Timeline of the introduction of television in countries

This is a list of when the first publicly announced television broadcasts occurred in the mentioned countries. Non-public field tests and closed circuit demonstrations are not included.

A map showing when television was introduced in each country.
  1939 and before
  1940s
  1950s
  1960s
  1970s
  1980s
  1990s
  2000 and after
  No television
  No data

This list should not be interpreted to mean the whole of a country had television service by the specified date. For example, the United States, Great Britain, Germany, and the former Soviet Union all had operational television stations and a limited number of viewers by 1939. Very few cities in each country had television service. Television broadcasts were not yet available in most places.

History

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1920s and 1930s

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Year Countries and territories
1924   United States (pre-experimental)
1926   Germany (pre-experimental),   United Kingdom (pre-experimental)
1927   Australia (pre-experimental),   Netherlands (pre-experimental)
1928   Argentina (pre-experimental),   Canada (pre-experimental),   United States (mechanical television, experimental – W2XCW)[1][2][3][4]
1929   United Kingdom (mechanical, experimental),[5]   Germany (mechanical, experimental),[6][7]   Australia (mechanical, experimental, after hours on two existing Melbourne radio stations - 3UZ and 3DB),[8][9][10]   Netherlands (mechanical, experimental in Scheveningen),[11]   France (pre-experimental),   Siam (pre-experimental)
1930   Soviet Union (pre-experimental in Moscow wired in 1929)
1931   France (mechanical, experimental),   Canada (mechanical, experimental – VE9EC),   Soviet Union (mechanical, experimental – МТЦ),   Siam (mechanical, experimental, cancelled because of the revolution)
1932   Argentina (mechanical, experimental),[12]   Japan (pre-experimental)
1934   Australia (electronic television, experimental, Brisbane),[13]   Turkey (pre-experimental)
1935   Germany (intermediate film; semi-electronic),   France (electronic – PTT Radio Vision),   Netherlands (electronic, experimental in Eindhoven by Philips),[11]   Italy (pre-experimental)
1936   United Kingdom (electronic – BBC Television Service),   Germany (electronic television - Deutscher Fernseh Rundfunk),[14][15]
1937   Free City of Danzig (electronic, experimental),[a]   Poland (mechanical, experimental), (Doświadczalna Stacja Telewizyjna),[16]   Peru (pre-experimental),   Chile (pre-experimental)
1938   Soviet Union (electronic, experimental - CT USSR),   Turkey (electronic, experimental),   Uruguay (pre-experimental)
1939   Argentina (electronic, experimental),   Brazil (electronic, experimental),   Chile (electronic, experimental),   Japan (electronic, experimental - J2PQ),[17][b]   Italy (electronic, experimental - EIAR Trasmissioni Sperimentali Radiovisione),[18]   Peru (electronic, experimental),[19]   Poland (electronic, experimental),[16]   United States (electronic; experimental and non-commercial until 1941 - NBC)

1940s

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Year Countries and territories
1941   United States (  New York,   Delaware,   New Jersey,   Connecticut, regular commercial telecasts (WNBT)),   Pennsylvania (WPTZ))
1942   Mexico (pre-experimental)
1943   Germany (  Occupied France (Fernsehsender Paris)),   Philippines (pre-experimental),   Uruguay (electronic, experimental)[20]
1944   France (returned, RDF Télévision française)
1945   Soviet Union (returned, CT USSR),[c]   United States (  Washington, D.C., experimental (W3XWT))
1946   Brazil (pre-experimental),   Czechoslovakia (pre-experimental),   Denmark (pre-experimental),   Mexico (experimental),[21]   United States (  Philippines (experimental, BEC)),   United Kingdom (returned, BBC),[d]   United States (  Illinois (WBKB),   Iowa, experimental (KRNT),   Washington, D.C. (WTTG))
1947   United States (  California (KTLA),   Maryland (WMAR-TV),   Michigan (WWDT),   Missouri (KSD-TV),   Ohio (WEWS-TV),   Wisconsin (WTMJ-TV))
1948   Brazil (experimental, Rede Tupi),   Canada (experimental),   Cuba (pre-experimental),   Czechoslovakia (experimental),[e],    Switzerland (pre-experimental),   United States (  Kentucky (WAVE-TV),   Louisiana (WDSU-TV),   Massachusetts (WBZ-TV),   Minnesota (KSTP-TV),   New Mexico (KOB-TV),   San Francisco (KPIX-TV),   Tennessee (WMCT),   Texas (WBAP-TV),   Utah (KDYL-TV),   Virginia (WTVR-TV),   Washington (KRSC-TV))WW2 End
1949   Denmark (experimental),   Italy (experimental),   United States (  Alabama (WAFM-TV),   Arizona (KPHO-TV),   Florida (WTVJ),   Georgia (WSB-TV),   Iowa (WOC-TV),   Indiana (WFBM-TV),   Missouri (WDAF-TV),   North Carolina (WBTV),   Oklahoma (WKY-TV),   Rhode Island (WJAR)),   Vatican City (pre-experimental),   Venezuela (pre-experimental)

