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1The printed word (or character, pictogram, what-have-you) is one of the oldest forms of passing information or creating entertainment. This listing honors print media that has reached the state of LongRunner. Print media includes books (and [[ScienceMarchesOn e-books]]), comics, newspapers, and {{manga}}. Long running is considered to be a print run of 20 years or more.
2
3For book series that have been going for a long time see [[index]]LongRunningBookSeries.
4
5
6'''A Administrivia/{{No Recent Examples|please}} rule applies to this trope''' and examples shouldn't be added until '''20 years''' after the first book, comic or other item's released. That assumes that it's been active for the full two decades. If there's been a lengthy hiatus or a significant gap between sequels, the minimum time required will be longer.
7----
8!!Examples:
9
10[[foldercontrol]]
11
12[[folder:Hall of Fame]]
13To honor those works that will probably remain in print as long as print exists.
14
15* Lewis Carroll's ''[[Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland Alice]]'' stories (in print since 1865)
16* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia'' (in print since 1950)
17* ''Literature/{{Frankenstein}}'' - Creator/MaryShelley (1818-present)
18* Bram Stoker's ''Literature/{{Dracula}}'' (1897-present)
19* Literature/TheBible - Available in one readable form or another for more than 1,600 years (in its present form; individual books are much older).
20** The Gutenberg Bible (very first book printed on a press with movable type): 1455.
21** The ''King James Bible'' (continuously in print since 1611)
22* The Torah has been "in print" for so long that there is argument over ''how'' long. Probably at ''least'' 2,500 years, maybe more. Interestingly, the method of "printing" hasn't changed at all in the meantime; it's the only tome left still commonly handwritten on lambskin scrolls.
23* The ''Analects'' of Creator/{{Confucius}}, the ''Records of the Grand Historian'', Creator/{{Laozi}}'s ''Daodejing'', and other fundamental Chinese writings, especially considering the Chinese invented the printing press long before Europeans did.
24* Literature/TheQuran was first officially written down and standardized in 653 AD. As far as printing goes the oldest surviving printing blocks are from the 10th century.
25* The Vedas, Upanishads and other major Hindu religious works.
26* ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' (in print since 1955)
27* ''Literature/{{On the Origin of Species}}'' - UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin (1859-present)
28* Scriptures of the LDS Church (aka Mormons), in addition to the Bible:
29** ''Literature/TheBookOfMormon'' – In print continuously since 1830.
30** ''Literature/DoctrineAndCovenants'' – Since 1835.
31** ''Literature/{{The Pearl of Great Price}}'' – Since 1851, although portions of it date back to 1831, and some material has been added to it since its first publication.
32* The works of:
33** Creator/CharlesDickens
34** Creator/WilliamShakespeare
35** Creator/OscarWilde
36** Creator/JaneAusten
37** Creator/GeoffreyChaucer
38** Creator/JohnMilton
39** Creator/RudyardKipling
40** Creator/ErnestHemingway
41** Sir Creator/ArthurConanDoyle
42** Euclid
43** Creator/{{Homer}}
44** Dame Creator/AgathaChristie
45** Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs
46** Creator/AntonChekhov
47** Creator/DorothyParker
48** Creator/{{Plato}} - You can still buy print copies of his works, and they've influenced philosophers and other figures for a good few thousand years, with the originals being written in about 300-400 BC.
49** Creator/{{Aristotle}} - Of more-or-less equal stature, influence, and endurance as Plato.
50** Creator/MiguelDeCervantes
51** Creator/RobertLouisStevenson
52* ''Literature/TheEpicOfGilgamesh'' deserves special mention even among epics as it's generally considered to be the oldest concrete "story" humans have to offer. The first versions were written approximately four thousand years ago (2150-2000 BCE) and the most familiar version was codified about a ''millennium'' later (1300-1000 BCE). Even the first modern translation was performed in 1873. Yeah, it's pretty old.
53* ''Literature/RobinsonCrusoe'': It's been published by various people in about 200 editions since 1719, more then 300 years straight.
54* ''Literature/TheLastOfTheMohicans'': America's first "epic novel", in print since 1826, five or six film adaptations.
55* ''Myth/RobinHood''
56* ''Franchise/{{Zorro}}'': The first superhero (and America's only swashbuckler), adapted into dozens of books, films, and TV shows. First appearance in 1919.
57* ''Literature/MobyDick'': published 1851, in print since the 1920s.
58* ''Literature/ThePilgrimsProgress'': in print since 1678.
59* ''Literature/GraysAnatomy of the Human Body'': Since 1858, and the show namer for at least [[Series/GreysAnatomy one tv show]].
60* ''Literature/PeterPan'' (in print since 1902)
61* ''Literature/PerryRhodan'': in print since 1961, 2661 weekly installments, 159,600 pages (as of 2012)
62* ''Literature/NancyDrew'': The original series ran from 1930 to 1956, for a total of 56 books; Simon & Schuster bought the rights from Grosset & Dunlap that year and continued the series until 2004, ending with book 175. A spin-off series is still running.
63* Boiler manufacturer Babcock & Wilcox published the first edition of ''Steam: Its Generation and Use'' in 1875. It is, as of late 2018, on its 42nd edition, and has been continually in print the entire time. Granted, a lot of both the methods of generation and uses for steam have changed a lot since the first edition, and the modern Babcock & Wilcox makes its bread and butter building boilers for nuclear power plants, but still...
64* The ''CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics'', a one-volume reference source[[note]]A ''huge'' volume... it's comparable in mass to a US gallon of water.[[/note]] for research in the stated fields, has been published since 1914. Its current edition, first published in 2022, is its 103rd.
65* Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/FoundationSeries'': While the series itself achieved LongRunningBookSeries status with the release of ''Literature/FoundationsTriumph'' in 1999, the original collections have been republished almost yearly since [[TheFifties the early 1950s]], and the {{novel}}s that succeeded them have been faithfully republished as well.
66* ''Literature/TheWonderfulWizardOfOz'' (in print since 1900)
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Comic Books and Magazine Comics]]
70* ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'' (1977-present). British.
71** The comic book's flagship IP, ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'' (1977-present), has been present in every issue (sorry, "prog") of the comic, except progs 1 and 1139.
72* ''ComicStrip/NittioettanKarlsson'' (1932-present). Swedish.
73* ''ComicBook/DieAbrafaxe'' (1976-present). German.
74* ''ComicBook/ActionComics'', with a new issue hitting newsstands almost every single month since 1938, is the second-longest continuously published American comic books, after stablemate ''Detective Comics''. (And actually has put out more issues than ''Detective'', due to a period in the '80s where ''Action'' went weekly and ''Detective'' remained monthly.) The very first issue introduced Superman, a long-runner in his own right who has been continuously appearing in this and lots of other publications (plus movies, television, video games and practically every other medium) since the late 1930s.
75* ''ComicBook/AdventureComics'' (1935-1983, 2009-2011). American. DC Comics' second anthology comic.
76* ''ComicBook/Agent327'' (1967-1985, 2000-present). Dutch.
77* ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Ford_%28comics%29 Alan Ford]]'' (1969-present). Italian.
78* ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' (1941-present. His very first comic book appearance (as a filler story) was in 1941. The newspaper strip was not started until 1947.) American.
79* ''ComicBook/Aria1979'' (1979-present). Belgian.
80* ''ComicBook/AstroCity'' (1995-present, with a three-year hiatus from 2010 to 2013). American.
81* ''ComicBook/{{Asterix}}'' (1959-present), technically a comic, but he follows a schedule more like a book series. 33 comic books in 50+ years, starting in 1959. All by the same two guys (later one guy) until 2013, when the series was taken over by a new team. French.
