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La Meuse was launched in 1856. [1] [2] The paper has its headquarters in Liège [3] and is owned by the Rossel group which also owns Le Soir and La Lanterne, among others. [4] [5] La Meuse is published by Rossel et Cie S.A. [6] in tabloid format. [4] As of 2014 its editor-in-chief was Olympe Gilbart. [7]
The number of national daily newspapers in Luxembourg was five both in 1950 and in 1965. [1] Until 2001 there were six dailies and it became eight when two more dailies were launched. [2] This is a list of newspapers published in Luxembourg.
La Meuse may refer to: Ateliers de construction de La Meuse (locomotive builder and engineering company) La Meuse (newspaper) , a French-language regional newspaper published in Liège, Belgium
[3] [4] The paper is the successor of the Luxembourg edition of Le Républicain lorrain, French regional newspaper. [5] [6] This switch occurred when the paper was acquired by the Editpress, [7] which also owns Le Jeudi and Tageblatt. [5] [8] The publisher of Le Quotidien, based in Esch-sur-Alzette, is the Lumedia.
Mediahuis Luxembourg S.A., formerly Groupe Saint-Paul Luxembourg is the owner of Luxembourg's largest newspaper, Luxemburger Wort, and its news website wort.lu. It is based at a large centralized complex in Gasperich, in the south of Luxembourg City. In May 2020, Mediahuis acquired Saint-Paul Luxembourg. [1]
La DH was established on 19 April [1] 1906. [2] The paper has its headquarters in Brussels and has a liberal stance without any political affiliation. [2] Its publisher is IPM. [3] It has seven regional versions: Namur / Luxembourg, Liège, Tournai / Ath / Mouscron, Mons Center, Charleroi Center, Brabant, and Brussels. In 1990 La DH sold ...
A little mudslinging is par for the course in every awards season. But this year just might be the messiest Oscar race on record.. Over the last few months, a slew of best picture nominees have ...
Lëtzebuerger Journal was first published on 5 April 1948, [2] replacing the Obermosel-Zeitung and l'Unio'n, which ceased publication the same year. [3] Both of those newspapers were attempts to create a mass-circulation liberal newspaper, like the Luxemburger Zeitung of the pre-war era, which had a long tradition, but had been discredited politically. [3]