Comic-Finance | |
Type: | Weekly newspaper |
Format: | Folio |
Editor: | Ernest Schrameck (1844–1911) |
Foundation: | 15 October 1868 |
Ceased Publication: | 25 November 1937 |
Headquarters: | Paris |
Circulation: | 1,000 (in 1877) |
Issn: | 2020-7611 |
Publishing Country: | France |
Le Comic-Finance was a French illustrated satirical and financial weekly newspaper, published in Paris, France from 1868 to 1937.[1] It was edited from 1868 to 1911 by Ernest Schrameck (1844–1911), who wrote under the pseudonym "Sergines".[2]
Comic-Finance was published weekly, on Thursdays. It included humorous articles, and caricatures of prominent businessmen, as well as serious news articles on financial matters.
Some of the illustrated biographical pieces published in Comic-Finance were republished in bound volumes by its editor-in-chief (Sergines, Silhouettes financières, 4 volumes, Paris, 1872–1874).[3]
In 1877, Comic-Finances circulation was estimated at 1,000 copies according to a police report.[4]
One of the newspaper's main contributors was Edmond Benjamin. In 1879, he left Comic-Finance to found La Finance pour rire, whose banner and thumbnails were illustrated by another former contributor to Comic-Finance, the designer E Doré.[5]
Publication of Comic-Finance was temporarily interrupted during the Franco-German War of 1870, the Paris Commune in 1871 and the First World War (1914–18). It appeared fortnightly or monthly from 1920 until 1937, when it ceased publication.[6]