In November 1490, Bernardino Rizo da Novara issued the earliest printed anonymous portolano. Several months later, a print privilege was issued at the request of Andrea Badoer, a merchant. With the support of a newly published database of Venetian privileges, it is contended that Badoer sponsored the print and possibly provided the text of the portolano
This Study endeavors to reconstruct the Vatican’s precursor system of copyright, and the author’s pl...
The paper aims at understanding the role that public navigation played for the Venetian merchant fir...
The first book to be printed in Venice was published in 1469. Between this date and the 1530s, the p...
This thesis reconstructs the activities of a single print workshop, active from 1515 to 1593. By pr...
In the increasingly polarized historiography of the printing industry of Venice, the workshop estab...
This is the first English translation of Benedetto Cotrugli’s The Book of the Art of Trade, a lively...
One of the pleasures of being a legal historian concerned with topics from the Early Modern period i...
The known documentation about the brothers John and Windelin from Spira is reread here. This is abov...
During the last years of the 16th c. the Venetian printing industry was still one of the major econo...
This paper attempts to prove that Venice was the main geographical center of music printing and publ...
This Essay examines Florentine painter and engraver Antonio Tempesta’s 1593 petition for a Papal pri...
The development of a system of printing privileges in Milan is very similar to that of Venice. Follo...
'Copyright Privileges, Intellectual Property, and Image Ownership: The Role of Law in the Art of Ren...
This Study endeavors to reconstruct the Vatican’s precursor system of copyright, and the author’s pl...
International audienceThe first printed book published in Venice appeared in 1469. Ten years later, ...
This Study endeavors to reconstruct the Vatican’s precursor system of copyright, and the author’s pl...
The paper aims at understanding the role that public navigation played for the Venetian merchant fir...
The first book to be printed in Venice was published in 1469. Between this date and the 1530s, the p...
This thesis reconstructs the activities of a single print workshop, active from 1515 to 1593. By pr...
In the increasingly polarized historiography of the printing industry of Venice, the workshop estab...
This is the first English translation of Benedetto Cotrugli’s The Book of the Art of Trade, a lively...
One of the pleasures of being a legal historian concerned with topics from the Early Modern period i...
The known documentation about the brothers John and Windelin from Spira is reread here. This is abov...
During the last years of the 16th c. the Venetian printing industry was still one of the major econo...
This paper attempts to prove that Venice was the main geographical center of music printing and publ...
This Essay examines Florentine painter and engraver Antonio Tempesta’s 1593 petition for a Papal pri...
The development of a system of printing privileges in Milan is very similar to that of Venice. Follo...
'Copyright Privileges, Intellectual Property, and Image Ownership: The Role of Law in the Art of Ren...
This Study endeavors to reconstruct the Vatican’s precursor system of copyright, and the author’s pl...
International audienceThe first printed book published in Venice appeared in 1469. Ten years later, ...
This Study endeavors to reconstruct the Vatican’s precursor system of copyright, and the author’s pl...
The paper aims at understanding the role that public navigation played for the Venetian merchant fir...
The first book to be printed in Venice was published in 1469. Between this date and the 1530s, the p...