Category
page 1Newspapers published in Istanbul
Şalom
Şalom is a Jewish weekly newspaper published in Turkey. Its name is the Turkish spelling of the Hebrew word Shalom| (Shalom). It was established on 29 October 1947 by the Turkish Jewish journalist Avram Leyon. It is printed in Istanbul and is published every Wednesday. Apart from one Ladino (Judaeo-Spanish) page, it is published in Turkish. From 1947 to 1984, the newspaper was published exclusively in Ladino. However, due to the massive decline of Ladino and the language shift to Turkish in the Turkish Jewish community over the decades, the newspaper switched to Turkish and the Ladino content
Q327147
Hürriyet (, Liberty) is a major Turkish newspaper, founded in 1948. it had the highest circulation of any newspaper in Turkey at around 319,000. Hürriyet combines entertainment with news coverage and has a mainstream, liberal and conservative outlook.
Zaman
major, high-circulation daily newspaper in Turkey

Cumhuriyet
Cumhuriyet (; English: "Republic") is the oldest up-market Turkish daily newspaper. It has been described as "the most important independent public interest newspaper in contemporary Turkey". The newspaper was awarded the Freedom of Press Prize by Reporters Without Borders in 2015 and the Alternative Nobel Prize in 2016. It is considered Turkey's newspaper of record. It has been known for its stance of publishing anti-Islamist titles and news at least since the 1960s.
Milliyet
Milliyet (Turkish for "nationality") is a daily newspaper published in Istanbul, Turkey.
Agos
Agos (in Armenian: Ակօս, "furrow") is a bilingual weekly newspaper published in Istanbul, Turkey, established on 25 February 1996 by Hrant Dink, Luiz Bakar, Harutyun Şeşetyan, and Anna Turay.
Sabah
Turkish daily newspaper
Yeni Şafak
Turkish daily newspaper
Hürriyet Daily News
English-language newspaper headquartered in Istanbul, Turkey
Sözcü
Sözcü (English: Spokesperson) is a popular Turkish daily newspaper. Sözcü was first published on 27 June 2007 by Burak Akbay and is distributed nationwide. As of June 2018, it was one of the top-selling newspapers in Turkey, with around 300,000 copies sold daily.
Posta
newspaper
Radikal
Radikal () was a daily liberal Turkish language newspaper, published in Istanbul. From 1996 it was published by Aydın Doğan's Doğan Media Group. Although Radikal did not endorse a particular political alignment, it was generally considered by the public to be a social liberal newspaper. Despite only having a circulation of around 25,000 (July 2013), it was considered one of the most influential Turkish newspapers.
Jamanak
Jamanak (, ) is the longest continuously running Armenian language daily newspaper in the world. It is published in Istanbul, Turkey.

Akşam
Akşam (Evening) is a Turkish newspaper founded in 1918, owned by Zeki Yeşildağ's Türk Medya Grup (T Medya Yatırım San. ve Tic. AŞ.) since 2013. In 2013 it had a circulation of around 100,000.
Marmara
Armenian-language daily newspaper
Türkiye
Turkish news website
Today's Zaman
periodical literature
Takvim-i Vekayi
first fully Turkish-language newspaper
İkdam
thumbnail|İkdams front page on 4 November 1918, after the Three Pashas fled the country during the final days of [[WWI.]]
İkdam (Turkish: Effort) was a newspaper in the Ottoman Empire and Turkey published between 1894 and 1928. During its lifetime it became the most popular newspaper in Istanbul.
Taraf
Taraf ("Side" in Turkish) was a liberal newspaper in Turkey. It had distinguished itself by opposing interference by the Turkish military in the country's social and political affairs. It was distributed nationwide, and had been in circulation since November 15, 2007. On July 27, 2016, the newspaper was closed under a statutory decree during the state of emergency after the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt, due to its links with the coup plotters' Gülen movement.
Daily Sabah
Turkish daily newspaper published in English
Fanatik (Turkey)
Turkish sports newspaper
BirGün
BirGün (One Day) is an Istanbul-based Turkish left-wing daily.
Habertürk
Habertürk (HT; ) was a high-circulation Turkish newspaper. It was established on 1 March 2009 by Ciner Media Group, drawing on the brand of Ciner's Habertürk TV. It ceased publication on 5 July 2018.
Özgür Gündem
Turkish newspaper
Millî Gazete
newspaper
Güneş
Turkish newspaper
Vatan
Turkish newspaper
Azadiya Welat
periodical literature
Yeni Akit
Turkish daily newspaper
Arevelk
Arevelk (in Armenian Արեւելք meaning Orient) was a widely circulated and read Armenian newspaper published and circulated throughout the Ottoman Empire.
Star Gazetesi
Turkish newspaper
Serbestî
Serbestî (Ottoman Turkish for "Liberty") was an Ottoman newspaper. It was founded in 1908 by Mevlanzade Rifat Bey, who in 1924 would become one of the 150 personae non gratae of the newly established Republic of Turkey, because the paper and its founder had an oppositional and hostile stance to the independence movement led by Mustafa Kemal.
İstanbul
newspaper
Tasvîr-i Efkâr
newspaper in Ottoman Empire and Turkey (1862–1925)
Yeniçağ
Yeniçağ or Yeni Çağ ("New Era" in Turkish) is a nationalist newspaper in Turkey. It was established in 2002.
Apoyevmatini
thumb|right|200px|Apoyevmatini frontpage
Apoyevmatini (in Greek: Απογευματινή, meaning "Afternoon (newspaper)", alternative transliteration Apogevmatini) is a daily Greek-language newspaper published in Istanbul, Turkey. The newspaper was founded on 12 July 1925 and is still being published until today. Following the Turkish Cumhuriyet, Apoyevmatini is the second most senior daily newspaper founded after the Republic of Turkey came into existence, its readers being mostly Greeks in Turkey.
Aydınlık
Aydınlık ("Clarify" or "Enlightenment" in Turkish) is the newspaper of the Patriotic Party (Vatan Partisi). Originally launched as a weekly newspaper in 1921, it has been repeatedly closed and relaunched, most recently in 2011.
Agani Murutsxi
Newspaper
Takvim
Takvim is a Turkish daily newspaper owned by Kalyon Group. The word "takvim" means calendar in Turkish.
Yeni Asya
Turkish newspaper
Diken
online newspaper
Tercüman
Tercüman: Halka ve Olaylara was a Turkish daily newspaper. It was founded in 1955 by Kemal Ilıcak (1932–1993), and associated with the center-right. It was based in the now demolished Tercüman Building. It was temporarily closed down by the military authorities between 11 August and 3 September 1983 when there was martial law in Turkey. Ayhan Songar published weekly columns in the paper between 1986 and 1989. Another contributor of the paper was Nevzat Yalçıntaş.