Rheinische Post is one of the allied new foundations in the post-
World War II era.
NSDAP-opponents
Karl Arnold,
Anton Betz, Erich Wenderoth and (soon resigned) Friedrich Vogel received a British newspaper license. The newspaper was established in 1946 and belongs to the Arnold, Betz, Droste, Alt and Ebel families. It is part of the
Rheinische Post Mediengruppe which also owns newspapers like the
Saarbrücker Zeitung, the
Lausitzer Rundschau or the
Trierischer Volksfreund. The core distribution area stretches from the
Bergisches Land to the
Dutch border. There are 31 local editions, among them other regional newspapers, like the
Neuß-Grevenbroicher Zeitung, the
Benrather Tageblatt and the
Bocholter-Borkener Volksblatt, which have their own regional news pages. The
Rheinische Post is available at kiosks as well as through
subscriptions. The paper is published in
Rhenish format. In 2001 the paper had a circulation of 418,000 copies. The circulation of the paper was 411,000 copies in 2004. Its circulation was 399,215 copies in the first quarter of 2006. In 2018, the circulation of the print version of Rheinische Post was about 280,000 copies. == Editorial staff ==