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Le Temps (French pronunciation: [lə tɑ̃], lit. ' The Time ') is a Swiss French-language daily newspaper published in Berliner format in Geneva by Le Temps SA. The paper was launched in 1998, formed out of the merger of two other newspapers, Journal de Genève et Gazette de Lausanne and Le Nouveau Quotidien (the former being a merger of two other papers), as those papers were facing ...
Merged with the Le Nouveau Quotidien in 1998 to form Le Temps. [118] Le Nouveau Quotidien: 1991 1998 Lausanne Canton of Vaud Daily Merged with the Journal de Genève et Gazette de Lausanne in 1998 to form Le Temps. [122] Journal du Chablais: 1993 2001 Monthey Canton of Valais Thrice weekly Formed out of a merger in 1993, out of the Journal de ...
In 2024, Tamedia, now its owner, made plans to merge the editorial offices of the publication with other publications it owned, Le Matin and the Tribune de Genève. [7] At the start of the 20th century its circulation was about 26,000. [2] The 2006 circulation of 24 heures was 95,315 copies. [8]
It publishes out of Nyon in the Canton of Vaud. [1] It was founded in 1987 as the Quotidien de La Côte by printer Jean-Pierre Manz. [2] [3] The paper was created out of the merger of several small biweekly and triweekly papers in the Geneva Lake region.
Nyheter Idag (News Today) is a Swedish-language online newspaper. The magazine was founded in February 2014 by Chang Frick and Jakob Bergman, [ citation needed ] and they say their news reports focus on "politics, gossip, social media and foreign news".
The Journal de Genève (JdG) was a French-language Swiss newspaper founded in 1826. In 1991, the Gazette de Lausanne was merged into it, after which it was titled the Journal de Genève et Gazette de Lausanne. Following financial difficulties that faced both papers, it was merged in March 1998 with the Le Nouveau Quotidien to form Le Temps.
Tribune de Genève Airship. The Tribune de Genève was first published by James T. Bates on 1 February 1879. Bates was an American who had moved to Geneva with his Swiss wife. [1] [2] It published a magazine occasionally and published news from outside the general area, with which it stood out from the other rival papers. [1]
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