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Aachener Zeitung

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Aachener Zeitung
Building of the Aachener Zeitungsverlag at the Dresdener Straße in Aachen
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatRhenish
PublisherZeitungsverlag Aachen
Editor-in-chiefBernd Mathieu
Founded1946 (1946)
LanguageGerman
HeadquartersAachen
Websitewww.aachener-zeitung.de

Aachener Zeitung (lit. Aachen Newspaper, AZ) is a daily newspaper published in Aachen, Germany. It is printed, alongside the daily Aachener Nachrichten [de], by the Zeitungsverlag Aachen [de] in the Rhenish format.

History

The AZ was founded in 1946 as Aachener Volkszeitung by Jakob Schmitz, Josef Hofmann [de], Albert Maas [de] and Johannes Ernst, first printed on 22 February 1946. It was the first free paper published by Germans after World War II.[1] The paper was renamed Aachener Zeitung on 6 March 1996. The paper was printed initially only two or three times a week, but daily every working day from 1 September 1949; it is sold mainly by subscription and the circulation is about 112,000 copies.[1]

The paper supplies news from around the world, but with a focus on the region, its politics, economy, culture, sports and weather, for readers in Aachen, Eschweiler, Geilenkirchen and Jülich.[1]

Bernd Mathieu is the current editor-in-chief, of the Aachener Zeitung from 1995 and of the Aachener Nachrichten from 2003. The concept of two newspapers in one Redaktion was then new for Germany. Mathieu is a lecturer at the Aachen University of Applied Sciences for Digital Business in media and communications studies.[2] He is a member of the jury of the journalism prize Theodor Wolff Prize.

Mathieu initiated online news service, namely a digital daily evening news "AmAbend“ with photo galleries and videos, provided from 7 pm, in addition to the printed papers which include weekly specials on Wednesdays and Sundays.[2]

Awards

References

  1. ^ a b c "Aachener Zeitung – Geschichte & Abo" (in German). zeitung.de. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Interview mit Bernd Mathieu – Aachener Zeitung / Aachener Nachrichten" (in German). Netzwirtschaft. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  3. ^ "Prämierter Text / Am Ende der Illusion / Von Marlon Gego" (in German). bdzv.de/twp. 2007. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  4. ^ "European Newspaper Award 2001: Zeitung verlieren journalistisches Interesse am Internet" (in German). oberauer.com. 18 November 2001. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  5. ^ "European Newspaper Award für "Welt am Sonntag Kompakt" und "Die Zeit"" (in German). BDZV. 21 November 2012. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  6. ^ "18th Competition Press Release · List of Winners" (PDF). Europrean Newspaper Award. 16 November 2016. Retrieved 21 November 2016.