82* ''ComicBook/TheAvengers'' (1963-present). American.
83* ''ComicBook/{{Bamse}}'' (1966-present). Swedish.
84* ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' (1939-present). American.
85* ''ComicBook/TheBeano'' (1938-present) British anthology comic, contains these long-running strips:
86** ''The Bash Street Kids'' (1954-present) .
87** ''ComicStrip/DennisTheMenaceUK'' (1951-present).
88** ''Lord Snooty'' (1938-49; 1950-90, intermittently until 2000, then again as ''Lord Snooty the Third'' 2008-2009, the original has appeared occasionally since).
89** ''Minnie the Minx'' (1953-present).
90** ''Roger the Dodger'' (1953-present).
91** ''Billy Whizz'' (1964-present).
92** ''Calamity James'' (1985-present).
93** ''Ball Boy'' (1975-2010s).
94** ''The Numskulls'' (1962-1993 in The Beezer, then 1993-present in The Beano).
95** ''Ivy the Terrible'' (1985-2010s).
96** ''Biffo the Bear'' (1948-1986, 1989-1999, intermittent appearances since).
97** ''Pansy Potter'' (1938-1947, 1949-1955, 1958, 1989-1993).
98** ''Little Plum'' (1953-1986, 1998, 2002-2007, 2011-2010s).
99** ''The Three Bears'' (1959-1985, 1988-1995, 1999-2007, 2010-2011).
100* ''ComicBook/TheBeezer'' (1956-1993; 1,809 issues)
101* ''ComicBook/{{Blackhawk}}'' (27 years in its original run from 1941 to 1968, plus another 10-odd years in scattered revivals)
102* ''ComicBook/BlakeAndMortimer'' (1946-present)
103* ''ComicBook/{{Bunty}}'' (1958-2001)
104* ''ComicBook/{{Buster}}'' (1960-2000, over 2,000 issues)
105* ''ComicBook/TheCartoonHistoryOfTheUniverse'' (1978-2009) Only the first 9 volumes (collected in omnibus volumes 1 and part of 2) were published individually, with the rest published in books with varying {{sequel gap}}s. The final two omnibus volumes were titled ''The Cartoon History of the Modern World''.
106* ''ComicBook/CerebusTheAardvark'' (1977-2004)
107* ''ComicBook/ChickTracts'' (1960-2016) [[note]]It is currently unknown if the comics will continue in light of Chick's death.[[/note]]
108* ''ComicBook/{{Condorito}}'' (1949-2019). Chilean. First appeared as part of the ''Okey'' weekly anthology comic book.
109* ''ComicBook/{{Cubitus}}'' (1968-present).
110* ''ComicBook/TheDandy'' (1937-2012, 3,500 issues)
111* ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' (1964-present)
112* ''ComicBook/{{Diabolik}}'', monthly since November 1962.
113* ''Creator/WaltDisney's Comics and Stories'': 698 monthly issues since 1940, with breaks of varying lengths as the publishers of the title changed. The longest running Disney Comics title.
114** The Swedish ''Kalle Anka & C:o'', fittingly named after Donald Duck's Swedish name, has been ongoing since 1948 - and since 1959, it has been a ''weekly''. It was bi-weekly between 1957 and and 1959, so at the moment of writing this, that means about 2700 issues, give or take a few double-issues during Christmas and the like.
115** ''Mickey Mouse'' comics have been around since 1930, first appearing as a daily newspaper comic strip (that lasted until 1990) and then being turned into its own comic book in 1939. Like ''Walt Disney's Comics and Stories'', it's had its fair share of hiatuses and publisher changes. For a while only reprints were being released, but it's made a comeback since then. They were also being produced in other countries even while it was lying dormant in the US.
116** You want no hiatuses? The French ''Le Journal de Mickey'' has been publishing since early 1952 without hiatuses, although with some double-issues. It passed 3000 in December 2009 and it's weekly. The Dutch ''Donald Duck'' has been publishing since October 25, 1952 without any double-issues or hiatuses. It passed 3000 in April 2010. It had ONE extra count: the 10th issue of 1954 had an extra double. That one's also been counted. Also, the Brazilian, German, Danish, Norwegian and the Finnish (and probably the Spanish too) have published over 2500 issues, all starting 1948-1950. ArchivePanic!
117* ''ComicBook/DetectiveComics'', with a new issue hitting newsstands almost every single month since 1937, is the longest continuously published American comic book. In addition to this, it was the place of birth of Batman (Detective #27, 1939), a long runner in his own right who has been continuously appearing in this and lots of other publications (plus movies, television, video games and practically every other medium) since the late 1930s.
118** By extension, DC's shared universe has been running at least since 1940 (the birth of the Justice Society of America, the first superhero team) and arguably since Superman's debut two years earlier. Connecting every book in DC's main line into one huge, endless narrative, the DCU is one of the largest works of fiction in human history.
119* ''Magazine/DoctorWhoMagazine'' (1979-present). British. There's been a new DWM comic in almost every issue since the first, and it passed the original TV series's 26-year run in 2005.
120* ''ComicBook/ElfQuest'' (1978-present)
121* ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'' (1961-present). American.
122* ''ComicBook/DeGeneraal'' (1971-2003)
123* ''ComicBook/GoldDigger'' (1991-present)
124* ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'' (1988-2013). American.
125* ''ComicBook/HermanHedning'' (1988-present). Swedish
126* ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk'' (1962-present). American.
127* ''ComicBook/InspectorCanardo'' (1979-present). Belgian.
128* ''ComicBook/JanJansEnDeKinderen'' (1970-present). Dutch.
129* ''ComicBook/{{Jommeke}}'' (1955-present). Flemish/Belgian.
130* ''El Jueves'' (1977-present). A Spanish weekly satirical magazine mixing regular strips and political cartoons that has survived numerous fines, bans and censorship for mocking diverse institutions. It had a near-death experience in 2013, when the publisher refused to run an especially harsh front page mocking the monarchy, leading the editor and half the artists to resign.
131* ''ComicBook/DeKiekeboes'' (1977-present), Flemish/Belgian
132* ''Kronblom'' (1927-present), Swedish.
133* ''ComicBook/LooneyTunes'' (1941-1984, 1990, 1993, 1994-present). American. Originally known as ''Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies'', also comprising series featuring Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd and other characters. Only remaining DC Comics humor title.
134* ''[[Magazine/{{MAD}} MAD Magazine]]'' (1952-2018, 2018-present, now mostly reprints). American. Created in retaliation to UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode, contains parodies and satire of popular culture, as well as some recurring series.
135* ''ComicBook/{{Mandy}}'' (1967-1991)
136* ''ComicBook/MeminPinguin'' (1943-2016) Mexican.
137* ''ComicBook/MillieTheModel'' (1945-1973)
138* ''ComicBook/MonicasGang'' (1959-present)
139* ''ComicBook/MortadeloYFilemon'' (1958-present). Creator Creator/FranciscoIbanez has worked in the comic for over 60 years, with only a brief interruption in the 80s due to legal issues with his publisher.
140* ''ComicBook/{{Mosaik}}'', featuring ''Die Digedags'' (1955-1975) and then ''ComicBook/DieAbrafaxe'' (1975-present). German (originally East German).
141* ''ComicStrip/ThePhantom'' (1936-present). It is the most popular comic book in Australia, where it first began running in 1948, and now has more than 2000 issues, with no end in sight.
