Amanecer was a Spanish newspaper published in Zaragoza between 1936 and 1979.
The newspaper Amanecer was founded in August 1936, following the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War. Its first issue appeared on August 11, 1936, under the subtitle "Diario nacional-sindicalista" (National-Syndicalist Daily). It was initially published at the facilities of the Diario de Aragón, which had been seized by the Falange Española de las JONS at the beginning of the conflict. In its early days, it was directed by the Falangist journalist and historian Maximiano GarcÃÂa Venero. àLater, the newspaper became the property of FET y de las JONS, and during the Francoist dictatorship, it was integrated into the so-called "Cadena de Prensa del Movimiento."
However, Amanecer never enjoyed high sales among the population. By the mid-1970s, it was one of the most unprofitable newspapers in the Cadena de Prensa del Movimiento chainâÂÂby then it had accumulated losses of almost 25 million pesetasâ a situation that led to its closure being proposed as early as 1975. àAfter Franco's death, it was incorporated into the state-owned entity Medios de Comunicación Social del Estado (MCSE), but the situation continued to worsen. By 1979, it had accumulated losses of almost 66 million pesetas, àand its daily circulation was only 2,267 copies. This situation led the government to decree its closure in mid-1979.
The newspaper's management included Maximiano GarcÃÂa Venero, Ubaldo Pozas Vidal, Casimiro Romero Porta, Luis Climent Cicujano, José Fernández Aguirre, Maximino Sastre del Blanco, Dámaso Santos, Ulpiano Vigil-Escalera, Francisco Villalgordo Montalbán, Ignacio Catalán, Antonio Muñoz Mompeón, and ÃÂngel Bayod Monterde.