Hamburger Abendblatt German Newspaper


     View Epaper

The Hamburger Abendblatt (English: Hamburg Evening Newspaper) is a daily newspaper in Hamburg, Germany.

The paper focuses on news in Hamburg and area, and produces regional supplements with news from Norderstedt, Ahrensburg, Harburg, and Pinneberg. Politically the paper is mildly conservative, but usually pro-government, including during SPD administrations.

Four previous Hamburg newspapers had the word Abendblatt (“Evening Newspaper”) in their title, including one named the Hamburger Abendblatt, founded on 2 May 1820.

This incarnation of the Hamburger Abendblatt, however, was first published after World War II beginning on 14 October 1948, with an initial edition of 60,000 copies. It received a publishing license from the Hamburg Senate and Mayor Max Brauer, making it the first daily paper of post-war Germany to receive a license from German rather than Allied occupation authorities. After about six months of operation, its circulation increased to 170,000 copies daily. Until the 1970s it was delivered in the afternoon, but it is now delivered in the early morning.

From 1948 through 2013 it was published by Axel Springer AG;[2] it is published by Funke Mediengruppe, who purchased it from Axel Springer effective 1 January 2014.[2] The paper used to appear Monday through Saturday only, but since 29 October 2006 it has also published a Sunday edition to compete with the Hamburger Morgenpost’s introduction of a Sunday edition beginning 5 November 2006.