1950s

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Year Countries and territories
1950   Brazil (  São Paulo (Rede Tupi, now defunct)),[f]   Cuba (CMQ-TV),   Dominican Republic (pre-experimental),   France (  Nord (Télé-Lille)),   West Germany (Northwest Germany, experimental, NWDR)),   Hungary (pre-experimental),   Iceland (pre-experimental),   Japan (returned, electronic, experimental, NHK),   Mexico (official, XHTV-TV),   Monaco (pre-experimental),   French Morocco (pre-experimental),   Norway (pre-experimental),   Romania (pre-experimental),   Saudi Arabia (pre-experimental),   South Korea (pre-experimental),   Soviet Union (  Latvian SSR (pre-experimental),    Switzerland (experimental),   United States (  Des Moines (WOI-TV),   Nashville (WSM-TV))
1951   Argentina (LR3 TV),   Brazil (  Rio de Janeiro (Rede Tupi, now defunct[g])),   Colombia (pre-experimental),   Denmark (DR),[22]   Mexico (XEW-TV,   Tamaulipas (XELD-TV), now defunct),[h]   Netherlands (NTS),[11],   Portugal (pre-experimental),   Soviet Union (  Estonian SSR (pre-experimental)
1952   Bulgaria (pre-experimental),   Chile (sporadically until 1959),   Canada (  Quebec (CBFT),   Ontario (CBLT)),   Dominican Republic (La Voz Dominicana),   Finland (pre-experimental),   East Germany (experimental and regular programming, DFF),   West Germany (Northwest Germany, full service, NWDR-Fernsehen)),   Guatemala (pre-experimental),   Iraq (pre-experimental),   Luxembourg (pre-experimental),   Mexico (XHGC-TV,   Puebla (XEQ-TV)[i]),   Poland (returned, TV Polska),   Spain (pre-experimental),   Thailand (experimental),[23]   Turkey (İTÜ TV, now defunct),[j]   United Kingdom (  Scotland (BBC TV Service Scotland)),   United States (  Colorado (KBTV),   Hawaii (KGMB),   Oregon (KPTV),   Spokane (KHQ-TV)),   Venezuela (YVKA-TV, now defunct)
1953   Alaska (KATV, now defunct),   Austria (pre-experimental),   Belgium (  Wallonia (INR Télé Expérimentale Belge),   Flanders (NIR Belgische Televisie)),[k]   Canada (  Ottawa (CBOT),   British Columbia (CBUT)),   Czechoslovakia (experimental),   El Salvador (pre-experimental),   France (  Bas-Rhin (Télé-Strasbourg)),   Hungary (experimental),   Japan (returned, NHK),[l],   Lithuanian SSR (pre-experimental),   Malta (pre-experimental),   Mexico (  Baja California (XETV)),[m],   Nicaragua (pre-experimental),   Philippines (thru ABS (DZAQ-TV), now ABS-CBN Corporation),   Puerto Rico (pre-experimental),   Saar (Telesaar),[n],  Soviet Union (  Armenian SSR (pre-experimental),   Azerbaijan SSR (pre-experimental),   Byelorussian SSR (pre-experimental),   Georgian SSR (pre-experimental),   Ukrainian SSR (pre-experimental),   Uzbek SSR (pre-experimental)),   Sweden (pre-experimental),    Switzerland (German television, SRG),   United Kingdom (  Guernsey,   Jersey (pre-experimental),   United Kingdom (  Northern Ireland, (BBC TV Service NI)[o]),   United States (  Arkansas (KRTV),   Fresno (KMJ-TV),   Idaho (KFXD-TV),   Nevada (KLAS-TV),   Kansas (KTVH),   North Dakota (KCJB-TV),   South Dakota (KELO-TV),   Maine (WABI-TV),   Montana (KXLF-TV)),   Vatican City (experimental, HVJ),   Yugoslavia (  SR Croatia (pre-experimental)
