- Source: La Lune
- Au nom de la lune
- Snow on the Sahara
- Mune: Guardian of the Moon
- Le Voyage dans la Lune
- Comical History of the States and Empires of the Moon
- La ligne des sens
- From the Earth to the Moon
- Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville
- Snow on the Sahara (lagu)
- Charles-Eugène Delaunay
- La Lune
- A Trip to the Moon
- Au clair de la lune
- From the Earth to the Moon
- Le voyage dans la lune (album)
- Clair de Lune
- Port de la Lune
- Star Wars Hyperspace Mountain
- Mune: Guardian of the Moon
- Suis La Lune
La Lune ("The Moon") was the name of a nineteenth-century French weekly four-sheet newspaper edited by Francis Polo. The illustrator André Gill became known for his work for this journal, in which he drew caricatures for a series entitled The Man of the Day.
Napoléon III disliked the portrait of him drawn by Gill. In December 1867, the journal was censored. "La Lune will have to undergo an eclipse," an authority commented to the editor Polo when the ban was instituted, unwittingly dubbing Polo's subsequent publication: L'Éclipse, which made its first appearance on 9 August 1868. Gill would contribute caricatures to this successor of La Lune as well.
Sources
(in English) Covers of La Lune by André Gill
(in English) Andre Gill
(in French) Frères Goncourt: Gill
External links
La Lune digitized version