Charlotte d'Ornellas

Charlotte d'Ornellas
Charlotte d'Ornellas in 2017
Born1986 (age 37–38)
NationalityFrench
Occupation(s)Journalist
Columnist
FamilyPierre d'Ornellas (uncle)


Charlotte d'Ornellas (born 1986) is a French conservative journalist and columnist.

Biography

Coming from a practising Catholic family from Orléans, where she was born, d'Ornellas is related to the Archbishop of Rennes, Pierre d'Ornellas,[1] private secretary to Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, former bishop of Orleans. At the age of 16, she was nominated to be Joan of Arc at the Fêtes johanniques d'Orléans in 2002.[2]

In 2004, she entered the Institute of Comparative Philosophy in Paris where she obtained a degree in philosophy and psychology. In 2008, she left for a year in Sydney, Australia, to improve her English. Towards the end of this visit, the International Media Center recruited her to participate in the translation of Australian press releases to the French press and official speeches on the occasion of World Youth Day 2008. Until then, her goal was to teach philosophy.[3]

When she returned in 2008, she decided to study journalism and graduated from IFJ-FACO in 2010. In 2009, Charlotte d'Ornellas completed her end-of-studies internship at L'Orient-Le Jour, in Beirut, Lebanon.[4]

Back in France in 2009, she worked for La Nouvelle République du Centre-Ouest, a regional daily newspaper based in Tours. She is employed as a trainee in the "Society and World" service of the weekly magazine Valeurs actuelles in 2009–2010, then in "Tous les goûts sont dans la culture" on Direct 8 in 2010. In addition, she makes, from January 2009 at October 2012, interviews for current values and Christian family. From July 2011, she worked on the realization and the presentation of a weekly newspaper for the webTV of the CFTC trade union and the writing of her weekly Confederal Letter.[5]

An independent journalist, she works mainly on the news site Boulevard Voltaire, founded in 2012 by Robert Ménard, at Valeurs Actuelles and the Catholic news site Aleteia. Her articles also appear regularly in the national-Catholic daily Present. In addition, she regularly appears on Radio Courtoisie and is a columnist ("sociétaire") in the program "Bistro Libertés" animated by Martial Bild on TV-Libertés.[6] In 2016, she founded with Damien Rieu, former spokesperson of Génération Identitaire, the magazine France,[7] a quarterly magazine, distributed free online, of which she is editor-in-chief. The first issue was published in March 2016.[8] In September 2017, she joined the editorial board of the magazine L'Incorrect, newly founded by Charles Beigbeder.[9]

References

  1. ^ Marie-Pierre Bourgeois; Michela Cuccagna (15 March 2017). "De Gollnisch à Ménard : Charlotte d'Ornellas, la journaliste préférée de la fachosphère". Streetpress.
  2. ^ Florent Buisson (26 December 2015). "Une ex-Jeanne d'Arc d'Orléans est une plume de l'extrême droite en France". Larep.fr.
  3. ^ "Soirée-débat Eugénie Bastié, Charlotte d'Ornellas et Geoffroy Lejeune du 20 juin 2017". Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  4. ^ "Charlotte d'Ornellas – journaliste : " pour éviter la désinformation, il faut une fois de plus être honnête. " [interview] -". Breizh-info.com, Actualité, Bretagne, information, politique. 13 February 2016. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  5. ^ "" Éditorial ", Lettre confédérale, n° 1364, 18 août 2011". Archived from the original on 26 August 2017. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  6. ^ "Charlotte d'Ornellas : " J'ai choisi de travailler avec ceux qui acceptent ma liberté " - : Novopress.info". fr.novopress.info (in French). Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  7. ^ "Philippe de Villiers écarte l'idée d'une candidature en 2017". Libération.fr (in French). Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  8. ^ "Défense, transmission de l'identité française et de ses traditions : entretien avec la rédaction du magazine France". Renaissance. 5 April 2016..
  9. ^ La-Croix.com (6 September 2017). "L'Incorrect, un nouveau magazine entre droite et extrême droite". La Croix (in French). Retrieved 11 April 2018.

External links

 This article incorporates text available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license.

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