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  1. Tabloid journalism is still an evolving concept in India's print media. The first tabloid, Blitz was started by Russi Karanjia on February 1, 1941 with the words "Our Blitz, India's Blitz against Hitler!". Blitz was first published in English and then branched out with Hindi, Marathi and Urdu versions.

  2. British India: First Odia language newspaper. The weekly paper was started on 4 August 1866 by Gourishankar Ray and Babu Bichitrananda Das. 1867 The Madras Mail: English Madras: British India: Started by Charles Lawson and Henry Cornish.It was closed in 1981 and was the first evening newspaper in India. 1868 Amrita Bazar Patrika: Bengali ...

    Date
    Newspaper
    Language
    Place
    1605 [4]
    German
    1609 [4]
    German
    1610 [4] [5]
    Ordinari-Zeitung
    German
    1615 [4]
    Name not given in source
    German
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  4. Jun 23, 2017 · - The first newspaper in India was published on 29 January, 1780 by James Augustus Hicky under the British Raj and its name was ‘The Bengal Gazette’. It was also called as ‘Calcutta General...

  5. DNA or Daily News and Analysis is a reputed Indian daily tabloid which was founded on 30th July, 2005 and used to published from regions like Indore, Mumbai, Pune, Jaipur, Ahmedabad and Bangalore. It was the very first Indian tabloid which introduced a format of all-colour pages.

  6. Jan 4, 2024 · Last Updated : 04 Jan, 2024. The first English newspaper in India was the “Hickey’s Bengal Gazette,” which was published by James Augustus Hickey. It was first issued on January 29, 1780, in Calcutta (now Kolkata).

  7. News Today: English: Daily Chennai: 1982: The North East Times: English: 1990: The Sentinel: English: Daily Broadsheet Guwahati, Dibrugarh, Shillong, Silchar, Itanagar: 1983: 167800 The Shillong Times: English: Daily Shillong: 1945: The Statesman: English: Daily Bhubaneshwar, Delhi, Siliguri: 1875 230,000 The Telegraph: English: Daily

  8. Hicky’s Bengal Gazette was also known as the Original Calcutta General Advertiser. It was an English language weekly that was started by James Augustus Hicky, a rather eccentric Irishman. The newspaper was published in Calcutta, the centre of colonial India during that time. Hicky acted as the paper’s writer, editor and publisher.