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Croatian Radiotelevision

Coordinates:45°47′35″N15°58′29″E / 45.79306°N 15.97472°E /45.79306; 15.97472
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Croatian public broadcasting company
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Hrvatska radiotelevizija
HRT
Official logo
HRT's headquarters in Prisavlje, Zagreb in 2008
TypeTerrestrial radio, state media, propaganda andonline
Country
AvailabilityNational; International (viaHRT International and hrt.hr)
Founded15 May 1926; 99 years ago (1926-05-15)
TV stations
Radio stations
RevenueIncreaseHRK1.397 billion
(c. €188 million)(2014)[1]
HeadquartersPrisavlje 3, 10000Zagreb
Broadcast area
Croatia
OwnerGovernment of Croatia
Key people
Robert Šveb
Launch date
15 May 1926; 99 years ago (1926-05-15) (Radio)
15 May 1956; 69 years ago (1956-05-15) (Television)
Former names
Radio Televizija Zagreb (1956–1990)[2]
AffiliationEuropean Broadcasting Union
Yugoslav Radio Television
Official website
www.hrt.hr
LanguageCroatian

Hrvatska radiotelevizija (abbr.HRT), orCroatian Radiotelevision, is aCroatianpublic broadcasting company. It operates several radio and television channels, over a domestic transmitter network as well as satellite. HRT is divided into three joint companies –Croatian Radio (Hrvatski radio),Croatian Television (Hrvatska televizija) and Music Production (Glazbena proizvodnja), which includes three orchestras (Symphony, Jazz, and Tamburitza) and a choir.

The founder of HRT is the Republic of Croatia which exercises its founder's rights through theCroatian Government. Croatian Radio (then Radio Zagreb) was founded on 15 May 1926. This date is considered the date on which HRT was founded. Television Zagreb (today Croatian Television) began broadcasting on 7 September 1956. By the law enacted by theCroatian Parliament on 29 June 1990, Radio Television Zagreb was renamed to Croatian Radiotelevision.

HRT operates as a provider of public broadcasting services, and Croatia provides independent funding by the Croatian Broadcasting Company Law and the State Aid Rules for Public Broadcasting Services. In carrying out its activities, HRT is independent of any political influence and commercial interest.

On 25 May 2012, HRT's archive of the television and radio program and its collection of musical production was given the status of Croatian cultural heritage.

History

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The tower of the Broadcasting Center in Prisavlje in 2013
An outside broadcast truck owned by HRT

Croatian Radiotelevision is the direct successor of Radio Station Zagreb (Radio stanica Zagreb) that started broadcasting on 15 May 1926, the second radio station to broadcast in the Balkans.[3] The station was initially a private company, before Radio Zagreb was nationalized on 1 May 1940. During theIndependent State of Croatia, the station was known asHrvatski krugoval. AfterWorld War II, it began to operate as a state-owned radio station.

At the end of the first year of operation, Radio Zagreb company had a little over four thousand subscribers.

On the 30th anniversary of the establishment of Zagreb Radio Station, on 15 May 1956, the first television programme was broadcast from thetransmitter built atSljeme. Television Zagreb's first live broadcast aired on 7 September 1956, making Croatia the first Yugoslav republic to have television.[4] For the next two years this was the only television broadcasting service in the southeast European area. Colour television broadcasts began in 1972. In 1970s, Radio Zagreb Correspondence Center and to a lesser extent Zagreb TV were the main coordinators of cooperation with other units of theYugoslav Radio Television in production of media content for numerous Yugoslav citizens abroad.[5] The program was aired byRadio Cologne,Frankfurt,Free Berlin,Zurich,Vienna,Paris,Liege,Luxembourg,Hilversum andStockholm while the second program of the German public television aired Zagreb made "Good Morning Yugoslavia" show.[5]

In May 1990, followingFranjo Tuđman'selection victory, he and his rulingCroatian Democratic Union party began a takeover of radio and television stations.[6] In June 1990, theCroatian Parliament renamed the company from Radio Television Zagreb (Croatian:Radiotelevizija Zagreb) to Croatian Radiotelevision (Croatian:Hrvatska radiotelevizija). The HDZ-majority Croatian Parliament soon appointed party loyalists to top managerial and editorial positions on the broadcaster.[7]

