Jours de France explained

Jours de France
Publisher:Marcel Dassault
Category:News magazines
Frequency:Weekly
Language:French, others
Based:Paris
Founded:1958
Country:France
Website:http://joursdefrance.lefigaro.fr/

Jours de France is a French news magazine which was created and belonged to French industrialist Marcel Dassault. It succeeded to an earlier magazine called Semaine de France and was originally intended as a competitor to Paris Match.

History and profile

Jours de France was established in 1958. The magazine was used as a tool by Dassault to propagate his political ideas and vision, such as organizing a World Fair in Paris (which did not happen). It was sent for free to all French dentists and physicians in France so that it was available to patients in the waiting rooms. It was essentially supported by publicity, which allow to keep a relatively low price. The magazine is headquartered in Paris.

It had pages devoted to fashion, health issues, social events in Paris, a regular editorial by Marcel Dassault, drawings by Jacques Faizant, Coq (Luis García Gallo), Kiraz and Hervé (alias of Hervé des Vallières).

In 1989 Jours de France ceased publication.[1] In September 2013 the Figaro group launched the magazine which is published quarterly.[2] The publisher is Societe du Figaro S.A.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Charlotte Murat. "Jours de France" est réapparu dans les kiosques. 14 November 2016. 20 Minutes. 7 August 2013. French.
  2. News: Jours de France. 21 March 2015. Cesana Media. 12 September 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150402105444/http://www.cesanamedia.com/en/news/2013/detail/archive/2013/set/article/jours-de-france-95/. 2 April 2015. dmy-all.
  3. Web site: Jours de France. Publicitas. 21 March 2015.