Le Boulevard was a weekly magazine published in Paris from 1861 to 1863.
It was founded and directed by Étienne Carjat and its first issue came out on December 1, 1861.
It was printed on 8 large folio pages, 43–49 cm high,[1] illustrated with two portraits.
Among the contributors to Le Boulevard were Charles Baudelaire, Gustave Flaubert, Victor Hugo, Champfleury, Jules Verne, Léon Cladel, and Honoré Daumier.
The magazine dared to be critical of the government, notably publishing extracts from Hugo's Les Misérables in 1862.