The film directorAntun Vrdoljak, a Tuđman appointee who was tasked with overseeing the changes, pledged to make HRT into the "cathedral of the Croatian spirit".[7] On 16 September 1991, 300 employees at HRT were fired for "security reasons".[7] According toMiljenko Jergović, formerly of the Croatian independentFeral Tribune, there were three waves of purges at HRT at this time: removal of Serb journalists; removal of "independent-minded, respected and thus dangerous" journalists; and slowly, the removal of those who did not support ultranationalism any longer.[7]

On 1 January 1993, HRT was admitted as a full active member of theEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU).[2]

The television channels were aired under the name Croatian Television (Croatian:Hrvatska televizija) between 1990 and 1993. Since then, the current name has been used. The radio broadcast unit is referred to as Croatian Radio (Croatian:Hrvatski radio).

Following Tuđman's death and the2000 election in Croatia which broughtStjepan Mesić to power, attempts at reforming HRT into a more open media were made.[8]

Funding

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In 2014, more than 85%[1] of HRT's revenue came from broadcast user fees with each household in Croatia required to pay 79HRK (~€10) per month for a single television set, with the remainder being made up from limited advertising.[9]

Television

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Channels

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  • HRT 1 (orPrvi program): HRT's first TV channel, previously known as TVZ 1. This is a general channel with daily news around the world, documentaries, religious programmes, series and movies.
  • HRT 2 (orDrugi program): HRT's second channel, previously known as TVZ 2. It is primarily used for sports broadcasts and entertainment programmes. The channel is known for its extensive footage of vintage films. It also broadcasts educational programmes.
  • HRT 3 (orTreći program): HRT's third channel, primarily used for culture, films, children's shows and documentaries. It was relaunched in September 2012.[10]
  • HRT 4 (orČetvrti program): HRT's fourth channel, broadcasting news programmes, started airing in December 2012.[11]
  • HRT International, formerlyHRT 5 (orPeti program): HRT's fifth and international channel, broadcasting a wide range of programmes from its domestic channels for theCroatian diasporas in Europe, North America, South America, Australia and New Zealand.[12]

In the 1980s, there was a third channel calledZ3 and laterHTV Z3. It was taken off-air on 16 September 1991 when its main transmitter, theSljeme TV tower, was damaged in an air raid. On 7 November 1994, the channel came back on the air, this time calledHRT 3. The channel was later shut down with its frequency de-nationalized and put up for lease in a public tender in 2004 and it has been used byRTL Televizija ever since. It was replaced by satellite channelHRT Plus until its relaunch in 2012.

Regional TV channels

[edit]
  • HRT Čakovec-Varaždin(HRT regionalni centar Čakovec-Varaždin)
  • HRT Osijek(HRT regionalni centar Osijek)
  • HRT Rijeka-Pula(HRT regionalni centar Rijeka-Pula)
  • HRT Split-Dubrovnik(HRT regionalni centar Split-Dubrovnik)
  • HRT Zadar-Šibenik-Knin(HRT regionalni centar Zadar-Šibenik-Knin)

Streaming

[edit]

In October 2015, HRT Launched HRTi, anover-the-topstreaming service free to all registered users. HRTi offers a live stream of HRT's television and radio channels, as well as access to select catalogue of HRT's original and acquired programming.[13]

Programming

[edit]
Dnevnik is one of HRT's popular news-programs
Studio ofDobro jutro, Hrvatska in 2008
HRT vehicles at the 2021Pula Film Festival.

Former shows

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Radio

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Main article:Croatian Radio
Croatian Radiotelevision is located in Croatia
Sljeme
Sljeme
Pula
Pula
Split
Split
Osijek
Osijek
Rijeka
Rijeka
Zadar
Zadar
Knin
Knin
Dubrovnik
Dubrovnik
Map of the eight Croatian Radio regional stations

TheCroatian Radio (Hrvatski radio) runs three national and eight local (county-level) stations.[14]

National stations

[edit]

The three national stations are available onFM,DAB+, throughout the country and are streamed live via the Internet.

