Radiodiffusion Nationale (France)

Summary

Radiodiffusion française nationale, renamed Radiodiffusion Nationale (RN), was a public broadcasting company in France that was in charge of the production, broadcasting and coordination of radio and television programs.

It was founded on 29 July 1939 by the decree of then Prime Minister Edouard Daladier. The founding decision was motivated by the upcoming World War II, with the attempt to establish a state monopoly on broadcasting, coordinate propaganda and facilitate censorship. The work was interrupted temporarily on the basis of the provisions of the capitulation agreement before Germany on 25 June 1940 but on 5 July it started working in the so-called "Free Zone" of Vichy.

In 1943, its headquarters were relocated to Paris, where the radio service under the direction of the Vichy propaganda minister Philippe Henriot received an anti-Semitic and pro-Axis character. In the meantime, on 4 April 1944, the Provisional Government of the French Republic established its own RN in Algeria. It took over installations in Paris during the liberation of Paris on 22 August 1944.

As early as 1 October, RN launched its own television channel (Télévision française, later RDF Télévision française) the first in liberated Europe. On 23 March 1945 RN was reorganized into Radiodiffusion Française.[1][2][3]

Among the radio stations managed by RN were Radio Tour Eiffel (1921-1940), Radio PTT (1923-1940), Radio-Paris (1924-1944) and Le Poste colonial (1931-1938, broadcast to the French colonial empire). In regards to television, RN managed Radiodiffusion nationale Télévision.

References edit

  1. ^ Renard, Daniel. "Histoire de la Radio-Télévision en France (1901-1967)". TeleSatMedia (in French). Retrieved July 31, 2017.
  2. ^ "1940-1944: Guerre des ondes". 100 ans de radio (in French). Retrieved July 31, 2017.
  3. ^ "La Radiodiffusion de service public" (in French). Paris: Radio France. Retrieved July 31, 2017.