STOCKHOLM, Sweden - For centuries, readers thumbed through the crackling
pages of Sweden's Post-och Inrikes Tidningar newspaper. No longer. The world's
oldest paper still in circulation has dropped its paper edition and now exists
only in cyberspace. The newspaper, founded in 1645 by Sweden's Queen Kristina,
became a Web-only publication on Jan. 1. It's a fate, many ink-stained writers
and readers fear, that may await many of the world's most venerable journals.
 This is an undated file photo of a
facsimile of a page from the world's oldest newspaper, Sweden's Post-och
Inrikes Tidningar, dated April 9 1645. [AP]
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"We think it's a cultural disaster," said
Hans Holm, who served as the chief editor of Post-och Inrikes Tidningar for 20
years. "It is sad when you have worked with it for so long and it has been
around for so long."
Queen Kristina used the publication to keep her subjects informed of the
affairs of state, Holm said, and the first editions, which were more like
pamphlets, were carried by courier and posted on note boards in cities and towns
throughout the kingdom.
Today, Post-och Inrikes Tidningar, which means mail and domestic
tidings, runs legal announcements by corporations, courts and certain government
agencies - about 1,500 a day according to Olov Vikstrom, the current editor.
The paper edition was certainly not some mass-market tabloid. It had a meager
circulation of only 1,000 or so, although the Web site is expected to attract
more readers, Vikstrom said.
The newspaper is owned by the Swedish Academy, known for awarding the annual
Nobel Prize in Literature. But it recently sold the publishing rights to the
Swedish Companies Registration Office, a government agency.
Despite its online transformation, Post-och Inrikes Tidningar remains No. 1
on a ranking of the oldest newspapers still in circulation compiled by the
Paris-based World Association of Newspapers.
"An online newspaper is still a newspaper, so we'll
leave it on the list," WAN spokesman Larry Kilman said.