1954   Algeria (pre-experimental),   Australia (experimental, ABC),[24]   Bulgaria (experimental, MEI),   Canada (  Manitoba (CBWT),   Saskatchewan (CKCK-TV),   Alberta (CHCT-TV),   New Brunswick (CHSJ-TV),   Nova Scotia (CJCB-TV)),   Colombia (HJRN-TV),   Czechoslovakia (ČST),   France (  Bouches-du-Rhône (Télé Marseille),   Rhône (Télé-Lyon)),   Guam (pre-experimental),   Hungary (experimental)   Italy (official, Programma Nazionale),   Mexico (  Chihuahua (XEJ-TV)),   Monaco (TMC - first microstate to have a native channel),   French Morocco (TELMA, went defunct shortly after),[25]   Norway (experimental, NRK),   Portugal (Lajes Field (CSL-TV, first AFRTS television station)),[26]   Puerto Rico (WKAQ-TV),   Soviet Union (  Latvian SSR (Latvijas Televīzija)),    Switzerland (French television, Télévision Genevoise),   United States (  New Hampshire (WMUR-TV),   Vermont (WMVT),   Wyoming (KFBC-TV)),   Uruguay (pre-experimental)
1955   Austria (ORF Fernsehen),   Brazil (  Minas Gerais (TV Itacolomi, now defunct[p])),   Bermuda (ZBK-TV),[q]   Canada (  Newfoundland And Labrador (CJON-TV)),   Finland (test programming, TV-kerho),[r]   Guatemala (TGW-TV, now defunct),   Iceland (AFRTS Keflavik),   Luxembourg (Télé-Luxembourg),   Saudi Arabia (Dhahran Airfield, experimental and regular programming, AJL-TV, now defunct),   Soviet Union (  Estonian SSR (TTV)),   Thailand (official, HSI-TV),[28]   Romania (experimental),   United Kingdom (  Guernsey,   Jersey (BBC))
1956   Australia (  New South Wales (TCN),   Victoria (HSV)),   France (  Algerian Departments (RTF Television Algiers)),[29]   Canada (  Prince Edward Island (CFCY-TV)),   El Salvador (YSEB-TV),[30]   Finland (regular programming, TES-TV, now defunct),[r]   United States (  Guam (KUAM-TV)),   Iraq (BTV, now defunct and replaced by Al-Iraqiya TV),   Nicaragua (YNSA-TV),[31]   United States (  Panama Canal Zone (CFN)),[32]   Romania (TVR),   South Korea (HLKZ-TV),   Soviet Union (  Armenian SSR (Armenian Television),   Azerbaijan SSR (Baku Television Studio),   Byelorussian SSR (Belarusian Television),   Georgian SSR (1TV),   Ukrainian SSR (regular programming, Ukrainske Telebachennia),   Uzbek SSR (Tashkent Television Studio)),   Spain (TVE),   Portugal (experimental, RTP),   Sweden, (Radiotjänst TV),   Uruguay (SAETA),[33],   Yugoslavia (  SR Croatia (RTV Zagreb))[s]
1957   Chile (UCV Televisión),   Cyprus (RIK),   Hong Kong (subscription, Rediffusion Television),[t]   Hungary (MTV),   Lithuanian SSR (TV Vilnius),[34]   Malta,[u]   Portugal (full service, RTP),
1958   Bermuda (ZBM-TV),   China (Peking Television),[v]   Czechoslovakia (ČST Bratislava),   Iran (TVI),[w],   Malaya (mechanical, experimental),   Peru (OAD-TV),   Soviet Union (  Kazakh SSR (Almaty Television Studio),   Kaliningrad Oblast (Kaliningrad Television Studio [ru]),   Moldavian SSR (TVM)),    Switzerland (Italian television, TSI),   United Kingdom (  Wales, TWW),[x]   Yugoslavia (  SR Serbia (RTV Belgrade),   SR Slovenia (RTV Ljubljana))
1959   Australia (  Queensland (QTQ),   South Australia (NWS),   Western Australia (TVW)),   Brazil (  Rio Grande do Sul (TV Piratini, now defunct[y])),   Bulgaria (Bulgarian Television),   Chile (full service, Canal 2 UC),   Ecuador (HCJB-TV, now defunct),[z]   Haiti (4VMR-TV),   Honduras (HRTG-TV),   India (AIR-TV),[35]   Lebanon (CLT),   Nigeria (WNTV),   Ryukyu Islands (KSDW-TV),[aa]  Soviet Union (  Crimean ASSR (Crimean Television [ru]),   Kirghiz SSR (regular programming, KTRK),   Tatar ASSR (Kazan Television Studio [ru]),   Tajik SSR (Shabakai Yakum),   Turkmen SSR (Turkmen Television))

