |
Website | argia.com |
Argia is a weekly newsmagazine published in Basque language, the eldest one still working, after surviving Francisco Franco's dictatorship in Spain. Their main office is in Lasarte-Oria, Basque Country. Its name was Zeruko Argia from 1919 to 1921 and from 1963 to 1980, and Argia from 1921 to 1936 and from 1980 to present. It had to cease its activity because of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, and it could not be published again until 1963, when the authoritarian regimen of Francisco Franco lifted its ban on Basque-language publications.[1]
It was the journalists working in Argia that in 1990 created Euskaldunon Egunkaria, the Basque newspaper that in 2003 was closed down on orders from Juan del Olmo — a Spanish juge in the Audiencia Nacional — on grounds of accusations driven by a "narrow and erroneous view according to which everything that has to do with the Basque language and with culture in that language is promoted and/or controlled by ETA."[2]
References
- ↑ For further data on the language politics of the authoritarian regimen of Francisco Franco, see the "Nationalism" section in Spain under Franco.
- ↑ Sentence of Audiencia Nacional in the Egunkaria case, passed on April 12, 2010.