142* ''ComicBook/PierreTombal'' (1986-present)
143* ''ComicBook/PietPienterEnBertBibber'' (44 years, 1951-1995)
144* ''Magazine/PSMagazine'' (In continuous publication since 1951, 700+ issues so far)
145* ''ComicBook/ThePunisher'' (1974-present)
146* ''ComicBook/RedEars'' (1989-present)
147* ''ComicBook/DeRodeRidder'' (1959 - present, over 238 issues as of 2013)
148* ''ComicBook/{{Spawn}}'' (1992-present, over 320 issues at present) American
149* ''ComicBook/SgtRock'' (30 years from 1958-1988, plus additional special projects)
150* ''ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics'' (1992-2017, 290 issues) American.
151* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'' (1962-present)
152* ''ComicBook/SpirouAndFantasio'' (1938-present)
153* ''ComicBook/{{Supergirl}}'': (1972-present) with breaks of varying lengths.
154* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'' (1938-present)
155* ''ComicBook/SuskeEnWiske'' (1946–present, 234 issues)
156* ''Comicbook/{{Tex|Willer}}'', a western Italian comic still running monthly since 1948 with 590 issues.
157* ''Franchise/{{Tintin}}'': Although Hergé, the author, died in 1983 and forbade in his will that anybody else publish new stories, it's always been in print since its debut in 1929, and probably should be considered Hall of Fame material--it'll obviously stay in print for a loooong time to come (in its original French version, anyway).
158* ''Topaze'' (1931-1970; 1989-1996). Chilean satirical weekly featuring political comic strips and panels.
159* ''ComicBook/TheTopper'' (1953-1990, 1963 issues)
160* ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'' (1984-present)
161* ''ComicBook/TreasureChest'' (1946-1972, 502 issues)
162* ''ComicBook/{{Urbanus}}'' (1982-present), Flemish
163* ''ComicBook/UsagiYojimbo'' (first appearance 1984; title is 1987-present)
164* ''ComicBook/{{Valhalla}}'' (1979-2009)
165* ''ComicBook/WhizzerAndChips'' (1969-1990, 1,092 issues)
166* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman'' (1942-present)
167* ''ComicBook/XMen'' (1963-present)
168[[/folder]]
169
170[[folder:Manga and Manga Magazines]]
171[[AC:Manga]]
172* ''Abu-san'' (1973-2014, 107 volumes)
173* ''Manga/AhMyGoddess'' (1988-2014, 48 volumes [308 chapters])
174* ''Manga/{{Akagi}}'' (1991-2018, 36 volumes)
175* ''Manga/AmaiSeikatsu'' (1990-present, 55+ volumes; includes a sequel series)
176* ''Manga/AnimalYokocho'' (2000-present, 18+ volumes)
177* ''Asari-chan'' (1978-2014, 100 volumes)
178* ''Manga/BakiTheGrappler'' (1991-present, 135+ volumes)
179* ''Manga/Bastard1988'' (1988-present, 27+ volumes)
180* ''Manga/BattleAngelAlita'' Saga (1990-95 [original], 2000-14 [''Last Order''], 2014-present [''Mars Chronicle''])
181* ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'' (1989-present, 41+ volumes but known for frequent [[SeriesHiatus breaks]]; briefly halted with original creator Creator/KentaroMiura's death in 2021, but continued under Kouji Mori and Miura's assistants)
182* ''Manga/BigWindup'' (2003-present, 36+ volumes)
183* ''Manga/BlackLagoon'' (2002-present, 12+ volumes)
184* ''Manga/BoysBe'' (1991-2012, 64 volumes)
185* ''Manga/CaptainTsubasa'' (1981-present, 94+ volumes)
186* ''Manga/CaseClosed'' (1994-present, 91+ volumes)
187* ''Manga/ChibiMarukoChan'' (1986-2018, 17 volumes)
188* ''Manga/CookingPapa'' (1985-present, 161+ volumes)
189* ''Manga/CrayonShinChan'' (1990-2010, 50 volumes; after [[DiedDuringProduction Usui's death]], his staff made a spin-off)
190* ''Manga/{{Dazzle}}'' (1999-present, 23+ volumes)
191* ''Manga/DescendantsOfDarkness'' (1996-present, 13+ volumes)
192* ''Manga/DesertPunk'' (1997-2020, 22 volumes)
193* ''Manga/DNAngel'' (1997-2021, 20 volumes; went on hiatus several times during its run)
194* ''Dokaben'' (1972-2018, 205 volumes spread over five story arcs)
195* ''Manga/{{Doraemon}}'' (1969-1996, 45 volumes)
196* ''Manga/FinderSeries'' (2002-present, 13+ volumes)
197* ''Manga/TheFiveStarStories'' (1986-present, 16+ volumes)
198* ''Manga/FromEroicaWithLove'' (1976-1989 & 1995-2012, 39 volumes)
199* ''Manga/FutariEcchi'' (1997-present, 89+ volumes): longest running erotic manga by volume numbers, for it relies heavily on sexual edutainment, allowing for continuous renewed education topics over the years.
200* ''Manga/GlassMask'' (1976-2004 & 2008-present, 49+ volumes)
201* ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}'' manga (44 years, 1955-1999) [[note]] With the exception of ''Film/KingKongVsGodzilla'', every ''Godzilla'' film from ''Film/{{Gojira}}'' to ''Film/Godzilla2000'' has had at least one manga adaptation.[[/note]]
202* ''Manga/Golgo13'' (1968-present, 206+ volumes – holds record for longest-running manga by timespan and volume count)
203* ''Manga/{{Guyver}}'' (1985-present, 32+ volumes)
204* ''Manga/HajimeNoIppo'' (1989-present, 116+ volumes)
205* ''Manga/{{Historie}}'' (2003-present, 11+ volumes)
206* ''Manga/HunterXHunter'' (1998-present, 36+ volumes; like ''Berserk'', known for frequent breaks)
207* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' (1987-present, 118+ volumes)
208* ''Manga/JunjouRomantica'' (2002-present, 28+ volumes)
209* ''Manga/{{Kaiji}}'' (1996-present, 83+ volumes)
210* ''Manga/KazeHikaru'' (1997-2020, 45 volumes)
211* ''Manga/TheKindaichiCaseFiles'' (1992-present, 76+ volumes)
212* ''Manga/{{Kochikame}}'' (1976-2016, 200 volumes – holds record for longest manga series by page-count)
213* ''Manga/KotaroMakaritoru'' (1982-2004, 94 volumes; includes two sequel series)
214* ''Manga/TheKurosagiCorpseDeliveryService'' (2002-present, 28+ volumes)
215* ''Locke the Superman'' (1967-2023, 101 volumes) [[note]] Not always regular, having started as a doujinshi and survived several publishers.[[/note]]
216* ''Manga/{{Loveless}}'' (2002-present, 13+ volumes)
217* ''Manga/MagicKaito'' (1987-present, 5+ volumes; has technically been on hiatus since 1988 with a very irregular schedule, as creator Gosho Aoyama only occasionally draws new chapters for it while working more continuously on [[Manga/CaseClosed his other long-running manga series]])
218* ''Manga/MinamiKe'' (2004-present, 24+ volumes)
219* ''Manga/MoonlightMile'' (2000-present, 24+ volumes; went on hiatus from 2011 to 2021)
220* ''Manga/MugenShinshi'' (1981-2007, 17 volumes)
221* ''Nijitte Monogatari'' (1978-2003, 110 volumes)
222* ''Manga/NintamaRantarou'' (1986-2019, 65 volumes)
223* ''Manga/NotariMatsutarou'' (1973-1998, 36 volumes)
224* ''Manga/{{Oishinbo}}'' (1983-present, 111+ volumes)
225* ''Manga/OnePiece'' (1997-present, 100+ volumes)
226* ''Manga/OukeNoMonshou'' (1976-present, 55 volumes)
227* ''Manga/{{Patalliro}}'' (1979-present, 97+ volumes [not including spin-off series])
228* ''Manga/Phoenix1954'' (1954-1988, 12 volumes)
229* ''Manga/PocketMonsters'' (1996-present, 41+ volumes)
230* ''Manga/PokemonAdventures'' (1997-present, 61+ volumes)
231* ''Manga/PumpkinScissors'' (2002-present, 23+ volumes)
232* ''Manga/RedEyes'' (1999-present, 28+ volumes)
233* ''Manga/RingNiKakero'' (1977-2009, 51 volumes)
234* ''Manga/RumikoTakahashiAnthology'' (1987-present, 5+ volumes; new chapters are published annually in ''Big Comic Original'')
235* ''Manga/{{Ryuuroden}}'' (1993-present, 61+ volumes; includes two sequel series)
236* ''Manga/SazaeSan'' (1946-1974, 45 volumes)
237* ''Manga/SgtFrog'' (1999-present, 33+ volumes)
238* ''Manga/SkipBeat'' (2002-present, 47+ volumes)
239* ''Manga/StrawberryMarshmallow'' (2002-present, 8 volumes)
240* ''Manga/SuperMarioBrosMangaMania'' (1990-present, 51+ volumes)
241* ''Manga/TekkenChinmi'' (1983-present, 79+ volumes)
242* ''Manga/TsuribakaNisshi'' (1979-present, 78+ volumes)
243* ''Manga/{{Yotsuba}}'' (2003-present, 15+ volumes)
244
245[[AC:Manga Magazines]]
246* ''Magazine/CoroCoroComic'' (1977-present): responsible for the long-runners ''Super Mario-kun'' and ''Doraemon''.
