L'oncle Paul
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L'oncle Paul
Summary
L'oncle Paul is a comic strip[1]. It draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (comic_strip category, ranking #105 of 352).[2]
Key Facts
- L'oncle Paul authored Jean-Michel Charlier[3].
- L'oncle Paul authored Octave Joly[4].
- L'oncle Paul authored René Goscinny[5].
- L'oncle Paul's instance of is recorded as comic strip[6].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Eddy Paape[7].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as René Follet[8].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Jean Graton[9].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Mitacq[10].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Gérald Forton[11].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Liliane Funcken[12].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Fred Funcken[13].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Édouard Aidans[14].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Hermann Huppen[15].
- L'oncle Paul's illustrator is recorded as Claude Pascal[16].
- L'oncle Paul's language of work or name is recorded as French[17].
- +1951-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of L'oncle Paul[18].
- L'oncle Paul's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04gs811[19].
- L'oncle Paul's published in is recorded as Spirou[20].
Body
Works and Contributions
Authored works include Jean-Michel Charlier[3], a comics writer[21], 1924–1989[22], of Belgium[23], awarded the Knight of the Order of the Crown[24]; Octave Joly[4], a screenwriter[25], 1910–1988[26], of Belgium[27]; and René Goscinny[5], an editor[28], 1926–1977[29], of France[30], awarded the Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres[31], specialised in comics[32].
Why It Matters
L'oncle Paul draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (comic_strip category, ranking #105 of 352).[2] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]