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The French Property Network

Oct 11

Support and guidance throughout this process

Hi Sharon,

Thank you so much, you have really put our minds at rest.

Thank you for all your support and guidance throughout this process.

Tom.

The buying process can be complicated but Cle France understands it inside-out so we find it easy, Tom has had a few questions to check his understanding throughout the process and Sharon has been able to guide and steer him through the process and in a few weeks time Tom will be sitting in his French Hoilday home in Normandy.

Well done Cle France

Add CommentViews: 2515
Sep 30

French Newspapers part 4

I guess you read French Property News, Living France, A Place in the Sun magazines etc. I hope you even enjoy reading the Cle France Newsletters! but to really learn more about life and living in France a French newspaper can not be beaten.

Continuing our look at French Newspapers - Part 4

Thank you for joining me once again as we review a selection of the most widely read newspapers in France.

In part 1, we had an overview of the different sections found in a typical newspaper that will help you navigate its contents.

In part 2, we learned about Le Monde and Le Figaro.

In part 3, we looked at Le Nouvel Observateur and Libération. Today, let’s delve into two more journaux (newspapers) that grace the racks of most newsstands in France: L’Express and l’Humanité.

French newspapers part 4

 

Image by Pranav Bhatt on Flickr

L’Express :

Originally printed as a supplément hebdomadaire (weekly supplement) to the economic newspaper Les Échos in 1953, L’Express morphed into the first french newsmagazine by 1964.  Columns written by Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus and André Malraux among others lent prestige and a certain validity to L’Express that readers had been seeking in other news outlets of the day.

The transition from supplement to full-fledged newsmagazine in 1964 brought with it some changes. Plusieurs journalistes quittent L’Express pour fonder Le Nouvel Observateur (Several journalists leave L’Express to found Le Nouvel Observateur). As a result, the magazine becomes less politically centered which leads to a tripling of its readership over the span of just three years.

In 1995, L’Express forged a new path in the emerging world of digital news when it launched la première version électronique (the first electronic version) of a weekly french newspaper. Today, lexpress.fr is one of the most frequented french news websites avec plus de deux millions de visiteurs par mois (with more than two million visitors a month).

l’Humanité :

One of the oldest french newspapers still in circulation, l’Humanité began informing readers in 1904. Ce journal quotidien (This daily paper) was founded by Jean Jaurès, a french socialist who believed in “la communion avec le mouvement ouvrier” (“agreement with the labor movement”) and for nearly seventy-five years was guided by le Parti Communiste Français (French Communist Party). Similar to L’Express, l’Humanité became a paper for intellectuals thanks to columns written by such illustrious characters as Aristide Brian, Léon Blum, et al.

Because of its communist/socialist leanings, l’Humanité’s popularity waxed and waned over the course of several decades and with the stream of world events, namely the two World Wars and the Cold War. L’Humanité supported la libération nationale à travers le monde (national liberation throughout the world), a practice that generated considerable controversy pendant les guerres d’Algérie et d’Indochine (during the wars of Algeria and Indochina).

In 1996, l’Humanité launched its website at humanite.fr containing archives of columns from its physical newspaper dating back to 1990. Visit la Boutique on the web où vous aurez accès à une sélection d’abonnements (where you will have access to a selection of subscriptions) in both digital and paper formats.

Join me next time for our final instalment in this series on french newspapers. À bientot (See you soon)!

Original text from the French Language Blog.

Blog submitted by: Alex at The French Property Network - Cle France.

Add CommentViews: 3089
Sep 26

Want to move to Normandy?

I love this property, the perfect blend of what a lot of people look for when searching for a house in France. A typical Normandy Farmhouse that is habitable but has much more room for improvement and 'stamping your own mark on the property' PLUS more scope and more rooms to develop PLUS Outbuildings and potential to create guest gite accommodation to create an income stream.

So if you are looking to move over to North-west France and start the good life then RTA00104 is for you!

AND it is for sale for only 86,000 euros.

RTA00104 for sale in normandy

Traditional French Farmhouse with Outbuildings set in approximately 3 acres of land, in a beautiful and tranquil area of Normandy, with easy access to and from the UK.

This stone farmhouse is partially renovated and habitable now but does require some finishing in part and some further development in others, it therefore offers the perfect mix of 'habitable now' and bundles of scope for improvement and further development opening up many options including guest accommodation to generate an income.

For sale in normandy RTA00104

Ground floor: kitchen, living room, bedroom, pantry, bathroom.

First floor: 4 bedrooms, bathroom.

