Courrier de Smyrne was Francophone newspaper of Izmir which was published from 1824 to 1905, usually twice a week. [1] Successive editors were Alexandrer Blacque (1824), Reggio Gaston, in 1893 and Jules Regio in 1905. [2] Besides politics, the newspaper contained commercial and literary issues, some of which can be found in the National Library of France. [3]
Courrier de Smyrne guided by Alexandre Blacque, who spent his whole life trying to stop the expansion of the Russian Empire into the Dardanelles, exercised hostile critique of Ioannis Kapodistrias, considering him representative of Russian interests and accusing him of not working for the true interest of Greece, that he wanted to become king, that he imprisoned people without cause, etc. [4]
Auguste Émile Faguet was a French author and literary critic.
Émile Henriot was a French poet, novelist, essayist and literary critic.
Antoine Jay was a French writer, journalist, historian and politician.
The mass media in Tunisia is an economic sector. Under the authoritarian regimes of Habib Bourguiba, and then Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, it saw periods of liberalization and then challenges, notably due to Tunisian censorship. The 2010-2011 Tunisian protests and the subsequent change in government may bring significant change in this domain.
A cycle of folk songs pertaining to the Souliotes and mainly to their wars against the Turks and the Albanians of Ali Pasha in 18th and early 19th century.
Christian Delporte, is a French historian specialized in political and cultural history of France in the twentieth century, including the history of media, image and political communication.
Robert Chaudenson was a French linguist.
Alphonse de Chavanges was a French officer and dramatist.
Antony Béraud, real name Antoine-Nicolas Béraud, was a French military, chansonnier, writer, poet, historian and playwright.
Théodore Anne was a French playwright, librettist, and novelist.
Eugène Louis Hatin was a 19th-century French historian, journalist and bibliographer.
Étienne-Gabriel Peignot was a 19th-century French bibliographer.
Jacques-Théodore Parisot was a 19th-century French soldier and historian of the French navy, founder and head of the Historical Section of the ministry of Marine.
There were multiple newspapers published in the Ottoman Empire.
Isidore Ndaywel è Nziem, is a Congolese historian and linguist. He is the author of several essays, studies and other publications about the history of the Congo, including the overview work L'histoire générale du Congo: De l'héritage ancien à la République démocratique.
Romuald Fonkoua is a professor of Francophone literature at the Faculty of Letters of Sorbonne University where he directs the International Center for Francophone Studies.
Jean-Pierre Makouta-Mboukou was a Congolese politician, academic, novelist and playwright. For his abundant and eclectic work his biographers have called him the “Congolese Victor Hugo” and the “baobab of Congolese literature”.