247* ''Magazine/HanaToYume'' (1974-present)
248* ''Magazine/LaLa'' (1976-present)
249* ''Magazine/MangaTimeKirara'' (2002-present)
250* ''Magazine/{{Nakayoshi}}'' (1954-present)
251* ''Magazine/{{Ribon}}'' (1976-present)
252* ''Magazine/ShonenChampion'' (1969-present)
253* ''Magazine/ShonenJump'' (1968-present): Home to the aforementioned long-runners ''Kochikame'', ''[=JoJo=]'s Bizarre Adventure'' and ''One Piece''.
254* ''Magazine/ShonenMagazine'' (1959-present)
255* ''Magazine/ShonenSunday'' (1959-present)
256[[/folder]]
257
258[[folder:Newspaper Comic Strips]]
259* ''Abbie an' Slats'' (1937-1971). American.
260* ''ComicStrip/AdamAtHome'' (1984-present). American.
261* ''Aggie Mack'' (1946-1972). American.
262* ''ComicStrip/{{Agnes}}'' (2002-present). American.
263* ''Alec the Great'' (1931-1969). American.
264* ''ComicStrip/AlleyOop'' (1932-present). American.
265* ''ComicStrip/AndyCapp'' (1957-present). British.
266* ''ComicStrip/AngusOg'' (1959-1989). Scottish.
267* ''Animal Crackers'' (1967-present). American.
268* ''Apartment 3-G'' (1961-2015). American.
269* ''Åsa-Nisse'' (1944-present). Swedish.
270* ''Arlo and Janis'' (1985-present). American.
271* ''[[ComicStrip/SnuffySmith Barney Google and Snuffy Smith]]'' (1918-present). American.
272* ''ComicStrip/{{BC}}'' (1958-present). American.
273* ''ComicStrip/{{Becassine}}'' (1905-1962). French.
274* ''ComicStrip/BeetleBailey'' (1950-present). American.
275* ''Belvedere'' (1962-1995). American.
276* ''Berry's World'' (1963-2003). American.
277* ''Beryl the Peril'' (1953-2012). British. (in ''The Topper'' until 1993, then in ''[[ComicBook/TheDandy The Dandy]]'')
278* ''The Better Half'' (1956-2014). American.
279* ''Betty'' (1920-1943). American.
280* ''ComicStrip/BigNate'' (1991-present). American.
281* ''ComicBook/BlakeAndMortimer'' (1946-present). Belgian.
282* ''ComicStrip/Blondie1930'' (1930-present). American.
283* ''ComicStrip/BonersArk'' (1968-2000). American.
284* ''Boots and Her Buddies'' (daily 1924-1960, Sunday 1926-1969). American.
285* ''The Born Loser'' (1965-present). American.
286* ''ComicStrip/BrendaStarr'' (1940-2011). American.
287* ''Brick Bradford'' (1933-1987). American.
288* ''ComicStrip/BringingUpFather'' (1913-2000). American. Also commonly called "Maggie and Jiggs".
289* ''Bristow'' (1961-present). British.
290* ''Broom-Hilda'' (1970-present). American.
291* ''ComicStrip/TheBroons'' (1936-present). Scottish.
292* ''Brother Juniper'' (1958-1989). American.
293* ''Buck Ryan'' (1937-1962). British.
294* ''The Bungle Family'' (1918-1945). American.
295* ''Bunky'' (1926-1949). American. Initially known as "Bedroom, Parlor and Sink".
296* ''Buz Sawyer'' (1943-1989). American.
297* ''Cap Stubbs and Tippie'' (1918-1966). American.
298* ''Cappy Dick'' (1939-1987). American.
299* ''ComicStrip/{{Cathy}}'' (1976-2010). American.
300* ''ComicBook/LeChat'' (1983-2013). Belgian.
301* ''ComicStrip/{{Crankshaft}}'' (1987-present). American.
302* ''Crock'' (1975-2012). American.
303* ''ComicStrip/{{Curtis}}'' (1988-present). American.
304* ''ComicStrip/DennisTheMenaceUK'' (1951-present). British. (in ''ComicBook/TheBeano'')
305* ''ComicStrip/DennisTheMenaceUS'' (1951-present). American.
306* ''Desperate Dan'' (1937-2012). British. (in ''ComicBook/TheDandy'')
307* ''ComicStrip/DickTracy'' (1931-present). American.
308* ''Dickie Dare'' (1933-1957). American.
309* ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' (1989-2023). American.
310* ''Dinglehoofer und his Dog'' (1926-1951). American.
311* ''Dixie Dugan'' (1929-1966). American.
312* ''Dondi'' (1955-1986). American.
313* ''ComicStrip/{{Doonesbury}}'' (1970-present). American.
314* ''Drabble'' (1979-present). American.
315* ''ComicStrip/DykesToWatchOutFor'' (1983-2008). American.
316* ''Eek & Meek'' (1965-2000). American.
317* ''Ella Cinders'' (1925-1961). American.
318* ''Emmy Lou'' (1944-1979). American. Originally titled "Bobby Sox".
319* ''Eric De Noorman'' (1946-1964). Dutch.
320* ''Etta Kett'' (1925-1974). American.
321* ''ComicStrip/{{Elvis|2000}}'' (2000-present). Swedish.
322* ''La Familia Burron'' (1948-2010). Mexican.
323* ''De Familie Doorzon'' (1989-2010). Dutch
324* ''ComicStrip/TheFamilyCircus'' (1960-present). American.
325* ''Fatty Finn'' (1923-1977). Australian.
326* ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat'' (1923-1966). American.
327* ''Ferd'nand'' (1937-2012). Danish.
328* ''ComicStrip/FlashGordon'' (1934-2003). American.
