List of Newspapers in France - Former Newspapers

Former Newspapers

  • La Gazette, 1631–1915, first French weekly, founded by Théophraste Renaudot, became the mouthpiece of the Legitimist monarchists
  • L'Ami du peuple founded by Marat
  • Le Journal des débats, 1789-1944 (conservative)
  • Le Père Duchesne, 1790-1794 (edited by Jacques Hébert)
  • Le Père Duchesne (19th c.) (other newspapers)
  • Le Globe, 1824–1832, founded by the republican and socialist Pierre Leroux, mouthpiece of the Saint-Simonists starting in 1830
  • Le National, 1830-1851 (liberal, founded by Adolphe Thiers and Armand Carrel)
  • La Voix des Femmes, 1848-1852 (feminist)
  • Le Temps (Paris), 1861-1942 (compromised by the Collaboration during Vichy, replaced at the Liberation by Le Monde)
  • Le Petit Parisien, 1876-1944
  • La Citoyenne, 1881-1891 (feminist)
  • Le Matin (France), 1884-1944
  • Le Journal (Paris), 1892-1944
  • Paris-Soir, 1923-1944
  • Je suis partout, 1930–1944, far-right newspaper, Collaborationist during Vichy
  • Combat, 1944-1974 (founded during the Resistance, hosted articles by Albert Camus, Sartre, Malraux, etc.)

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Famous quotes containing the word newspapers:

    If words were invented to conceal thought, I think that newspapers are a great improvement on a bad invention.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    I blame the newspapers because every day they call our attention to insignificant things, while three or four times in our lives, we read books that contain essential things. Once we feverishly tear the band of paper enclosing our newspapers, things should change and we should find—I do not know—the Pensées by Pascal!
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)