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''Udant Martand'' (The Rising Sun) was the first Hindi-language newspaper published in India. Started on May 30, 1826 from Calcutta (now Kolkata), the weekly newspaper, was published every Tuesday by Pt. Jugal Kishore Shukla.〔 ==History== By the early 19th-century educational publications in Hindi had already started, thus journalism was only a matter time. By the 1820s, newspapers in several Indian languages were starting, including Bengali and Urdu, however printing in Devanagari script was still rare. Soon after Calcutta School Book started printing, ''Samachar Darpan'', a Bengali journal which started in 1819, had some portions in Hindi. However, Hindi reading audience base was still at a nascent stage. Thus few of the early attempts were successful, but they nevertheless were a start. Shukla was a lawyer originally from Kanpur in Uttar Pradesh, who had settled in Calcutta, and became Proceedings Reader at the Sadr Diwani Adalat (Civil and Revenue High Court), and later on a pleader.〔〔 On February 16, 1826, he along with Munnu Thakur of Banstala Gali, Calcutta, received a license to publish a newspaper in Hindi. The newspaper was finally started on May 30, 1826; with it for the first time a newspaper was published completely in Hindi, using Devanagari script. Udant Martand employed a mix of Khari Boli and Braj Bhasha dialects of Hindi. The first issue printed 500 copies,〔 and the newspaper was published every Tuesday.〔 The office of newspaper was at 37, Amartalla Lane, Kolutolla, near Barabazar Market in Kolkata. Owing to its distance from the Hindi-speaking areas of North India, the newspaper had difficulty in finding subscribers.〔 The publisher even tried to get Government subscription, and patronage in the form of postal fee exemption for eight newspapers to be posted to North India. However, didn't received the subscription and only one newspaper was allowed postal fee exemption. This meant that the paper could never be financial viable.〔 Nevertheless, it briefly gained prominence for featuring the controversy that rose Bengali-language magazine, ''Samachar Chandrika'' and traders from interiors, who were based in Calcutta.〔 However soon due to higher postal rates as well as distant readership, the newspaper ran into financial difficulties. The publication expected some funding from the Government, which didn't come through and eventually closed on December 4, 1827.〔〔http://www.indianage.com/eventdate.php/Publication/30-May-1826〕 An year later in 1828, Governemt withdrawn Government subscription for newspapers, started during the liberal period of Governor-General Lord William Bentinck. This led to several small newspaper closing down.〔 Many years later in 1850, Shukla also started a magazine, ''Samdand Martand'',〔 which ran till 1929. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Udant Martand」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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