International audienceThe seventeenth-century Dutch Republic was a highly literate society. The Dutch produced, and consumed, more printed items per head than any other people in Europe. Books were imported from all the major European centres of production, and exported to markets the Dutch soon came to dominate. In the seventeenth century Amsterdam was already ‘the bookshop of the world’. Yet there has never previously been an attempt to estimate the full extent of print production undertaken by the Dutch printing industry. Building on the foundations of the Short Title Catalogue Netherlands (STCN), we undertake such a systematic evaluation here, beginning with classes of print excluded from the terms of reference of the STCN, such a...
This thesis is an in-depth exploration of a single sixteenth-century printing firm, the Compagnie d...
International audienceThe first printed book published in Venice appeared in 1469. Ten years later, ...
How did print spread through France to become a major force during the eighteenth century? This ques...
The seventeenth-century Dutch Republic was a highly literate society. The Dutch produced, and consum...
The contribution of prints to the European expansion and the globalisation of the Early Modern world...
One of the tasks of a national library is to collect and keep the national printed heritage of a spe...
Cet article traite du rapport existant entre les privilèges accordés aux imprimeurs et la littératur...
How does one gauge the reception of French Renaissance authors in the Netherlands? Auction catalogue...
The invention of the printing press by Gutenberg in the mid-fifteenth century is one of the most imp...
Gnirrep Kees. Quantitative techniques in the study of early printed books. The Netherlands in the 15...
Often considered as the first phenomenon of mass media in history, the use of books and prints by Pr...
This thesis is the first to provide an overview of the English book ownership of Danish and Dutch co...
In the 16th century Antwerp, the “metropolis of the west”, was a not only an economic centre in Eur...
RASTERHOFF Claartje, Painting and Publishing as Cultural Industries : The Fabric of Creativity in th...
A careful inventory and analysis of the XVth century printed material kept in northern France helps ...
This thesis is an in-depth exploration of a single sixteenth-century printing firm, the Compagnie d...
International audienceThe first printed book published in Venice appeared in 1469. Ten years later, ...
How did print spread through France to become a major force during the eighteenth century? This ques...
The seventeenth-century Dutch Republic was a highly literate society. The Dutch produced, and consum...
The contribution of prints to the European expansion and the globalisation of the Early Modern world...
One of the tasks of a national library is to collect and keep the national printed heritage of a spe...
Cet article traite du rapport existant entre les privilèges accordés aux imprimeurs et la littératur...
How does one gauge the reception of French Renaissance authors in the Netherlands? Auction catalogue...
The invention of the printing press by Gutenberg in the mid-fifteenth century is one of the most imp...
Gnirrep Kees. Quantitative techniques in the study of early printed books. The Netherlands in the 15...
Often considered as the first phenomenon of mass media in history, the use of books and prints by Pr...
This thesis is the first to provide an overview of the English book ownership of Danish and Dutch co...
In the 16th century Antwerp, the “metropolis of the west”, was a not only an economic centre in Eur...
RASTERHOFF Claartje, Painting and Publishing as Cultural Industries : The Fabric of Creativity in th...
A careful inventory and analysis of the XVth century printed material kept in northern France helps ...
This thesis is an in-depth exploration of a single sixteenth-century printing firm, the Compagnie d...
International audienceThe first printed book published in Venice appeared in 1469. Ten years later, ...
How did print spread through France to become a major force during the eighteenth century? This ques...