329* ''ComicStrip/FoxTrot'' (1988-present; dailies until 2006, Sundays only 2007-). American.
330* ''ComicStrip/FrankAndErnest'' (1972-present). American.
331* ''Freckles and His Friends'' (1915-1971). American.
332* ''ComicStrip/FredBasset'' (1963-present). British.
333* ''ComicStrip/ForBetterOrForWorse'' (1979-2008). Canadian.[[labelnote:*]] but with heavy US circulation[[/labelnote]]. Touched-up reruns running since.
334* ''Fred Basset'' (1963-present). British.
335* ''ComicStrip/FunkyWinkerbean'' (1972-present). American.
336* ''The Gambols'' (1950-present). British.
337* ''ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}'' (1978-present). American.
338* ''Garth'' (1943-1997). British.
339* ''ComicStrip/GasolineAlley'' (1918-present). American.
340* ''Geech'' (1982-2003). American.
341* ''ComicStrip/GeorgeAndLynne'' (1976-2010). British.
342* ''ComicStrip/GilThorp'' (1958-present). American.
343* ''Ginger Meggs'' (1921-present). Australian.
344* ''Gordo'' (1941-1985). American.
345* ''Grandma'' (1947-1969). American.
346* ''Grin and Bear It'' (1932-40, 1942-2015). American.
347* ''The Gumps'' (1917-1959). American.
348* ''ComicStrip/HagarTheHorrible'' (1973-present). American.
349* ''Hälge'' (1991-present). Swedish
350* ''Happy Hooligan'' (1900-1932). American. Also known as "Down in the Farm" and "Mr. Dough and Mr. Dubb".
351* ''Harold Teen'' (1919-1959). American.
352* ''Hazel'' (1943-1993). American. Appeared weekly in ''The Saturday Evening Post'' until 1969, then in daily newspaper syndication. Currently in reprints.
353* ''The Heart of Juliet Jones'' (1953-2001). American.
354* ''ComicStrip/{{Heathcliff}}'' (1973-present). American.
355* ''Henry'' (daily 1932-1990, Sunday until 1995; currently in reruns). American.
356* ''Herman'' (1975-present, although it's mostly been in reruns since 1992). American.
357* ''ComicStrip/HiAndLois'' (1954-present). American.
358* ''The Jackson Twins'' (1950-1979). American.
359* ''Jane'' (1933-1959). British.
360* ''Jane Arden'' (1927-1968). American.
361* ''Jeff Cobb'' (1955-1978). American.
362* ''Jerry on the Job'' (1913-1932, 1946-1949). American.
363* ''Joe Palooka'' (1930-1984). American.
364* ''ComicStrip/JudgeParker'' (1952-present). American.
365* ''Just Kids'' (1923-1957; known as "Mush Stebbins and Sister" from 1950).
366* ''ComicStrip/TheKatzenjammerKids'' (1897-2006). American. Yes you read that right; more than a ''century'' of continuous production. [[note]] When creator Rudolph Dirks left the strip in 1914 owing to a dispute with newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst, he created a competing strip featuring the same characters (''The Captain and the Kids''), which itself ran for more than 60 years (1914-1979). The Katzenjammers are currently in reprints.[[/note]]
367* ''Kerry Drake'' (1943-1983). American.
368* ''Korky the Cat'' (1937-present). British. (in ''[[ComicBook/TheDandy The Dandy]]'')
369* ''ComicStrip/KrazyKat'' (1913-1944). American.
370* ''Kudzu'' (1981-2007). American.
371* ''ComicStrip/LifeInHell'' (1977-2012). American.
372* ''ComicStrip/LilAbner'' (1934-1977). American.
373* ''Lilla Fridolf'' (1955-present). Swedish.
374* ''Little Annie Rooney'' (1927-1966). American.
375* ''Little Iodine'' (1943-1985). American.
376* ''Little Jimmy'' (1904-1941, Sunday-only 1945-1958). American.
377* ''The Little King'' (1933-1975). American. The newspaper strip in 1933-34 was titled "The Ambassador".
378* ''Little Mary Mixup'' (1917-1956). American.
379* ''ComicStrip/LittleOrphanAnnie'' (1924-2010). American.
380* ''ComicStrip/TheLockhorns'' (1968-present). American.
381* ''ComicStrip/LoveIs'' (1970-present). New Zealander.
382* ''ComicStrip/{{Luann}}'' (1985-present). American.
383* ''ComicStrip/MadamAndEve'' (1992-present). South African.
384* ''ComicStrip/MallardFillmore'' (1994-present). American.
385* ''ComicStrip/MandrakeTheMagician'' (1934-present). American.
386* ''ComicStrip/MarkTrail'' (1946-present). American.
387* ''ComicStrip/{{Marmaduke}}'' (1954-present). American.
388* ''ComicStrip/{{Marvin}}'' (1982-present). American.
389* ''Mary Perkins, On Stage'' (1957-1979). American.
390* ''ComicStrip/MaryWorth'' (1932-present). American.
391* ''Mickey Finn'' (1936-1976). American.
392* ''Miss Peach'' (1957-2002). American.
393* ''Mr. and Mrs.'' (1919-1963). American.
394* ''ComicStrip/ModestyBlaise'' (1963-2002). British.
395* ''Momma'' (1970-present). American.
396* ''Moon Mullins'' (1923-1991). American. [[labelnote:Fun Fact]] Ferd Johnson – assistant to creator Frank Willard – worked on the strip during its ''entire'' run.[[/labelnote]]
397* ''Moose & Molly'' (1965-2020). American. Previously titled "Moose" and "Moose Miller".
398* ''Mopsy'' (1939-1965). American.
399* ''ComicStrip/MotherGooseAndGrimm'' (1984-present). American.
400* ''Muggs and Skeeter'' (1927-1974). American.
401* ''ComicStrip/MuttAndJeff'' (1907-1983). American.
402* ''ComicStrip/{{Nancy}}'' (1938-present). American. [[note]] This comic is an offshoot of ''Fritzi Ritz'', which began in 1922 and had a separate Sunday edition until 1968.[[/note]]
403* ''The Nebbs'' (1923-1947). American. In 1947 the family became supporting characters on ''The Toodle Family'' (1940-1961).
404* ''The Neighbors'' (1939-1976). American.
405* ''ComicStrip/{{Nero}}'' (1947-2002). Flemish. [[note]] Drawn by the same artist, Marc Sleen, until 1992. He even entered the Guinness Book Of Records for drawing the longest running comic strip by a single artist! (though he's since been surpassed by Charles Schulz). During the strip's final decade he took a back seat as a script writer, with another artist drawing everything.[[/note]]
406* ''Oaky Doaks'' (1935-1963). American.
407* ''ComicStrip/OnTheFastrack'' (1984-present). American.
408* ''ComicStrip/OneBigHappy'' (1988-present). American.
409* The ''Opus'' saga: ''ComicStrip/BloomCounty'' (1980-1989), ''Outland'' (1989-1995), and ''Opus'' (2002-2008), followed by a web-only revival of ''Bloom County'' (2016-present). American.
410* ''Oor Wullie'' (1936-present). Scottish.
411* ''Our Boarding House'' (1921-1984). American. Also commonly called "Major Hoople".
412* ''Out Our Way'' (1922-1977). American. Also known as "The Willets", who were the stars of the Sunday page.
413* ''Panda'' (1946-1991). Dutch.
414* ''ComicStrip/PaulusDeBoskabouter'' (1946-1984). Dutch.
415* ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' (1950-2000). American.
416* ''Penny'' (1943-1970). American.
