The Rheintaler

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The Rheintaler
Logo RheintalerProdukte
description Daily newspaper of the St.Galler Rheintal and the Appenzeller Vorderland
publishing company Galledia Regionalmedien AG (Switzerland)
Headquarters Berneck SG
First edition October 8, 1846
Frequency of publication Monday - Saturday normal edition; "Rheintaler Weekend" is a large edition on Fridays
Sold edition Normal edition 7,833 copies

Large print run 34,703 copies

(Based on Wemf circulation bulletin 2019/2020)
Range Normal circulation 24,000 readers

Large circulation 41,000 readers million readers

(Do base 19/20)
Editor-in-chief Gert Bruderer
editor Galledia Regionalmedien AG
Web link St.Galler Tagblatt, Rhine Valley
The Rheintaler, issued on February 9, 1871

“Der Rheintaler” is a local newspaper from Eastern Switzerland. It appears from Monday to Saturday for the 13 municipalities of the Rheintal constituency (Rheineck to Rüthi) and the Appenzell Vorderland, namely the municipalities of Wolfhalden, Lutzenberg, Walzenhausen, Reute, Oberegg and Heiden. Since 1998, “Der Rheintaler” has been published under the cover of the “ St. Galler Tagblatt ” as a full newspaper with an expanded international, domestic and business section. On Fridays the local section of the newspaper is titled “Rheintaler Weekend”; the regional part is then distributed to all households in the catchment area; this large edition is 38,069 copies (WEMF-certified 2019).

“Der Rheintaler” has been published by Galledia Regionalmedien AG, a subsidiary of the galledia group ag (formerly Rheintal Medien AG) , since 2019 .

The publisher of the daily newspaper "Der Rheintaler" is entrepreneurial and financially independent. The editorial independence of the Rheintaler local newspaper is also preserved. "Der Rheintaler" has its own editor-in-chief. The collaboration with the «St. Galler Tagblatt »essentially comprises the procurement of the supraregional cover section, the use of the same editorial system and the printing of the newspaper in the printing center in Winkel. With the «St. Galler Tagblatt »the galledia group ag is linked by a cooperation agreement.

The “ Rheintalische Volkszeitung ” - colloquially often referred to as the “Volkszeitung” - appears with a local section that is largely identical to that of the “Rheintaler”. The “Rheintalische Volkszeitung” is also published by Galledia Regionalmedien AG. The editorial team for “Rheintaler” and “Rheintalische Volkszeitung” is the same. The same editorial team also looks after the fee-based online platform “rheintaler.ch”

Editors-in-chief

Before and after the Second World War, Willy Rohner was responsible for the editorial content of the daily newspaper “Der Rheintaler” for over two decades (1934-1937; 1939-1957). He was followed in 1957 by Hans Müller, who worked for the editorial team until the 1980s and for a long time formed an editorial duo with Hans Andres. In the second half of the 1970s, Eduard Nacht was editor-in-chief; the editorial team now consisted of a team of several for the first time. From 1979 to 1992 Markus Löliger was in charge of the “Rheintaler” editorial team, followed by Hansruedi Wieser (1996-1999) and Elmar Hürlimann (1999-2002). Gert Bruderer has been the editor-in-chief since April 2002.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rheintaler and Volkszeitung from one house. Retrieved May 19, 2020 .
  2. WORKZ NEW MEDIA ° FREDY HOLENSTEIN: New company name for the newspapers | Galledia Regionalmedien AG. Retrieved on May 19, 2020 (German).
  3. The restart was successful. Retrieved on May 19, 2020 (Swiss Standard German).
  4. ^ Rheintaler and Volkszeitung from one house. Retrieved June 10, 2020 .
  5. WORKZ NEW MEDIA ° FREDY HOLENSTEIN: New company name for the newspapers | Galledia Regionalmedien AG. Accessed June 10, 2020 (German).
  6. Rheintaler, Der. Retrieved May 19, 2020 .
  7. Hans Müller (1917 to 2012). Retrieved May 19, 2020 .
  8. ^ A half farewell to Markus Löliger. Retrieved May 19, 2020 .
  9. Elmar Hürlimann. Retrieved May 19, 2020 .
  10. Gert Bruderer becomes the new editor-in-chief of the “Rheintaler”. Retrieved May 19, 2020 .