Le Monde and Le Figaro are France's most well-known daily newspapers. Libération started in 1976 by Sartre and July, now left-leaning. Le Parisien/Aujourd'hui en France focuses on Paris and surrounding region. 20 Minutes offers free daily news in major cities
Founded in 1827 as The Standard by Stanley Lees Giffard. Became Evening Standard in 1859, gaining prominence for foreign news coverage. Merged with Associated Newspapers' Evening News in 1980. Acquired by Alexander Lebedev in 2009 for £1
Founded in 1889 by Charles Dow and Edward Jones as a subscription-based business newspaper. Initially focused on stock and bond news, later expanded to include financial analysis. Won 39 Pulitzer Prizes and became largest newspaper in US by print circulation
Founded in 1945 by Norwegian resistance movement after liberation. Christian A.R. Christensen served as first editor-in-chief until 1967. Now wholly owned by public company Schibsted ASA. Based in Oslo and publishes in tabloid format
Vogue launched in 1892 as a society and fashion journal. First color cover shot by Edward Steichen in 1932. Donyale Luna became first woman of color on Vogue cover in 1966. Helmut Berger became first man on Vogue cover in 1970. Harry Styles became first solo male cover in 2020
First newspapers appeared in 17th century Europe with printing press. Gazzetta di Mantova is world's oldest living newspaper since 1664. Newspapers must meet four criteria: publicity, periodicity, currentness, universality