Asahi Shimbun: Difference between revisions
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The newspaper's first issue was published in [[Osaka]] on January 25, 1879, by politician [[Murayama Ryohei]] ([[Ueno Ri'ichi]], who joined the managament 2 years later is often cited as a co-fouder). The paper was a small-sized 4 page publication, complete with pictures (although the first photograph was not printed until 1904) and [[furigana]] (Japanese signs used to indicate pronounciation). In the beginning, the newspaper usually sold a 1000 copies a day. In September the same year, the first editorial in the newspaper was published<ref>Titled "On the role of newspaper editorials" (''Shinbunshi ronzetsu no koto wo ronzu'', 新聞紙論説の事を論ず)</ref>, . In 1882, "neutrality" and "altruism" were adopted as the newspapers' principal policies<ref>In Japanese ''hodochushinshugi'' (報道中心主義) and ''koheimushi'' (公平無私), literally "neutrality in reporting" and "fairness and altruism".</ref>, which at the time was seen as a novelty, with most current newspapers outspokenly siding with either the civil right's movement or the government. In 1883, the newspaper's circulation surmounted 30,000 copies a day, making it the largest newspaper in Japan. In 1888, an office was opened in Tokyo, and an Asahi Shimbun Tokyo edition was put into print.<ref name=JapAsahi>http://www.asahi.com/shimbun/honsya/j/history.html</ref><ref name=EngAsahi>http://www.asahi.com/shimbun/honsya/e/e-history.html</ref> | The newspaper's first issue was published in [[Osaka]] on January 25, 1879, by politician [[Murayama Ryohei]] ([[Ueno Ri'ichi]], who joined the managament 2 years later is often cited as a co-fouder). The paper was a small-sized 4 page publication, complete with pictures (although the first photograph was not printed until 1904) and [[furigana]] (Japanese signs used to indicate pronounciation). In the beginning, the newspaper usually sold a 1000 copies a day. In September the same year, the first editorial in the newspaper was published<ref>Titled "On the role of newspaper editorials" (''Shinbunshi ronzetsu no koto wo ronzu'', 新聞紙論説の事を論ず)</ref>, . In 1882, "neutrality" and "altruism" were adopted as the newspapers' principal policies<ref>In Japanese ''hodochushinshugi'' (報道中心主義) and ''koheimushi'' (公平無私), literally "neutrality in reporting" and "fairness and altruism".</ref>, which at the time was seen as a novelty, with most current newspapers outspokenly siding with either the civil right's movement or the government. In 1883, the newspaper's circulation surmounted 30,000 copies a day, making it the largest newspaper in Japan. In 1888, an office was opened in Tokyo, and an Asahi Shimbun Tokyo edition was put into print.<ref name=JapAsahi>http://www.asahi.com/shimbun/honsya/j/history.html</ref><ref name=EngAsahi>http://www.asahi.com/shimbun/honsya/e/e-history.html</ref> | ||
During it's time as Japan's most read newspaper, a title it lost in 1977 to Yomiuri<ref>http://info.yomiuri.co.jp/company/history/</ref>, Asahi stood out as an early adopter of new technology. Asahi was the first newspaper to send news stories by telegraph, between the Osaka and Tokyo offices, in | During it's time as Japan's most read newspaper, a title it lost in 1977 to Yomiuri<ref>http://info.yomiuri.co.jp/company/history/</ref>, Asahi stood out as an early adopter of new technology. In 1889, Asahi was the first newspaper to send news stories by telegraph, between the Osaka and Tokyo offices, in 1890, the first to use rotary presses in Japan. In 1895, the Asahi Tokyo edition was the first newspaper in Japan to make use of carrier pigeons. In 1923, the newspaper inaugurated the country's first regular airmail service to link the Osaka and Tokyo offices, sustained with its own fleet of airplanes. It was also the first to install a newspaper-clipping morgue and the first to run a picture supplement.<ref name=EngAsahi /><ref>http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,794925,00.html?promoid=googlep</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 11:21, 6 April 2007
Asahi Shimbun (朝日新聞, Asahi Shinbun) is a Japanese national newspaper, and it is the second most circulated newspaper in the world, after it's Japanese rival, the conservative Yomiuri Shimbun. The newspaper forms, together with the Yomiuri Shimbun and the Mainichi Shimbun, what is called "the big three" in Japanese newspapers[1]. Its circulation was as of June, 2005, 8.2 million copies of the morning edition and nearly 3.8 million copies of the evening edition[2].
History
The newspaper's first issue was published in Osaka on January 25, 1879, by politician Murayama Ryohei (Ueno Ri'ichi, who joined the managament 2 years later is often cited as a co-fouder). The paper was a small-sized 4 page publication, complete with pictures (although the first photograph was not printed until 1904) and furigana (Japanese signs used to indicate pronounciation). In the beginning, the newspaper usually sold a 1000 copies a day. In September the same year, the first editorial in the newspaper was published[3], . In 1882, "neutrality" and "altruism" were adopted as the newspapers' principal policies[4], which at the time was seen as a novelty, with most current newspapers outspokenly siding with either the civil right's movement or the government. In 1883, the newspaper's circulation surmounted 30,000 copies a day, making it the largest newspaper in Japan. In 1888, an office was opened in Tokyo, and an Asahi Shimbun Tokyo edition was put into print.[5][6]
During it's time as Japan's most read newspaper, a title it lost in 1977 to Yomiuri[7], Asahi stood out as an early adopter of new technology. In 1889, Asahi was the first newspaper to send news stories by telegraph, between the Osaka and Tokyo offices, in 1890, the first to use rotary presses in Japan. In 1895, the Asahi Tokyo edition was the first newspaper in Japan to make use of carrier pigeons. In 1923, the newspaper inaugurated the country's first regular airmail service to link the Osaka and Tokyo offices, sustained with its own fleet of airplanes. It was also the first to install a newspaper-clipping morgue and the first to run a picture supplement.[6][8]
References
- ↑ http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9009759/Asahi-shimbun
- ↑ http://adv.asahi.com/english/media_kit/circulation.html
- ↑ Titled "On the role of newspaper editorials" (Shinbunshi ronzetsu no koto wo ronzu, 新聞紙論説の事を論ず)
- ↑ In Japanese hodochushinshugi (報道中心主義) and koheimushi (公平無私), literally "neutrality in reporting" and "fairness and altruism".
- ↑ http://www.asahi.com/shimbun/honsya/j/history.html
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 http://www.asahi.com/shimbun/honsya/e/e-history.html
- ↑ http://info.yomiuri.co.jp/company/history/
- ↑ http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,794925,00.html?promoid=googlep