Singer Atilla Tas and the other suspects in Turkey face up to 10 years in prison if convicted of membership in "an armed terrorist organization" in a massive government crackdown that has included closing more than 100 media outlets and the arrests of reporters and editors suspected of ties to the July 15 insurrection.
The Reporters Without Borders group ranked Turkey at 151st out of 180 countries on its press freedom index last year.
While critics say the detentions show Turkey is becoming more authoritarian, Turkish officials say the bulk of the journalists were jailed for illegal activities on behalf of enemies of a government facing numerous security challenges in the past year, including the Kurdish insurgency, attacks blamed on the Islamic State group and the attempted coup blamed on Fethullah Gulen, a US-based Muslim cleric.
The arrests of top executives and editors at Cumhuriyet have prompted accusations the Turkish government is trying to muzzle dissent of any kind.
Turkey has arrested 41,000 people in the crackdown in what it says is an effort to dismantle a parallel state loyal to Gulen.
Political polarization in Turkey is also high ahead of an April 16 referendum on whether to expand the powers of the presidency.
"We don't accept anything we're being told," defendant Muhterem Tanik, who is not in detention and denies the charges, said at the Istanbul courthouse. Her husband, Unal Tanik, is also a defendant and has been in prison for two months.
Tas, a Turkish celebrity and social media phenomenon, wrote a newspaper column and posted satirical observations on Twitter about President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Such laws, which existed long before Erdogan came to power as prime minister in 2003, have come under scrutiny in the last decade as Turkey campaigned for membership in the European Union and was urged to widen its freedom of speech rules. But the EU bid has been adrift for years.
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