417* ''Pepe Antártico'' (1947-2016). Chilean.
418* ''ComicStrip/ThePerishers'' (1959-2006). British. Currently in reprints.
419* ''Pete the Tramp'' (1932-1963). American.
420* ''ComicStrip/PiranhaClub'' (1988-2018). American. Known as "Ernie" until 1998.
421* ''ComicStrip/{{Pluggers}}'' (1993-present). American.
422* ''ComicStrip/{{Pogo}}'' (1948-1975). American. There was also an unsuccessful {{revival}} strip that ran from 1989-93.
423* ''Polly and Her Pals'' (1912-1958). American.
424* ''ComicStrip/{{Popeye}}'' (1929-present). American. The strip began in 1919 as ''Thimble Theatre''. Daily strips have been in reprints since 1994, while Sunday strips are still being produced.
425* ''ComicStrip/PrinceValiant'' (1937-present). American.
426* ''ComicStrip/PriscillasPop'' (1946-1983). American.
427* ''ComicStrip/PugadBaboy'' (1988-2013, 2018-2019). Filipino. Web-based from 2013-2018 and 2019-present.
428* ''ComicStrip/RasmusKlump'' (1951-present). Danish.
429* ''ComicStrip/DeRechter'' (1993-present). Dutch.
430* ''Redeye'' (1967-2008). American.
431* ''Red Ryder'' (1938-1964). American.
432* ''Reg'lar Fellers'' (1917-1949). American.
433* ''ComicStrip/RexMorganMD'' (1948-present). American.
434* ''ComicStrip/RickOShay'' (1958-1981). American.
435* ''Right Around Home'' (1937-1964). American.
436* ''Franchise/RipleysBelieveItOrNot'' (1918-present). American.
437* ''ComicStrip/RupertBear'' (1920-present). British.
438* ''ComicStrip/SafeHavens'' (1988-present). American.
439* ''[[ComicStrip/SallyForthHoward Sally Forth]]'' (1982-present). American.
440* ''ComicStrip/SamAndSilo'' (1977-present). American. A {{retool}} of ''ComicStrip/SamsStrip'' (1961-1963).
441* ''Scorchy Smith'' (1930-1961). American.
442* ''Secret Agent X-9'' (1934-1996). American.
443* ''ComicStrip/ShermansLagoon'' (1991-present). American.
444* ''ComicStrip/{{Shoe}}'' (1977-present). American.
445* ''Silent Sam'' (1920-1964). Swedish. Also published as "Adamson's Adventures".
446* ''Sjors en Sjimmie'' (1938-2005). Dutch. [[note]] By different artists, in different styles, but always the same protagonists.[[/note]]
447* ''Skippy'' (1923-1945). American.
448* ''ComicStrip/SlylockFox'' (1987-present). American.
449* ''Smilin' Jack'' (1933-1973). American.
450* ''Smitty'' (1922-1973). American.
451* ''Smokey Stover'' (1935-1973). American.
452* ''ComicStrip/SpyVsSpy'' (1962-present). Cuban, then American. Mainstay of ''[[Magazine/{{MAD}} MAD Magazine]]''.
453* ''ComicStrip/SteveCanyon'' (1947-1988). American.
454* ''Steve Roper and Mike Nomad'' (1936-2004). American. Originally called "Big Chief Wahoo". Steve Roper first appeared in 1940, while Mike Nomad turned up in 1956, almost a decade after Wahoo was written out.
455* ''ComicStrip/StoneSoup'' (1995-2020). American.
456* ''Tank [=McNamara=]'' (1974-present). American.
457* ''Terry and the Pirates'' (1934-1973). American.
458* ''There Oughta Be a Law!'' (1948-1984). American.
459* ''They'll Do It Every Time'' (1929-2008). American.
460* ''Tiger'' (1965-2005). American.
461* ''Tillie the Toiler'' (1921-1959). American.
462* ''Tim Tyler's Luck'' (1928-1996). American.
463* ''The Timid Soul'' (1924-1953). American.
464* ''ComicBook/TomPoes'' (1938 or 1941-1986. The ambiguity over how old this strip is, is due to the fact that it made its very first appearance in Argentina and Czechoslovakia as a weekly gag strip in 1938. In 1941, it replaced ComicBook/MickeyMouse as a daily in the newspaper ''De Telegraaf''.)
465* ''Toonerville Folks'' (1908-1955). American.
466* ''ComicStrip/TootsAndCasper'' (daily 1918-1951, Sunday 1920-1956). American.
467* ''ComicStrip/{{Tumbleweeds}}'' (1965-2007). American.
468* ''ComicStrip/TheWackyAdventuresOfPedro'' (1990-2022). American. Mainstay of ''Boys' Life'' magazine. Title character created in 1947.
469* ''Wash Tubbs''[=/=]''Captain Easy'' (1924-1988). American. [[note]] This one is kind of complicated. The ''Wash Tubbs'' strip started in 1924 as a daily. The character of Captain Easy was introduced in it in 1929 as a sidekick to Tubbs. In 1933 Captain Easy got a Sunday strip with Tubbs making occasional appearances, while Tubbs kept the daily strip and Easy made occasional appearances. In 1949, the two strips were combined and syndicated as ''Captain Easy'', and continued under that name until 1988.[[/note]]
470* ''Wee Pals'' (1965-2024). American.
471* ''Winnie Winkle'' (1920-1996). American.
472* ''Winthrop'' (1956-1993). American. Originally titled "Morty Meekle".
473* ''ComicStrip/TheWizardOfId'' (1964-present). American.
474* ''ComicStrip/{{Ziggy}}'' (1968-present). American. First appearance in book collection, in newspapers since 1971.
475* ''ComicStrip/ZippyThePinhead'' (1971-present). American. First appearance in underground comix. Nationally syndicated since 1976, first as a weekly and then as a daily King Features newspaper strip starting in 1986.
476* ''ComicStrip/{{Zits}}'' (1997-present). American.
477[[/folder]]
478
479[[folder:Newspapers, Magazines, and Academic Journals]]
480Due to the exceptional shelf-life of many publications, long-runners in this category are those that reach 150 years in print.
481* ''24 heures'' (Lausanne) (1762–present; claims to be the world's oldest newspaper with uninterrupted publication, although it only adopted its current name in 1972)
482* ''Åbo Underrättelser'' (Turku/Åbo[[note]]Turku is the Finnish name, Åbo the Swedish name. As you might guess, the paper is published in Swedish.[[/note]]) (1824–present)
483* ''Açoriano Oriental'' (Azores) (1835–present)
484* ''Aftonbladet'' (Stockholm) (1830–present, though it had ''25 different names'' before adopting the current one in 1852)
485* ''The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle'' (c. 900–1150)
486* ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette'' (Little Rock) (1819–present; spent most of the period from 1819–1991 as the ''Arkansas Gazette'' and was merged with the ''Arkansas Democrat'' in 1991)
487* ''The Atlanta Constitution'' (1868–present; known as the ''Journal-Constitution'' since 2001)
488* ''The Atlantic'' (1857–present): Originally ''The Atlantic Monthly''; the word "Monthly" was removed from the cover in 2004, three years after it [[ArtifactTitle stopped publishing in every month]].[[note]]11 issues in both 2001 and 2002, and 10 issues in every year since.[[/note]] The name was officially changed to ''The Atlantic'' in 2007.
