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Defunct magazines published in the Netherlands

This list has 28 members. See also Defunct magazines by country, Magazines published in the Netherlands, Defunct mass media in the Netherlands
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  • Atlantic Free Press Dutch political news website
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    rank #1 ·
    Atlantic Free Press, an online political website, was founded in September 2006 by Publisher Richard Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in Groningen, Netherlands and published over 13,000 articles from over 250 progressive writers worldwide until it closed in October 2011.
  • Maatstaf Dutch literary magazine
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    rank #2 ·
    Maatstaf was a Dutch literary magazine, founded in 1953 by Bert Bakker. Bakker, who was the magazine's first editor, is credited with bringing in poets such as Ida Gerhardt. The magazine had a reputation for publishing "realist" authors (such as Maarten 't Hart), and was categorized as "neoromantic," one of a number of Dutch literary magazines in an "anti-experimental tradition." Dutch poet Gerrit Komrij, who edited the magazine from 1969 on, was the subject of a themed issue in 1984, and again in 1996, this last time centered on a collection of ten homo-erotic poems he had published in 1978, Capriccio. In that same year, 1996, the magazine, with a new team of editors, was renewed following a "conservative revolution."
  • De Post van den Neder-Rhijn
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    rank #3 ·
    De Post van den Neder-Rhijn ("The Post of the Nether Rhine") was a Patriot magazine from 1781 to 1787, at the end of the Dutch Republic. It was one of the first opinion weeklies in the Netherlands, and was edited by Pieter 't Hoen (1744–1828).
  • Ajax-nieuws Dutch sports magazine (1917–1987)
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    rank #4 ·
    Ajax-nieuws - clubblad van de Amsterdamsche Football Club "Ajax" (Dutch, "Ajax-news - club magazine of the Amsterdam Football Club "Ajax") was a Dutch monthly sports magazine published in Amsterdam, focusing on the association football club AFC Ajax with 12 issues appearing per season. It was established in 1917 and ran for 70 years with its first edition appearing in 1917 with an Ajax team photo on the cover. The 1986/87 season marked the final season of the printed magazine, as it was replaced by the bimonthly publication Ajax Magazine.
  • Avenue (magazine)
    Avenue (magazine) Defunct Dutch magazine
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    rank #5 ·
    Avenue was a defunct Dutch glossy monthly magazine. In its original form it was established in 1965 and shut down in 1994. In 2001, publisher VNU restarted the magazine, surviving only four issues.
  • Hoog Spel Topic
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    rank #6 ·
    Hoog Spel (High Game) was the first video games magazine in the Netherlands. The magazine was published by Rangeela B.V. between 1990 and 2000. The publisher of the magazine was Harry d’Emme.
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    rank #7 ·
    Nouvelles de la république des lettres (News from the Republic of Letters) was a periodical devoted to reviews of current publications, edited and in large part written by Pierre Bayle. It began publication in 1684, and is the first known book review journal.
  • Nictoglobe
    Nictoglobe Netherlands magazine
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    rank #8 ·
    Nictoglobe is an online art magazine. Its international contributors are working in arts related fields, such as (digital) writing, painting, poetry and activism. Nictoglobe is edited and published by A. Andreas (Andreas Maria Jacobs) who was born in the Netherlands in 1956.
  • De Nieuwe Gids
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    rank #9 ·
    De Nieuwe Gids (meaning The New Guide in English) was a Dutch illustrated literary periodical which was published from 1885 to 1943. It played an important role in promoting the literary movement of the 1880s. Its contents covered a wide range of topics, extending to developments in science.
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    rank #10 ·
    Speedskating World (SSW) is an international magazine devoted to news and discussions pertaining to speed skating and speedskaters. The magazine is the only English-language publication of its kind, and has had subscribers in more than twenty-five countries. The SSW first saw light in 1995, and typically publishes eight issues a year. It has a broad outlook on speedskating, featuring articles and interviews related to athletes, coaches, politics, sports medicine, training regimes, equipment, statistics, Olympics, championships, history, and the broad fan culture associated with these aspects. Around twenty different Olympic champions have been specially interviewed for the SSW, many of them before they won their medals. The natural emphasis of the SSW is on classical long-track speedskating (where athletes race in pairs on 400-m rinks, against each other and against the clock, exchanging inner and outer lanes on the backstretch), but some space is also devoted to short track and marathon skating races. It is published and printed in the Netherlands, by its chief editor Irene Postma, but is truly international in outlook and operation.
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