RTA00104 in normandy

Outbuildings: garage, basement and outbuilding.

Outside: Set in 3 acres of land at the end of a long drive.. More potential.

For sale in normandy rta00104

 

A quiet rural position near the edge of the beautiful village of Feugeres, in the Lower Normandy region of France.

Feugeres is a small beautiful village, there is a village shop, a bar, a church, primary school and village hall.

If you need more then the lovely town of Périers less than 10 mins away offering a large selection of shops, restaurants, etc.

Or for more shops, services and amenities then just 20 minutes away is the capital city of Normandy, Saint-Lo to the east and the stunning cathedral city of Coutances to the south.

RTA00104 for sale in Normandy with Cle France for 86,000.00 euros FAI.

Blog submitted by: Alex at The French Property Network - Cle France.

Add CommentViews: 2596
Sep 23

Great communication with Sharon, very helpful

Morning, thanks for the message, yes all set to view the property, great communication with Sharon very helpful, cheers.

Khaled.

Cle France makes sure you have everything you need ahead of your viewing trip to France so you know where you are going, who you are seeing and what time to be there, sounds easy but when you have several properties to see it is best to let us schedule your viewings.

Well done Cle France

Add CommentViews: 2160
Sep 23

French Newspapers part 3

I guess you read French Property News, Living France, A Place in the Sun magazines etc. I hope you even enjoy reading the Cle France Newsletters! but to really learn more about life and living in France a French newspaper can not be beaten.

Another look at French Newspapers - Part 3

Bonjour une fois de plus (Hello once again).

I hope you took the time to look into les journaux (the newspapers) I reviewed dans la deuxième partie (in the second part) of this series on French newspapers. Both Le Monde and Le Figaro are excellent publications featuring quality journalism.

Le Nouvel Observateur and Libération are also very popular newspapers that offer a different perspective on the news. Let’s look at them in greater detail.

French newspapers part 3

Image by Ol.v!er on Flickr

Le Nouvel Observateur :

Founded in 1964, Le Nouvel Observateur (The New Observer) is actually a news-magazine. The magazine saw the light over a decade earlier in 1950 as L’Observateur politique, économique et littéraire (The political, economic and literary Observer). In 1953, the name changed to simply l’Observateur and then to France Observateur in 1954.

Le Nouvel Observateur has always been un magazine hebdomadaire (a weekly magazine) avec une orientation centre-gauche (with a center-left orientation) and more than cinq cent mille lecteurs (five hundred thousand readers) making it by far the most widely read newsmagazine in France. According to Claude Perdriel, the magazine’s founder, Le Nouvel Observateur “est un journal social-démocrate de gauche” (is a leftist social-democratic newspaper).

Le Nouvel Observateur focuses on the world of business, la politique (politics), and l’économie (the economy). Unlike some French papers, political and cultural issues of l’Europe (Europe), l’Afrique (Africa) and le Moyen-Orient (the Middle East) are covered in depth.

The magazine entered the digital age in 1999 with its website nouvelobs.com - You will find the usual sections such as Politique (Politics), Société (Society), and Éco (short for Economy) as well as Monde (World), Culture, Santé (Health), and Sport. You can subscribe to the digital magazine for as little as 1 euro par mois (1 Euro a month) which is a fantastic deal.

Libération :

Bursting onto the scene a decade after Le Nouvel Observateur, Libération began as un journal situé a l’extrême gauche (a newspaper situated on the extreme left). In the 80s and 90s, this journal quotidien (daily newspaper) shifted to a centre-gauche (center-left) orientation, a position it maintains to this day.

Interestingly, one of the founding members of Libération was Jean-Paul Sartre, un écrivain et philosophe Français (a French writer and philosopher) and a leading figure of existentialism who became active in politics après la Seconde Guerre mondiale (after the second World War).

The paper has had its share of ups and downs over the course of quatre décennies (four decades) but remains a fairly popular source of news avec un lectorat de près de deux cent mille (with a readership of nearly two hundred thousand).

The usual sections grace the homepage of Libération at liberation.fr - but you will also find atypical sections such as Cannabis, Prostitution and Sex & Genre. You can even listen to Libé Radio, the newspaper’s very own radio station.

If Le Monde or Le Figaro do not offer what you seek in a French newspaper, go ahead and try out Le Nouvel Observateur or Libération for a different take on French news.

Original text from the French Language Blog.

Blog submitted by: Alex at The French Property Network - Cle France.

Add CommentViews: 3451

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