1960s

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Year Countries and territories
1960   Albania (experimental and regular programming, RTSH),   Australia (  Tasmania (TVT)),   Brazil (  Distrito Federal (TV Brasília),   Paraná (TV Paranaense),   Bauru (TV Bauru),   Bahia (TV Itapoan),   Pernambuco (TV Jornal do Commercio),   Ceará (TV Ceará, now defunct[ab])),   Costa Rica (Teletica),   Greece (experimental, PPC),   Netherlands Antilles (PJC-TV),   New Zealand (NZBC TV),   Norway (full service, NRK),   Panama (RPC),   Southern Rhodesia (RTV),   Soviet Union (  Sakhalin Oblast (Sakhalin [ru])),   United Arab Republic ((Egyptian Television Network),   Syria (Channel 1)),[ac]
1961   Brazil (  Goiás (TV Rádio Clube (TV Goyá)),   Espírito Santo (TV Vitória),   Pará (TV Marajoara, now defunct[ad])),   Cambodia (experimental, NEC),[36][37]   Ireland (Telefís Éireann),[ae]   Kuwait (Kuwait Television),   United States Virgin Islands (WBNB-TV, now defunct),   Yugoslavia (  SR Bosnia (RTV Sarajevo)),   Northern Rhodesia (RTV)
1962   Australia (  Australian Capital Territory (CTC)),   Congo-Brazzaville (RTC),   Ethiopia (ETV),   France (  Gironde (Télé-Bordeaux Aquitaine),   Haute-Garonne (Télé Toulouse-Pyrénées)),   Gibraltar (GBC),[af]   Indonesia (experimental and regular programming, Jajasan TVRI),[ag][38]   Kenya (VOK),   Malta (MTV),[ah]   Sudan (Sudan Television Service),   Taiwan (TTV),[ai]   Trinidad and Tobago (TTT)
1963   Brazil (  Maranhão (TV Difusora)),   Upper Volta (VoltaVision),   Gabon (RTG),   Ivory Coast (RTI),   Jamaica (JBC, now defunct),   Malaysia (Televisyen Malaysia),[aj]   Netherlands (  Aruba (Telearuba)),   North Korea (CTBS-DPRK),   Sierra Leone (SLTV),[39]   Singapore (TV Singapura Channel 5),   Soviet Union (  Nakhichevan ASSR (Nakhchivan TV)),[40]   Tunisia (experimental),   Uganda (UTV)
1964   American Samoa (KVZK-TV),   Barbados (CBC-TV),   East Pakistan (Pilot Television Dhaka),   Spain (Canary Islands (TVE Canarias)[ak]),   Ethiopia (regular programming, ETV),   Federation of South Arabia (  Aden (Aden TV)),   France (  Alpes-Maritimes (Télé Marseille-Provence),   Calvados,   Cher &   Seine-Maritime (Télé Paris Normandie Centre),   Ille-et-Vilaine (Télé-Bretagne),   Loire-Atlantique (Télé Loire-Océan [fr]),   Puy-de-Dôme (Télé Auvergne [fr]),   Sarthe (Télé Maine-Anjou-Touraine-Perche [fr])),   Guadeloupe (ORTF Guadeloupe [fr]),   Karakalpak ASSR (Karakalpak Television),[41]   Liberia (LBC),   Martinique (ORTF Martinique [fr]),   Mauritius (MBC 1),   Niger (Télévision Scolaire du Niger),   West Pakistan (PTV),   Réunion (ORTF La Réunion),   Yugoslavia (  SR Macedonia (RTV Skopje),   SR Montenegro (RTV Titograd))
1965   Antigua and Barbuda (ZAL-TV),[42]   Brazil (  Mato Grosso (TV Morena)),[al]   France (  Côte-d'Or (Télé Bourgogne-Franche-Comté),   Haute-Vienne (Télé-Limoges-Centre-Ouest [fr])),   Meurthe-et-Moselle &   Marne (Télé Lorraine-Champagne [fr]))   French Polynesia (ORTF Télé Tahiti),   Ghana (GTV),   New Caledonia (ORTF Télé Nouméa [fr]),   Paraguay (TV Cerro Cora),   Saudi Arabia (Al Saudiya, state-owned),   Senegal (RTS),   Suriname (trial and regular programming, STVS),   Tunisia (experimental),   United Kingdom (  Isle of Man (Border Television)),[am]   India (AIR-TV, regular programming)[35]
1966   Brazil (  Amazonas (TV Manauara [pt], now defunct),   Paraíba (TV Borborema)),[an]   Cambodia (TVRK, regular),   Congo-Kinshasa (RTNC),   Greece (EIR),   Iceland (Sjónvarpið),   Israel (IETV, went defunct and replaced by Kan Educational),[ao]   Tunisia (RTT),[ah]   South Vietnam (THVN),[ap]   North Yemen (SABS-TV),[43]   South Yemen (SYBS-TV),[39]   Zambia (ZNBC)[aq]
1967   Canada (  Northwest Territories (CFYK-TV)),   French Somaliland (RTD),   French Guiana (ORTF Guyane),   Hong Kong (free-to-air, TVB),   Madagascar (RTM),   Mongolia (experimental and regular programming, MNTV),   Saint Lucia (SLTV),[ar][44]   Saint Pierre and Miquelon (ORTF Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon [fr])   France (  Somme (Télé-Lille Amiens))
1968   Canada (  Yukon (CFWH-TV, now defunct)),   Equatorial Guinea (TVE Guinea Ecuatorial)[ak],   Jordan (JTV),   Libya (Libyan Television Service)[45]
1969   Bolivia (Televisión Boliviana),   Brazil (  Santa Catarina (TV Coligadas)),[as]   Trucial States (  Abu Dhabi (Abu Dhabi TV)),   Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (Saipan,[at] WSZE-TV, now defunct)

