Guides Joanne

French-language travel guide books
Cover of guide to Toulouse, 1914
Map of geographic regions covered in the Guides Joanne series, 1912

Guides Joanne (est. 1841) was a series of French-language travel guide books to Europe founded by Adolphe Joanne and published in Paris. Routes followed the railways at first,[1] and later volumes guided readers by province.[2]


Titles

  • Adolphe Joanne (1841). Itineraire descriptif et historique de la suisse (in French). Paris: Paulin – via HathiTrust.[3]
  • Adolphe Joanne (1855). Itinéraire descriptif et historique des bords du Rhin, du Neckar et de la Moselle (in French). Paris: L. Maison.
  • De Paris a Bordeaux (in French). Paris: Hachette. 1856.
  • De Paris à Nantes (in French). circa 1856

1860s-1880s

  • Les bains d'Europe (in French), 1860, OCLC 77330822, OL 25091079M
  • Itineraire descriptif et historique de l'Allemagne (in French) (2nd ed.), 1862, OL 24554335M
  • Joanne, Adolphe (1862), De Poitiers à la Rochelle (in French)
  • Guide Parisien (in French), 1863, OCLC 18592529
  • Paris illustré (in French), 1867, OL 25192042M
  • Célestin Port (1867). De Paris a Agen (in French).
  • France: Le Nord. 1869. + index
  • Èmile Isambert (1881). Itinéraire descriptif, historique et archéologique de l'Orient (in French).
    • v.1: Turkey + index
    • v.2: Egypt
    • v.3: Syria
  • Louis Piesse (1888). Algérie et Tunisie (in French). hdl:2027/hvd.hn5e8a.
  • Le Mans (in French), 1888

1890s-1900s

  • Joanne, Paul (1890). Bretagne (in French).
  • Grece: Athenes. 1890
  • Luxembourg. 1895
  • Nancy (1895). Nancy (in French).
  • Dijon (in French). hdl:2027/hvd.32044087927356. circa 1896
  • Avignon et ses environs (in French). 1898.
  • Savoie (in French). 1898.
  • Les Vosges et l'Alsace. 1898. + contents
  • Le Nord (in French). 1899.
  • Alger. 1901
  • Normandie (in French). 1901.
  • Rouen (in French). 1901.
  • Bordeaux (in French). 1902. hdl:2027/uc1.c105602300.
  • Joanne, Paul (1902). Toulouse (in French).
  • La Loire (in French). 1903.
  • Tours (in French). 1905.
  • Nice, Beaulieu and Monaco. 1906. (in English)
  • Paul Joanne [in French] (1906). Provence (in French). hdl:2027/uc1.$b192331.
  • Bourgogne, Morvan, Nivernais, Lyonnais (in French). 1907.
  • Auvergne et centre (in French). 1908.

1910s

  • Belgique et Hollande. 1911. + index
  • Pyrénées (in French). 1912. hdl:2027/njp.32101007980228.
  • Vallée de la Meuse; Ardenne, Grotte de Han, Gd-Duché de Luxembourg. 1912
  • Vosges, Lorraine, Alsace (in French). 1913.
  • Cévennes, Languedoc (in French). 1914. hdl:2027/njp.32101064992173.
  • Le Havre (in French). 1914. hdl:2027/uc1.31158008894346.
  • Chartres.Maintenon, Rambouillet (in French). 1914. hdl:2027/njp.32101064992173.

1920s

  • Avignon, Villeneuve, Orange, Saint-Rémy, Arles, Les Baux (in French). 1921.

See also

Guide Bleu, est. 1919

References

  1. ^ Stephen L. Harp (2001). Marketing Michelin: Advertising and Cultural Identity in Twentieth-Century France. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-6651-7.
  2. ^ Nordman 1997.
  3. ^ W. A. B. Coolidge (1889). Swiss Travel and Swiss Guide-books. London: Longmans, Green, and Company.

Bibliography

  • Daniel Nordman (1997). Pierre Nora (ed.). Les Guides-Joanne: ancêtres des Guides Bleus (in French). Gallimard. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guides Joanne.
  • Items related to Guides Joanne (via Digital Public Library of America)


  • v
  • t
  • e