  • HR 1 – The primary national-level station, mainly serious programming. News every full hour with oldies and local pop music.
  • HR 2 – Entertainment programming includingpopular music, with news followed bytraffic reports at the half-hour mark
  • HR 3Classical music and radio drama

Regional stations

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Themediumwave transmitter atZadar was at one time one of the most powerful in Europe and at nighttime could be heard throughout most of the continent withJRT (Yugoslav) and later HR (Croatian) programming from Zagreb and Pula. However it was badly damaged during the Serbian shelling of the city in the early 1990s, and has operated on somewhat reduced power since on 1134 kHz. Transmitter was rebuilt in 2004. It consists of 4 masts, every is 132 meters high.[15] It was taken off the air on 1 January 2014.

International service

[edit]
  • Voice of Croatia (Glas Hrvatske): Airs programming for Croatians living abroad, Croatia's minority groups and the international community. While mostly in Croatian, the station also features short news and segments in English, German, Italian, Hungarian, and Spanish at different times of the day.

The Voice of Croatia broadcasts 24 hours a day via the following satellites; inEurope,North Africa, theMiddle East on theEutelsat 13C at13°E andEutelsat 16A at16 degrees east for Central and East Europe.[16][17]

Logos

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  • 1956–1990
    1956–1990
  • 1990
    1990
  • 1994–1999
    1994–1999
  • 1999–present (black strips)
    1999–present (black strips)
  • 1999–present (white strips)
    1999–present (white strips)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab"Izvješće o poslovanju HRT-a za 2014. godinu"(PDF). Croatian Radiotelevision. 29 July 2015.Archived from the original on 18 October 2017. Retrieved13 March 2020.
  2. ^ab"The Evolution of Croatian Radio and Television". 10 January 2009. Archived fromthe original on 5 March 2016.
  3. ^Malović, Stjepan; Selnow, Gary W. (2001).The People, Press, and Politics of Croatia. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 55.ISBN 978-0-275-96543-3.
  4. ^Lisičar, Hrvoje; Turudić, Marko (2019).Media Law in Croatia. Kluwer Law International B.V.ISBN 978-94-035-0782-8.
  5. ^abWilliam Zimmerman (1987).Open Borders, Nonalignment, and the Political Evolution of Yugoslavia.Princeton University Press. p. 120.ISBN 0-691-07730-4.
  6. ^Kurspahić 2003, p. 66.
  7. ^abcdKurspahić 2003, p. 67.
  8. ^Kurspahić 2003, pp. 185–188.
  9. ^Circom-regional.org, Funding Arrangements
  10. ^"Novi program HRT 3 s emitiranjem počinje u subotu 15. rujna 2012".mvinfo.hr. 14 September 2012.
  11. ^"Na Badnjak kreće HRT 4".www.057info.hr. 19 December 2012.
  12. ^"How to Access New TV Channel for Croatians Abroad".croatiaweek.com. 14 January 2018.
  13. ^"Što nudi HRTi putem mobilnih platformi".glasistrenovine.hr (in Croatian).Glas Istre. 22 October 2015. Retrieved10 October 2024.
  14. ^List of radio programme content providersArchived 2018-11-08 at theWayback Machine, Croatian Post and Electronic Communications Agency, retrieved 2011-10-25
  15. ^"Navršava se 25 godina od napada na važni odašiljač Grbe". 15 September 2016.
  16. ^"Eutelsat 16A".Odašiljači i veze d.o.o. (in Croatian). 2020. Retrieved25 February 2021.
  17. ^LyngSat Network (ed.)."Glas Hrvatske".lyngsat.com. Retrieved11 July 2021.

Books

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External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toCroatian Radiotelevision.

45°47′35″N15°58′29″E / 45.79306°N 15.97472°E /45.79306; 15.97472

Croatian Radiotelevision (Hrvatska radiotelevizija, HRT)
Television
National
International
Radio
National
  • HR 1
  • HR 2
  • HR 3
Regional
  • Radio Dubrovnik
  • Radio Knin
  • Radio Osijek
  • Radio Pula
  • Radio Rijeka
  • Radio Sljeme
  • Radio Split
  • Radio Zadar
International
Musical
  • Klapska glazba
  • Tamburaška glazba
  • Rock glazba
  • Jazz glazba
  • Pop glazba
  • Klasična glazba
Active
members
Current
Suspended
Former
Associate
members
Current
Former
Approved
participants
Current
Former
International
National
Other
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