1970s

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Year Countries and territories
1970   Qatar (QTV),   North Vietnam (Independent Television System)
1971   Australia (  Northern Territory (ABD)),   Brazil (  Sergipe (TV Sergipe [pt])),   Malaysia (  Sabah (TV Malaysia Sabah))
1972   Brazil (  Piauí (TV Clube)),   Madeira (RTP Madeira),   Saint Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla (ZIZ)
1973   Antarctica (  McMurdo Station (AFAN-TV)),[46]   Bahrain (Bahrain TV),   British Virgin Islands (ZBTV)[au]   Hong Kong (free-to-air broadcasting service, RTV),   Togo (RTNM)
1974   Brazil (  Acre ((Rede Amazônica Rio Branco),   Rondônia ((TV Rondônia [pt])),   Central African Republic (RTC),   Grenada (ZBF-TV),   Oman (Oman TV),   Tanzania (  Zanzibar (TVZ)),   Yugoslavia (  SAP Kosovo, (Televizioni i Prishtinës [sq]))
1975   Angola (experimental and regular programming, RPA),   Azores (RTP Açores),   Brazil (  Alagoas (TV Gazeta de Alagoas),   Amapá (TV Amapá [pt])),   Brunei (RTB),   Burundi (RTNB),   Chile (  Easter Island (TVN))[47]   Dominica (Cable & Wireless Dominica),[av]   Gilbert and Ellice Islands (foreign-owned launching),   Yugoslavia (  SAP Vojvodina (RTV Novi Sad))
1976   Abkhaz ASSR (National Television of Abkhaz ASSR),   Bahamas (experimental),[48]   Turkish Federated State of Cyprus (BRT 1),[aw]   Palau (WALU-TV, now defunct),   South Africa (SABC TV)
1977   Bahamas (ZNS-TV),[ax]   Guinea (RTG),   Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (  Pohnpei (KPON-TV))
1978   Afghanistan (Afghanistan National Television),   Benin (ORTB),   East Timor (TVRI Dili),[ay]   Swaziland (Swazi TV),   Maldives (TV Maldives),[49]
1979   Chad (mechanical, experimental),   Equatorial Guinea (returned, TVGE)[az],   Federated States of Micronesia (  Yap (WAAB-TV)),   Marshall Islands (MBC),[ba]   Burma (test programming),[bb]   Sri Lanka (ITN Sri Lanka)[bc]

