Guardian Issues Corrections: Restaurant Origins and Historic Dates
Guardian corrects restaurant and hotel details

The Guardian newspaper has published a series of corrections and clarifications, addressing factual inaccuracies in several of its recent articles. The amendments cover details about a trendy restaurant's origins and the historical classification of a Sicilian hotel.

Setting the Record Straight on Dining and History

In a review published on 8 November within the Feast supplement, the newspaper incorrectly described Punk Royale as a Danish restaurant chain. The publication has now clarified that while the group does operate a venue in Copenhagen, it was originally founded in Stockholm.

Furthermore, a travel feature from 15 November in the Saturday magazine mischaracterised the Palazzo Previtera. This Sicilian hotel and museum was erroneously labelled as 'medieval' in a subheading. The publication confirms the building was actually constructed in 1649, placing it well outside the medieval period.

Commitment to Accuracy and Further Amendments

These corrections underscore the publication's ongoing process of reviewing its content for factual precision. The notice also mentioned that other recently amended articles include a piece about Paramount securing the rights to show most Champions League games in the UK from 2027 to 2031.

The Guardian has provided clear channels for readers to submit editorial complaints or correction requests. These can be sent via email to guardian.readers@theguardian.com, by post to the Readers' editor at Kings Place in London, or by leaving a voicemail on +44 (0)20 3353 4736.