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List of newspapers in the United Kingdom

Table of contents
1 National newspapers
2 Regional Newspapers
3 Local newspapers
4 Defunct newspapers
5 See Also

National newspapers

English Broadsheets

Scottish Broadsheets

  • The Herald / Sunday Herald
  • The Scotsman / Scotland On Sunday
  • The Times and The Daily Telegraph have a daily Scottish edition

English Tabloids

Scottish Tabloids

Regional Newspapers

England

Wales

Scotland

  • West Highland Free Press
  • Shetland Times
  • Press and Journal, Aberdeen based daily newspaper

Northern Ireland

  • The Belfast Telegraph

Local newspapers

Most towns and cities in the UK have at least one local newspaper, such as the Evening Post in
Bristol and The Echo in Cardiff. However they are not known nationally for their journalism in the way that (despite much syndication) city-based newspapers in the USA are (e.g. The New York Times, Washington Post, Boston Globe). The single major exception to this pattern was the well-regarded "Manchester Guardian", which dropped the 'Manchester' from its name (1959) and relocated to London (1976), the group continue to produce a Mancunian paper with the Manchester Evening News.

England

Birmingham

Brighton

  • Evening Argus

Exeter

  • Express and Echo (locally known as the "Suppress and Distort")
  • Flying Post

Guildford

  • Surrey Advertiser

Ipswich

Leeds

  • Yorkshire Post

London

Manchester

  • Manchester Evening News

Norwich

  • Eastern Evening News

Sheffield

  • The Sheffield Star
  • Sheffield Telegraph

Stoke-on-Trent

Scotland

Glasgow

Wales

Papurau Bro

Papurau Bro (Area Papers) are
Welsh language newspapers produced nominally monthly (typically 10 issues a year with a summer break) which cover the news in a small area -- a town, group of parishes, one or a few valleys, etc., with a circulation of perhaps a few thousand each. There are between 50 and 60 Papurau Bro which cover the whole of Wales, plus the Welsh communities of Liverpool and London. Papers are frequently named after local features, connections, crafts, etc, or in dialect (clebran, clecs, clochdar, and clonc all imply gossip).

Defunct newspapers

See Also





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