1980s

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Year Countries and territories
1980   Indonesia (Batam, TVRI),[bd][50][51]   Mauritania (experimental),   Burma (BBS, regular programming),   Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG-TV),   Guyana (Vieira Communications Television),   Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (  Chuuk (WTKK-TV))
1981   Belize (Channel 7),   Mozambique (TEM),   South West Africa (SWABC)[be]
1982   Brazil (Fernando de Noronha (TV Nacional Fernando de Noronha)),   France (  Corsica ((FR3 Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur-Corse [fr])),   Greenland (KNR),   Mauritania (TV de Mauritanie),[52]   São Tomé and Príncipe (Televisão Experimental RDSTP, experimental),   Sri Lanka (Rupavahini, national)
1983   Bophuthatswana (Bop TV),[bf]   Kampuchea (re-established, TVK),   Laos (LNTV)[bg]   Mali (ORTM),   Seychelles (RTS),[53]   Somalia (Telefishanka J. D. Soomaaliya),[54][bh]   Tonga (VAP-TV18, now defunct),[bi]   Vatican City (Centro Televisivo Vaticano),[bj]   Saint Lucia (HTS, local)
1984   Åland (TV Åland),[55]   Cape Verde (TEVEC),   Faroe Islands (SvF),   Macau (TDM),   Tristan da Cunha (taped service)[56]
1985     Nepal (NTV),   Cameroon (CTV),   Norfolk Island (relays from mainland Australia)[57]   (LBCI)
1986   Falkland Islands (SSVC Television Falkland Islands),[bk]   Mayotte (RFO Mayotte [fr]),   Niue (Bliss Cablevision),[bl]   Wallis and Futuna (RFO Wallis-et-Futuna [fr])
1987   Chad (Télé Tchad),   Papua New Guinea (foreign-owned launching, Niugini Television Network),   Spain (  Ceuta (La 1 Ceuta),   Melilla (La 1 Melilla))
1988   Botswana (GBC TV, in Gaborone),[58]   Lesotho (Lesotho Television),[59]   Soviet Union (  Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (Artsakh Public TV))
1989   Cook Islands (Cook Islands Television),   Guinea-Bissau (TEGB),[60][61]   Soviet Union (  Gagauz ASSR (Comrat Television [gag]))

1990s

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Year Countries and territories
1991   Akrotiri and Dhekelia (SSVC TV Cyprus),[62]   Cayman Islands (Cayman 27, now defunct),   Falkland Islands (FITV),[bm]   Fiji (FijiTV),[bn]   Hezbollah (Al-Manar),   Nauru (NTV),   Rwanda (RTV)
1992   Republika Srpska (RTV Krajina Banja Luka),   São Tomé and Príncipe (TVS, regular),   Solomon Islands (TTV),   South Ossetia (Ir),[63]   Transnistria (PMR TV),   Vanuatu (TBV, experimental)
1993   Eritrea (Eri-TV),   San Marino (San Marino RTV),   Vanuatu (TBV),   Western Samoa (SBC Television 1)
1994   Tanzania (mainland, Coastal Television Network)
1995   Andorra (ATV),[bo]   Gambia (Gambia Radio & Television Service),   Saint Helena (Sure South Atlantic Ltd),   Turks and Caicos Islands (WIV Channel 4)
1996   Palestine (PBC)
1997   Montserrat (Peoples Television),[bp][64]   Somaliland (Somaliland Television)[65]
1999   Belgium (  German-speaking Community (KA3)),[bq]   Bhutan (BBS),[66]   Malawi (TVM),[67]   Tuvalu (limited service)[68]

2000s and 2010s

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Year Countries and territories
2000   Botswana (BTV, national),   Tonga (TV Tonga, national)
2001   Bosnia and Herzegovina (  Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Federalna TV)),   Tokelau (foreign channels, no local service),[69]   Tristan da Cunha (BFBS, live service)
2002   Kiribati (TV Kiribati, native, but suspended from 2013 to 2018)
2004   Southern Provinces (Laayoune TV)
2006   Comoros (ORTC),   France (  Saint-Martin and   Saint Barthélemy (Carib’inTV [fr], stopped broadcasting in 2017)),   Hamas (Al-Aqsa TV),   Palau (OTV, returned),[br]   Pitcairn Islands[70]
2008   Liechtenstein (1 FL TV),[bs]   Netherlands (  Bonaire (NOSTV Bonaire)),[71]   Papua New Guinea (state-owned launching, NBC Television)
2009   Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (RASD TV)[bt][72]
2010   Netherlands (  Sint Maarten (TV-CARIB)),[73]   South Sudan (South Sudan Television)[bu]
2011   Norfolk Island (TVNI, local)
2014   Donetsk People's Republic (Novorossiya TV),[bv]   Luhansk People's Republic (Luhansk 24)[74][bv]
2018   Kiribati (Kiri 1 TV, returned)[75]
2019   Tuvalu (returned, Tuvalu.TV)[76]

