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- # Resistance
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  During the second world war the nazis occupied the northern half of France, and the collaborationist governement of Pétain was left to rule over the southern half (the “[zone libre](https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zone_libre)”). A lot of newspapers at that time were closed, others submitted to the occupiers (some even enthusiastically collaborated). At the same time, a range of clandestine publications started circulating, often associated with the resistance movements. When the country was Liberated in 1944, the most outrageously collaborationist press was dismantled, other newspapers changed their names and were sometimes taken over by new teams of resistance journalists. The most famous case is “Le Temps,” a daily newspaper that had been [publishing since 1861](<https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Temps_(quotidien_fran%C3%A7ais,_1861-1942)>) and had closed in 1942. Although not a collaborationist newspaper, it was not allowed to reopen, and its assets were transferred to create “Le Monde” on 19&nbsp;December 1944, under Hubert Beuve-Méry.
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+ # Résistance
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  During the second world war the nazis occupied the northern half of France, and the collaborationist governement of Pétain was left to rule over the southern half (the “[zone libre](https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zone_libre)”). A lot of newspapers at that time were closed, others submitted to the occupiers (some even enthusiastically collaborated). At the same time, a range of clandestine publications started circulating, often associated with the resistance movements. When the country was Liberated in 1944, the most outrageously collaborationist press was dismantled, other newspapers changed their names and were sometimes taken over by new teams of resistance journalists. The most famous case is “Le Temps,” a daily newspaper that had been [publishing since 1861](<https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Temps_(quotidien_fran%C3%A7ais,_1861-1942)>) and had closed in 1942. Although not a collaborationist newspaper, it was not allowed to reopen, and its assets were transferred to create “Le Monde” on 19&nbsp;December 1944, under Hubert Beuve-Méry.
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