Motteux edited ''The Gentleman's Journal, or the Monthly Miscellany
from its initial issue, dated January 1692, to its last of November 1694; evidence suggests he wrote most of the prose in each issue as well. (The plan was for monthly issues, though some were late, and some were missed.) Motteux may have been influenced by Le Mercure Galant'', a French periodical of the 1670s devoted to Court news and gossip—though Motteux's
Journal was more ambitious. The
Journal published "News, History, Philosophy, Poetry, Musick, Translations, &c." It covered a wider range of topics than other periodicals of its era like
John Dunton's
The Athenian Gazette, giving it some claim as the first "general interest" magazine in English. Motteux reviewed plays by
John Dryden (a personal friend) and
William Congreve among others; he published verse by the poets of the era, including
Matthew Prior and
Charles Sedley; he covered the musical career of
Henry Purcell and printed several of his songs. The short fictions published in the journal contributed to the formation of the novel in English. The
Journal even featured a "Lovers' Gazette," foreshadowing the advice-to-the-lovelorn columns of later generations of popular journalism. Though its existence was relatively brief in historical terms, the
Journal provided a precedent for later publications of the same type, notably ''
The Gentleman's Magazine and The London Magazine. One curiosity of the Journal
is that the title page of its first issue bore the motto E pluribus unum'', apparently the earliest use of what would later become the motto of the United States of America. Motteux used the phrase in the sense of "one chosen among many," rather than its common later connotation. (Classicists have attempted to trace possible sources for the motto, ranging from
Vergil to
Aristotle to
Horace to
Cicero to
St. Augustine.) Motteux published early arguments in favor of the equality of the sexes; he re-titled the October 1693 issue of the
Journal "The Lady's Journal," and devoted it to articles by and about women. ==Notes==