Notes

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  1. ^ Although 180-line cathode ray tube receivers were manufactured in France in 1936, a mechanical scanning camera was still used at the transmitter in Paris until 1937.
  2. ^ Off from 1940 to 1950 due to Japan's entry in the World War II and subsequent US occupation.
  3. ^ Off from 1939 to 1945 during World War II. The service reached the entirety of the Russian SSR alone by the late 1960s.
  4. ^ Off from 1939 to 1946 during World War II.
  5. ^ Czechoslovakia became two separate states, namely the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993.
  6. ^ License auctioned to Silvio Santos and became SBT São Paulo in 1981.
  7. ^ License auctioned to Organizações Bloch in 1983 and became TV Manchete Rio de Janeiro, now RedeTV! Rio.
  8. ^ Station broadcast in English from its launch to shutdown in 1954, as a consequence of the FCC freeze, which was lifted at the time of closure.
  9. ^ Licensed to Altzomoni, in the neighboring State of Mexico.
  10. ^ Limited to Istanbul. Ankara got television in 1968 when TRT started its television service. In 1971, ITU TV shut down and TRT started a station in Istanbul. From then on, a slow process to start a national service began.
  11. ^ Dutch-language BRT used the Belgian 625-line standard and French-language RTB used the Belgian 819-line standard (abandoned in 1963). Early Belgian sets were very expensive because they could receive four different standards: Belgian 625, European 625, Belgian 819, French 819. Later a fifth standard was added with the French 625-line standard.
  12. ^ Rollout for NHK started in 1953 in Kanto, 1954 in Tokai and Kansai and between 1956 and 1958 for the rest of Japan. For commercial TV, limited to Kanto from 1953 to 1955 (NTV and KRT) and spread between 1956 and 1963 to the rest of the country. Saga Prefecture only gained television (NHK and commercial) in 1969 due to overspill from neighboring prefectures and usage of UHF as the preferred band.
  13. ^ English-language station affiliated to American networks (with an independent phase) until 2015, when it became a Canal 5 affiliate.
  14. ^ Telesaar went defunct in 1958 as it was ordered by the German authorities.
  15. ^ First television broadcasts in the island of Ireland, eight years before the Republic. Local programmes started in 1955.
  16. ^ License auctioned to Organizações Bloch in 1983 and became TV Manchete Minas, now RedeTV! Minas.
  17. ^ Served only in Kindley Air Force Base.
  18. ^ a b The channel launched in 1956 as a continuation of a project that had aired a public broadcast in May 1955 as the first television broadcast in Finland.[27]
  19. ^ The date refers to the launch of the television channel in republics and autonomous provinces of Yugoslavia, there were: RTV Zagreb in SR Croatia (1956), RTV Ljubljana in SR Slovenia (1958), RTV Belgrade in SR Serbia (1958), RTV Skopje in SR Macedonia (1964), RTV Sarajevo in SR Bosnia and Herzegovina (1969), RTV Titograd (Podgorica) in SR Montenegro (1971), and in SAP Kosovo (RTV Priština) and SAP Vojvodina (RTV Novi Sad) was introduced in 1975.
  20. ^ Television was introduced in Hong Kong when it was a British crown colony until 1997. The Rediffusion service was a cable network until 1973, when it converted to terrestrial television.
  21. ^ Date where relays from Italy became available.
  22. ^ This station was the first in the Chinese world to be strictly terrestrial from the outset.
  23. ^ Originally limited to Tehran area, later to Abadan, and from 1969, expanded to the whole nation. Television of Iran was absorbed into National Iranian Television in 1969; since the main network of the NIRT used a different frequency from TVI (which used channel 3) in Tehran, it's likely that the former TVI frequency was turned off.
  24. ^ Wales had received broadcasts from England since 1952.
  25. ^ License auctioned to Silvio Santos in 1981 and became SBT RS.
  26. ^ Station shut down in 1972. The frequency was later occupied by Teleamazonas starting in 1974. RTS is often erroneously believed to be the first.
  27. ^ Television was introduced in the Ryukyu Islands (now part of Japan), when they were under U.S. administration.
  28. ^ License auctioned to Organizações Bloch in 1983 and became TV Manchete Ceará (signed on 1984), now RedeTV! Ceará.
  29. ^ The United Arab Republic was a short-lived political union between Egypt and Syria. The union began in 1958 and existed until 1961, when Syria seceded from the union.
  30. ^ License auctioned to Silvio Santos in 1981 and became SBT Pará.
  31. ^ Ireland had received broadcasts from the United Kingdom since 1949.
  32. ^ Gibraltar had previously received television broadcasts from Spain.
  33. ^ Originally limited to Jakarta area, and from 1965, the island of Java as a whole. The first television station outside of the island, TVRI North Sumatera, opened in 1970, after receiving just overspill coming from West Malaysia.
  34. ^ a b Previously received television broadcasts from Italy.
  35. ^ This is the year when television was introduced in territories under its administration. After the Chinese Civil War in 1949, the government of the Republic of China retreated to Taiwan and other islands, and Mainland China was controlled by the People's Republic of China.
