Created by Romain Rolland and a group of French writers,[1] the literary magazine Europe began on 15 February 1923, published by Rieder House [fr].
But it is to all the peoples that we address ourselves [...] in the hope of averting the tragic misunderstandings which currently divide mankind.
From 2009 until 2014, Charles Dobzynski was director while Jean-Baptiste Para remained editor-in-chief of the magazine.
Europe has published works by authors as diverse as Aragon, Jean-Richard Bloch, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Emile Danoën, Jean Giono, Panaït Istrati, Rabindranath Tagore or Tristan Tzara, for example.
There is an Association of Europe Friends (Association des Amis d'Europe), which aims to develop cultural life, principally of the literary kind, "in a spirit of openness and hospitality and in the humanistic tradition which has characterised Europe since its foundation.