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* ''Sunday World'' (est. 1973) -- Sunday paper known for its articles on Northern Ireland paramilitaries. Owned by Independent News and Media.

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* ''Sunday World'' (est. 1973) -- Sunday paper known for its articles on Northern Ireland paramilitaries.paramilitaries and gangland activity. Veronica Guerin was working for the publication at the time of her murder. Owned by Independent News and Media.
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* ''Irish Daily Mail'' (est. 2006) -- Ireland's newest major paper and sister to the British ''[[BritishNewspapers Daily Mail]]''. Has struggled to find it's footing but is slowly moving away from being a carbon copy of the London ''Mail'' while retaining a strongly right of centre ethos. This has the unfortunate side effect of the Mail organising separate campaigns on both sides of the spectrum in Ireland and the UK (for example, a breast cancer drug was strongly supported by the British Mail and strongly opposed by the Irish Mail). Ironically the British paper was itself founded by a Dubliner. Owned by Associated Newspapers.

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* ''Irish Daily Mail'' (est. 2006) -- Ireland's newest major paper and sister to the British ''[[BritishNewspapers ''[[UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers Daily Mail]]''. Has struggled to find it's footing but is slowly moving away from being a carbon copy of the London ''Mail'' while retaining a strongly right of centre ethos. This has the unfortunate side effect of the Mail organising separate campaigns on both sides of the spectrum in Ireland and the UK (for example, a breast cancer drug was strongly supported by the British Mail and strongly opposed by the Irish Mail). Ironically the British paper was itself founded by a Dubliner. Owned by Associated Newspapers.
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National newspapers in Ireland are traditionally divided by format, between the relatively respectable and intelligent broadsheets and the scurrilous, gossip- and crime-obsessed tabloids.

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National newspapers in Ireland (not unlike in the UK) are traditionally divided by format, between the relatively respectable and intelligent broadsheets and the scurrilous, gossip- and crime-obsessed tabloids.
tabloids. The main difference is that the Irish broadsheets still use primarily said format while the "red top" tabloid market is relegated to local editions of the UK papers.



* ''Irish Daily Star'' (est. 1988 as ''The Star'') -- known for its sensational crime coverage. Owned by Independent Star Limited.

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* ''Irish Daily Star'' (est. 1988 as ''The Star'') Star'', being a sister publication of the British red top) -- known for its sensational crime coverage. Owned by Independent Star Limited.Limited (a subsidiary of Northern & Shell).
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* ''Sunday Independent'' (est. 1906) -- the "Sindo" is the best-selling Sunday title, and not afraid to court controversy. Famously [[TheTroubles anti-IRA]] it sometimes verged on being actively Unionist in outlook, though this has diminished slightly in recent years. Owned by Independent News and Media.

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* ''Sunday Independent'' (est. 1906) -- the "Sindo" is the best-selling Sunday title, and not afraid to court controversy. Famously [[TheTroubles [[UsefulNotes/TheTroubles anti-IRA]] it sometimes verged on being actively Unionist in outlook, though this has diminished slightly in recent years. Owned by Independent News and Media.



* BritishNewspapers
* TheTroubles

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* BritishNewspapers
UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers
* TheTroublesUsefulNotes/TheTroubles



* StrokeCountry

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* StrokeCountryUsefulNotes/NorthernIreland
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* ''Evening Echo'' -- The Cork equivalent of the ''Herald''. The guy who sells it on Patrick's Street has become something of a national legend with his distinctive shouting of [[NoIndoorVoice "ECHO!"]] Owned by Thomas Crosbie Holdings.
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* ''The Irish News'' (est. 1891) -- printed in Belfast and focuses on NorthernIreland, but sold in most of Ireland. Owned by the Fitzpatrick family.

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* ''The Irish News'' (est. 1891) -- printed in Belfast and focuses on NorthernIreland, UsefulNotes/NorthernIreland, but sold in most of Ireland. Owned by the Fitzpatrick family.
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Added DiffLines:

National newspapers in Ireland are traditionally divided by format, between the relatively respectable and intelligent broadsheets and the scurrilous, gossip- and crime-obsessed tabloids.

'''Broadsheets'''

* ''The Irish Times'' (est. 1859) -- generally considered the paper of record. Was once the paper of the Anglo-Irish Establishment, now a centre-liberal publication. Owned by the Irish Times Trust.
* ''Irish Examiner'' (est. 1841 as the ''Cork Examiner'', went national in 2000) -- published in Cork, and thus places more emphasis on non-Dublin goings-on. Owned by Thomas Crosbie Holdings.
* ''Irish Independent'' (est. 1905) -- the "Indo" is a middle-of-road paper owned by Independent News and Media.
* ''Foinse'' (est. 1996; name is Irish for "source" and is pronounced "fween-sha") -- the only Irish-language national paper. Briefly cancelled in 2009 but returned as a weekly supplement in the ''Irish Independent''.
* ''The Irish News'' (est. 1891) -- printed in Belfast and focuses on NorthernIreland, but sold in most of Ireland. Owned by the Fitzpatrick family.
* ''Sunday Independent'' (est. 1906) -- the "Sindo" is the best-selling Sunday title, and not afraid to court controversy. Famously [[TheTroubles anti-IRA]] it sometimes verged on being actively Unionist in outlook, though this has diminished slightly in recent years. Owned by Independent News and Media.
* ''The Sunday Business Post'' (est. 1989) -- a Sunday paper with emphasis on commerce, business etc. Owned by Thomas Crosbie Holdings.

'''Tabloid'''

* ''Irish Daily Star'' (est. 1988 as ''The Star'') -- known for its sensational crime coverage. Owned by Independent Star Limited.
* ''Evening Herald'' -- "de Heddild" is owned by Independent News and Media.
* ''Sunday World'' (est. 1973) -- Sunday paper known for its articles on Northern Ireland paramilitaries. Owned by Independent News and Media.
* ''Irish Daily Mail'' (est. 2006) -- Ireland's newest major paper and sister to the British ''[[BritishNewspapers Daily Mail]]''. Has struggled to find it's footing but is slowly moving away from being a carbon copy of the London ''Mail'' while retaining a strongly right of centre ethos. This has the unfortunate side effect of the Mail organising separate campaigns on both sides of the spectrum in Ireland and the UK (for example, a breast cancer drug was strongly supported by the British Mail and strongly opposed by the Irish Mail). Ironically the British paper was itself founded by a Dubliner. Owned by Associated Newspapers.

'''UK papers'''

Many British newspapers also sell in the Republic of Ireland, including ''The Times, The Independent'' and ''The Guardian''. Some tabloid also produce Irish editions, e.g. the ''Irish Sun''.

See also:
* UsefulNotes/IrishPoliticalSystem
* BritishNewspapers
* TheTroubles
* UsefulNotes/TheIrishQuestion
* StrokeCountry
* UsefulNotes/TheCelticTiger
* UsefulNotes/{{Dublin}}
* UsefulNotes/TheNewIrish
* UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}}
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