  36. ^ Originally limited to most areas of Peninsular Malaysia.
  37. ^ a b Station operated autonomously by the territorial production center of Televisión Española (TVE) in the region.
  38. ^ Considering the current territory of the state, the first TV station is TV Centro América, founded in 1967. The area where TV Morena is became its own state, Mato Grosso do Sul, in 1979.
  39. ^ Although the Isle of Man has received television signals since 1951, 1965 marked the first direct broadcast from a relay station built on the island. To date, no local television service has been set up and the island is served by BBC North West and ITV Granada (until 2009, ITV Border) with no local opt-outs.
  40. ^ Experimental broadcasts started in 1963; the station claims 1966 to be its birth year, when broadcasts became regular.
  41. ^ The Israeli Ministry of Education in co-operation with the Rothschild Fund started limited broadcasts to schools in March 1966. A public state-owned TV channel started broadcasting in May 1968. Broadcasts were black and white (with a few exceptions) until the early 1980s.
  42. ^ now defunct and replaced by HTV.
  43. ^ Successor of the prior RTV service in Lusaka, which started in 1961.
  44. ^ SLTV relayed television broadcasts from Barbados.
  45. ^ Excludes TV Florianópolis, a television station that existed between 1964 and 1965, and was shut down after four months on air by DENTEL on the grounds that it lacked a license.
  46. ^ Corresponds to the current Northern Mariana Islands.
  47. ^ Converted from the former cable service.
  48. ^ Cable service. Dominica never had a terrestrial television service. Its monopoly in the market was broken in the early 80s by Marpin Telecoms, which is currently Digicel Dominica.
  49. ^ Current Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.
  50. ^ The Bahamas had previously received broadcasts from the United States.
  51. ^ Now believed to be under the jurisdiction of Radio-Televisão Timor Leste following the formal independence of the country in 2002.
  52. ^ Off from 1973 to 1979.
  53. ^ Replaced a cable company set up in 1975 when it was still under the control of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands and was shut down due to storm surges from a hurricane in 1979.
  54. ^ Test service available only in Yangon in 1979, and formally launched in 1981.
  55. ^ Available only in Colombo in the network's early years.
  56. ^ Had received broadcasts from Singapore since 1963.
  57. ^ Corresponds to the current country of Namibia.
  58. ^ Only bantustan within Apartheid-era South Africa to have a local television service. After the dissolution of Bophuthatswana, the station was integrated into the SABC and later shut down.
  59. ^ Television is available from Nong Khai city in Thailand since the mid-1970s.
  60. ^ Off from 1991 to 2011 as the channel was suspended due to the civil war. During the interim, numerous private television stations appeared.
  61. ^ Subscription service, shut down in 1987, during its existence it also faced competition from ASTL-TV3, itself a subscription service until the 1991 launch of the Oceania Broadcasting Network, ASTL-TV3 later shut down in 1996.
  62. ^ Although the Vatican did not have a television service of its own until 1983, broadcasts from Italy had been received since 1954.
  63. ^ A prior service existed during the brief Argentine takeover of the islands in the Falklands War in 1982, sustained by ATC.
  64. ^ Assets sold to the government of Niue in 1989 and converted to a free-to-air terrestrial operation, TV Niue.
  65. ^ Television broadcasts had also been received from Argentina.
  66. ^ Television came to Fiji in part-time for the 1991 Rugby World Cup, and it arrived in full-time in 1994.
  67. ^ ATV's origins trace back to the early 90s as an opt-out in the local relay of TVC's second channel, Canal 33.
  68. ^ Previously relayed broadcasts from Antigua and Barbuda.
  69. ^ Sporadic broadcasts in association with a local Francophone cable channel in 1993. Start of the German-language service. Excludes German TV received by overspill and cable and the adjacent services from RTBF in French.
  70. ^ Excluding the cable network installed by the PNCC in 1990.
  71. ^ Liechtenstein previously received television broadcasts from Switzerland.
  72. ^ RASD TV was established in February 2004, but didn't broadcast its regular transmissions until 2009.
  73. ^ Became the national broadcaster upon independence in 2011.
  74. ^ a b Excludes local stations that existed before and were confiscated by the new regimes. Suspilne still has channels for the occupied areas, which as of 2024 are "temporarily occupied" according to the official stance of the Ukrainian government.

See also

edit

References

edit
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  3. ^ "W3XK: America's first television station".
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  5. ^ "J.L. Baird: Television in 1932". Baird Television.
  6. ^ Museum of Broadcast Communications: Germany
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