489* ''The Augusta Chronicle'' (1785–present)
490* ''Baltimore American'' (1773–1964, then the ''News-American'' until 1986)
491* ''The Baltimore Sun'' (1837–present)
492* ''Berlingske'' (Copenhagen) (1749–present under several different names)
493* ''Berrow's Worcester Journal'' (England) (1690–present)
494* ''Le Bien Public'' (Dijon) (1868–present)
495* ''Boletín Oficial del Estado'' (1661–2008; official legislative newspaper of Spain. Known as ''Gaceta de Madrid'' until 1936; went online-only effective 1 January 2009.)
496* ''Boston Herald'' (1846–present)
497* ''Brantford Expositor'' (Ontario) (1852–present)
498* ''Der Bund'' (Bern) (1850–present)
499* ''Canada Gazette'' (1841–2014): The country's official federal government gazette, where new laws and regulations are officially published (contrast with ''Hansard'', which publishes parliamentary proceedings). It was print-only until 1998, when an online edition was added. In 2003, the online edition received the same official status as the print edition. Print publication ended on April 1, 2014.
500* ''Cape Argus'' (Cape Town) (1857–present)
501* ''La Capital'' (Rosario, Argentina) (1867–present)
502* ''Charleston Gazette-Mail'' (West Virginia) (1873–present; spent most of the period from 1873–2015 as the ''Charleston Gazette'' and was merged with the ''Charleston Daily Mail'' in 2015)
503* ''Chicago Tribune'' (1847-ongoing; its parent company also owns other publications such as the ''Hartford Courant'', below)
504* ''The Cincinnati Enquirer'' (1849–present under current name, but...)
505** Its first issue under the ''Enquirer'' name (as the ''Daily Cincinnati Enquirer'') was in 1841, and predecessor newspapers date to 1828.
506* ''Congressional Record'' (1873–present) — the record of the proceedings of the US Congress (equivalent to the ''Hansard'' of the UK and several Commonwealth countries)
507* ''Cornwall Standard-Freeholder'' (Ontario) (1846–present): Date applies to the paper's oldest predecessor, the ''Cornwall Freeholder''. The current name was adopted with the 1932 merger of the ''Freeholder'' and the ''Cornwall Standard'' (founded in 1886).
508* ''The Courier-Journal'' (Louisville) (1868–present under current name, but...)
509** Its earliest predecessor, ''The Focus of Politics, Commerce and Literature'', was first published in 1826. ''The Louisville Daily Journal'' was established in 1830 and absorbed ''The Focus'' two years later. In 1844, the ''Louisville Morning Courier'' began publication. The current name was adopted when the ''Courier'' and ''Journal'' merged in 1868.
510* ''Le Courrier'' (Geneva) (1868–present)
511* ''Le Courrier du pays de Retz'' (Pomic, France) (1844–1944, 1946–present, although it didn't get its current name until 1996)
512* ''Dagbladet'' (Oslo) (1869–present)
513* ''Dagens Nyheter'' (Stockholm) (1864–present)
514* ''The Daily Hampshire Gazette'' (1786-ongoing) serves Hampshire county in Massachusetts (it hasn't been daily its whole run, though).
515* ''The Daily Telegraph'' (1820–present)
516* The Texas edition of ''The Daily News'' is Texas' oldest newspaper and has been serving the city of Galveston and Galveston county since 1842.
517* ''La Dépeche'' (1870–present) – Applies only to the paper's original Toulouse edition. Sixteen other local editions are published throughout the paper's home region of Occitanie.
518* ''Detroit Free Press'' (1831–present)
519* ''Diário de Noticias'' (Lisbon) (1864–present)
520* ''Diário de Pernambuco'' (Recife, Brazil) (1825–present)
521* ''Diário dos Açores'' (Azores) (1870–present)
522* ''Drammens Tidende'' (Drammen, Norway) (1832–present)
523* ''Magazine/TheEconomist'' (1843–present)
524* ''Evening Standard'' (1827–present)
525* ''L'Express'' (Neuchâtel) (1738-2018)
526* ''The Farmer's Almanac'' (1818–present)
527* ''Le Figaro'' (1826–present)
528* ''Gazeta de Barcelona'' (1641–1808)
529* ''Gazzetta di Mantova'' (Mantua) (1664–present; the world's oldest newspaper currently published under its original name)
530* ''La Gazette'' (French weekly) (1631–1915)
531* ''The Gazette'' (Montreal) (1778–present).
532* ''Gazette officielle du Québec'' (1869–present): The province's government newspaper.
533* ''The Globe and Mail'' (1844–present): The 1844 date applies to its oldest predecessor, ''The Globe''. The paper's current incarnation resulted from the 1936 merger of ''The Globe'' with ''The Mail and Empire'', itself founded by the 1895 merger of ''The Toronto Mail'' (1872) and ''The Empire'' (1887).
534* ''Göteborgs-Posten'' (Gothenburg) (1813–1822, 1850–present; daily since 1939)
535* ''The Guardian'' (1821–present; known as ''The Manchester Guardian'' until 1959.)
536* ''The Hamilton Spectator'' (Ontario) (1846–present; originally ''The Hamilton Spectator and Journal of Commerce'')
537* ''The Hansard'', the record of the proceedings of the Parliament of Canada, published since 1868.
538* The British ''Hansard'' has been published continuously since 1802 (though they weren't called Hansard until 1829).
539* ''Haarlems Dagblad'', a regional newspaper from the Netherlands, claims a founding date of 1656. The original newspaper that had been in print since 1656, ''Opregte Haarlemsche Courant'', was forced to merge with the then bi-weekly ''Haarlems Dagblad'' by the occupying Germans in 1942. The merged publication assumed the younger newspaper's name but still claimed the older newspaper's publishing history.
540* ''Harper's'' (US) (1850-ongoing)
541* ''Hartford Courant'' (1764-ongoing; the self-proclaimed oldest newspaper in America. Just how old is it? Old enough to author an [[http://articles.courant.com/1993-04-13/news/0000103420_1_feared-courant-church-and-state apology]] to Thomas Jefferson almost 200 years after saying, among other, less flattering things, that should he have won the election of 1800 (which he did, in fact, win), "the air will be rent with the cries of distress, the soil soaked with blood, and the nation black with crimes.")
542* ''L'Indépendant'' (Perpignan, France) (1846–present)
543* ''The Intelligencer'' (Belleville, Ontario) (1834–present)
544* ''Irish Examiner'' (Cork) (1841–present; originally ''The Cork Examiner'' and later ''The Examiner'')
545* ''The Irish Times'' (1859-ongoing; still considered the country's newspaper of record)
546* ''The Journal'' (Newcastle) (1832-ongoing)
547* ''Journal de la Corse'' (Corsica) (1817–present)
548* ''Le Journal de Saône-et-Loire'' (Chalon-sur-Saône) (1826–present)
549* ''The Kingston Whig-Standard'' (Ontario) (1834–present) – Originally ''The British Whig'' and later ''The Kingston Whig''; adopted current name via a merger in 1926. The word "Kingston" was dropped in 1973 but restored some time in the early 1990s.
550* ''The Lancet'' (1823–present)
551* ''Ledger-Enquirer'' (Columbus, Georgia) (1826–present) – Originally a weekly as the ''Columbus Enquirer''. Merged with the ''Daily Sun'' in 1874, creating the ''Columbus Enquirer-Sun'', later reverting to the ''Enquirer'' name. The current name was adopted in 1988, when the ''Enquirer'' and ''Columbus Ledger'' (founded in 1886), which had previously published a joint Sunday paper, merged their daily editions.
552* ''Lexington Herald-Leader'' (Kentucky) (1870–present) – Adopted its current name in 1983 with the merger of the ''Lexington Herald'' and ''Lexington Leader''; the 1870 date reflects the founding of the ''Herald'' as the ''Lexington Daily Press''.
