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Magazines disestablished in 1914

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Vanity Fair
British magazine, published 1868-1914
Modern Electrics
US magazine
Gil Blas
French periodical (1879-1940)
L’Anarchie
'''''L'Anarchie''' (, anarchy'') was a French individualist anarchist journal based in Paris and established in April 1905 by Albert Libertad. Along with Libertad, contributors to the journal included Émile Armand, André Lorulot, Émilie Lamotte, Raymond Callemin, and Victor Serge. Rirette Maîtrejean and Victor Kibaltchich, who initially advocated illegalism, changed their publishing policy in 1911 when the old team disappeared after a break-in.
Le Tour du monde
newspaper
Grazhdanin
thumb|Гражданин Grazhdanin (, lit. The Citizen) was a Russian conservative political and literary magazine published in Petersburg in 1872–1914 (with a one-year interval in 1880–1881). The magazine was founded by Prince Vladimir Meshchersky. It came out weekly or two times a week, and daily in 1887–1914. Grazhdanin exerted some influence on policies of the Russian government. It adhered to principals of monarchism and opposed liberal press and revolutionary movements. Fyodor Dostoyevsky was the magazine's chief editor from the early 1873 to April 1874. Throughout this magazine's existence, peo
The Pall Mall Magazine
monthly literary magazine
Satirikon
Russian satirical magazine (1908-1914)
Westminster Review
Official organ of the Philosophical Radicals
L'Art Moderne
arts and literary magazine (1881–1914)
Le Mouvement socialiste
French magazine
Le Courrier français
La Plume
French literary magazine
L'Illustration européenne
Belgian weekly newspaper
Les Soirées de Paris
recueil mensuel (1912-1914)
Marmnamarz
Marmnamarz (Armenian: Մարմնամարզ), published between 1911 and 1914, was one of the first sport magazines in the Ottoman Empire. The magazine was established and edited by Shavarsh Krissian. The first issue appeared in February 1911. Published monthly in Armenian (with "Marmnamarz" meaning sport in Armenian) the magazine offered an additional incentive for extending the interest towards the sport among the Ottoman Armenians.