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Adresseavisen : ウィキペディア英語版
Adresseavisen

''Adresseavisen'' (commonly known as ''Adressa'') is a regional newspaper published daily, except Sundays, in Trondheim, Norway.〔 It is an independent and conservative newspaper.
==History and profile==

The newspaper was first published on 3 July 1767 as ''Kongelig allene privilegerede Trondheims Adresse-Contoirs Efterretninger'', making it the oldest Norwegian newspaper still being published. The paper was originally founded as a classified publication.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.ccieurope.com/References/References/Customer_Cases/Adresseavisen.aspx )〕 The name of the newspaper changed several times before its present name began to be used in 1927. Locally it is often referred to as ''Adressa''. The newspaper is based in Trondheim〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.pressreference.com/No-Sa/Norway.html )〕 and covers the areas of Trøndelag and Nordmøre.
Martinus Lind Nissen (1744–1795) was the founder and first editor of ''Adresseavisen''. At his death, Nissen was succeeded by Mathias Conrad Peterson, a French-oriented revolutionary pioneering radical journalism in Norway. Later editors, however, have been more conservative. In Peterson's age the paper was renamed ''Trondhjemske Tidender'' (roughly ''Trondhjem Times'') and began to look more like a modern newspaper. Changing names, owners and profile several times during the 19th century, the paper was named ''Trondhjems Adresseavis'' in 1890. Its first press picture was seen in 1893. During the 1920s, the paper nearly bankrupted, but it was saved by the new editor, Harald Houge Torp, who had the position until 1969.
''Adresseavisen'' describes itself as conservative〔 and is part of the Adresseavisen Media Group which also owns several smaller local newspapers in the Trøndelag region.〔 It also owns and operates a local radio station, Radio-Adressa, and a local TV station, TV-Adressa (prior to 30 January 2006: TVTrøndelag). In addition, the company owns the local newspapers ''Fosna-Folket'', ''Hitra-Frøya'', ''Levanger-Avisa'', ''Sør-Trøndelag'', ''Trønderbladet'' and ''Verdalingen''.〔 As of 2006 Schibsted had a share of the paper (31.7%).〔 Stocks in ''Adresseavisen'' are traded on the Oslo Stock Exchange.
''Adressavisen'' became the first Norwegian newspaper to use computer technology in 1967. Its website was launched in 1996. Gunnar Flikke was editor-in-chief from 1989 to 2006. ''Adresseavisen'' switched from broadsheet to tabloid format on 16 September 2006.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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