553* ''Liverpool Daily Post'' (1855–present)
554* ''London Gazette'' (1665–present). This is the official government paper-of-record of the UK and does not function like a standard newspaper.
555* ''The London Free Press'' (Ontario) (1849–present)
556* ''Magyar Közlöny'' (1848–present; official legislative newspaper of Hungary. Between 1849 and 1867 its legal predecessor functioned as a government newspaper only since legislature was suspended.)
557* ''El Mercurio de Valparaíso'' (1827–present)
558* ''La Nación'' (Buenos Aires) (1870–present)
559* ''Nature'' (1869–present)
560* ''Neue Zürcher Zeitung'' (1780–present; originally ''Zürcher Zeitung'', with ''Neue'' added in 1821)
561* ''The New Hampshire Gazette'' (on-and-off since 1756; also claims to be America's oldest paper)
562* ''New York Post'' (1801–ongoing; claims to be America's longest continuously-published newspaper)
563* ''The New York Times'' (1851–present)
564* ''The New Zealand Herald'' (Auckland) (1863–present)
565* ''Newport Mercury'' (Rhode Island) (1758–2019): Published regularly until December 1776, when the British occupied the city during the [[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution Revolutionary War]]. Publication resumed when the British left in 1779. In 1928, the ''Newport Daily News'' bought the ''Mercury'', but the ''Mercury'' continued as a weekly subscription paper until 2005, when it was relaunched as a free alt-weekly. Weekly publication ended in April 2018, but the ''Mercury'' continued for about a year as a free monthly and an insert in the ''Daily News''.
566* ''The News & Observer'' (1865–present; though it only changed to the current name in 1880)
567* ''The News Letter'' (Belfast) (1737–present; claims to be the world's oldest continuously published English-language daily newspaper.)
568* ''News of the World'' (1843–2011)
569* ''Nova Scotia Royal Gazette'' (1752–present): Originally the ''Halifax Gazette'', it published as a newspaper until three days after Canadian Confederation in 1867, at which time it adopted its current name and became the province's official legislative journal.
570* ''The Observer'' (1791–present)
571* ''[[http://www.Almanac.com The Old Farmer's Almanac]]'' (1792-ongoing; 2017 declairs it as the 225 issue this year. Famous quote: '''''Usefull with a degree of humor.''''')
572* ''Ontario Gazette'' (1868–present): The province's government newspaper.
573* ''The Oregonian'' (Portland) (1850–present)
574* ''L'Osservatore Romano'' (Vatican City) (1861–present) – Applies only to the daily Italian-language edition. Since 1949, weekly editions have been added in Italian and six other languages, plus a monthly edition in Polish.
575* ''Otago Daily Times'' (Dunedin) (1861–present)
576* ''Ottawa Citizen'' (1845–present) — Founded as ''The Bytown Packet''; became the ''Bytown Citizen'' in 1851 and adopted the current name when Bytown was subsumed by Ottawa in 1855.
577* ''The Peterborough Examiner'' (Ontario) (1847–present)
578* ''Philadelphia Inquirer'' (1829–present)
579* ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'' (1786–present; originally a weekly simply called ''The Gazette'', it became a daily in 1844 and acquired its present name, following several additional changes, in 1927.)
580* ''The Plain Dealer'' (Cleveland) (1842–present)
581* ''Post & Inrikes Tidningar'' (1645–present). This is the government newspaper of Sweden, and the oldest currently published newspaper in the world. It has basically been online-only since 2007, but four physical copies of each new issue are still printed, in order to maintain its status as a "print" publication.
582* ''La Prensa'' (Buenos Aires) (1869–present)
583* ''The Press'' (Christchurch) (1861–present). Though founded six months before the ''Otago Daily Times'', ''The Press'' was a weekly until March 1863, while the ''ODT'' has been a daily since its establishment.
584* ''Le Progrès'' (Lyon) (1859–present)
585* ''The Providence Journal'' (1829-ongoing; Another claimant to the "oldest newspaper in the US" title. They claim to be the "oldest continuously published ''daily'' newspaper in the United States", as the ''Hartford Courant'' didn't become a daily until 1837, and a few strikes in the 1950's and 1970's have caused the ''New York Post'' not to publish a daily paper).
586* ''Punch'' (1841–2002)
587* ''Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph'' (Quebec City) (1764–present) – Another claimant to the "oldest newspaper in North America" title. Started as the ''Quebec Gazette'', a weekly with English and French editions; missed a few days during the 1775 siege of the city. In 1832, it became a daily, publishing in English and French on alternate days (no Sundays) until becoming an English-only paper in 1842. Mergers with other papers led to name changes to ''Quebec Chronicle and Quebec Gazette'' and ''Chronicle-Telegraph'', with "Quebec" added to the masthead in 1934. It returned to its original weekly schedule in 1972.
588* ''The Recorder & Times'' (Brockville, Ontario) (1821–present) – The date applies to the "Recorder" part, originally the ''Brockville Recorder''. The current name dates to the 1918 merger of the ''Recorder'' with the ''Daily Times''.
589* ''Rocky Mountain News'' (Denver) (1859–2009)
590* ''St. Galler Tagblatt'' (St. Gallen, Switzerland) (1789–present; originally ''Tagblatt der Stadt St. Gallen'' and adopted current name in 1910)
591* ''Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti'' (1702–1917, revived in 1991 and claims the older paper's history)
592* ''The Saturday Evening Post'' (1821-ongoing). The original run ended in 1969. The magazine changed ownership and restarted in 1971.
593* ''Scientific American'' (1845–present). The oldest continuously published magazine in the United States.
594* ''The Sun Times'' (Owen Sound, Ontario) (1853–present): Date applies to the paper's oldest predecessor, the ''Times''. The current name was adopted with the 1918 merger of the ''Times'' and the ''Sun'' (founded in 1893).
595* ''The Sunday Times'' (1821–present; originally ''The New Observer'', adopted its current name on 20 October 1822, but was not under the same ownership as ''The Times'' until 1966)
596* ''The Sydney Morning Herald'' (1831–present; ''Sydney Herald'' until 1842) – Longest running newspaper in Australia. In fact, it was founded 70 years before Australia even existed as a country.
597* ''Sydsvenskan'' (Malmö) (1870–present)
598* ''Thurgauer Zeitung'' (St. Gallen, Switzerland) (1798–present)
599* ''The Times'' (1785–present; originally ''The Daily Universal Register'', it adopted its current name on 1 January 1788)
600* ''Times Colonist'' (Victoria, British Columbia) — Debatable. The "Colonist" bit has been going since 1854, first as ''The British Colonist'' and later the ''Daily Colonist''. it merged with the ''Victoria Daily Times'' (established 1884) in 1980. However, the ''Daily Colonist'' characterized the merger as "the demise of two of Canada's oldest newspapers."
601* ''Toledo Blade'' (1835–present; known simply as ''The Blade'' since 1960)
602* ''Wiener Zeitung'' (1703–present; official government newspaper of Austria, Ended its daily print edition on 30 June 2023; continues as an online publication, and plans to distribute a monthly print edition.)
603* ''Winnipeg Free Press'' (1872–present): Originally the ''Manitoba Free Press''; adopted its current name on December 2, 1931. The paper published its first edition nearly a year before Winnipeg itself became incorporated.
604* ''Zürcher Oberländer'' (Wetzikon, near Zürich) (1852–present under three different names)
605* ''Zürichsee Zeitung'' (Stäfa, near Zürich) (1845–present under three different names)
606[[/folder]]

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