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Libelle (Dutch magazine)

Dutch weekly women's magazine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Libelle (Dutch magazine)
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Libelle (from the Latin "libellus", meaning book or writ) is a weekly women's magazine published in Amsterdam, Netherlands. It has been in circulation since 1934.

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History and profile

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Libelle was first published on 13 April 1934 by NV Uitgeverij.[1][2] The magazine was part of VNU[3] and was published by VNU Tijdschriften for several years.[4] In 2001 the magazine became part of Sanoma[5] and was published by Sanoma Media Netherlands B.V. on a weekly basis.[6] It has its headquarters in Amsterdam.[6]

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Covers of Libelle in the early years on a tin can from 1984–1985

Following the German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II the editors of Libelle endorsed support of the German forces.[7] In the late 1960s another women's magazine, Beatrijs, merged with Libelle.[8] During the 1990s Libelle was among the Dutch publications which functioned as an opinion leader in political and health-related issues.[9]

The target audience of Libelle is women aged between 30–55 most of whom are average Dutch women.[10] The weekly mostly features articles about fashion, beauty, culinary, travel, human interest, health, and work.[10][11]

Franska Stuy served as the editor-in-chief of the magazine from 1999 until 2015, and as of 2015 Hilmar Mulder was in charge.[12]

For the past 20 years Libelle has been organizing a week long outdoor event in May, the Libelle Zomerweek.[13] In 2016 this event attracted 84,300 visitors.[14]

The magazine has a Flemish edition with the same name, Libelle, published in Belgium.[15] Although they are part of the same company, each magazine has an independent editorial board.[15]

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Circulation

Libelle was the thirtieth best-selling women's magazine in 2001 globally with a circulation of 643,000 copies.[4] By 2016 circulation fell to about 300,000 copies. It kept dropping since, at a rate of about 20,000 annually.

  • 1990: 747,147
  • 2000: 640,101
  • 2003: 621,068[8]
  • 2009: 461,694[16]
  • 2010: 444,556
  • 2011: 426,869[17]
  • 2012: 401,558[18]
  • 2013: 374,141
  • 2014: 347,466
  • 2015: 326,302
  • 2016: 300,310
  • 2017: 273,195
  • 2018: 256,903
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See also

References

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