The development of a system of printing privileges in Milan is very similar to that of Venice. Following the first privilege \u201cpro arte introducenda\u201d the system of printing privileges began to flourish; as in Venice, they did not involve just the exclusive right to print a work but also guaranteed a protected market for the edition by prohibiting the sale and import of identical editions. In Milan, however, from the fifteenth century onwards privileges also began to be granted for works which were printed outside the State of Milan, thus offering protection to printers who were not Milanese subjects. Eventually, towards the end of the sixteenth century, and given the notable weakness of the printing trade, both the State and the Ch...
The first book to be printed in Venice was published in 1469. Between this date and the 1530s, the p...
First best seller of Italian literature, the Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto was printed at Ferr...
This work provides an in-depth description of the juridical framework in which the Italian book trad...
'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...
This work provides the legal framework in which the Venetian book trade operated in the years 1527-1...
During the last years of the 16th c. the Venetian printing industry was still one of the major econo...
This Study endeavors to reconstruct the Vatican’s precursor system of copyright, and the author’s pl...
In November 1490, Bernardino Rizo da Novara issued the earliest printed anonymous portolano. Several...
This article accounts the tense dialectic that arose in 1601 between the Roman Curia and the Venetia...
Presenting the most comprehensive account of official print in the Holy Roman Empire during the sixt...
The paper provides a general view of different typologies of privilege existing in the Republic of V...
This essay is a contribution to the history of governmental printing houses in Italy in the nineteen...
This paper aims at offering a reconstruction of the salient features of the most important formal in...
This article traces the history of the book privileges granted by the Republic of Venice in the year...
The first book to be printed in Venice was published in 1469. Between this date and the 1530s, the p...
First best seller of Italian literature, the Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto was printed at Ferr...
This work provides an in-depth description of the juridical framework in which the Italian book trad...
'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...
This work provides the legal framework in which the Venetian book trade operated in the years 1527-1...
During the last years of the 16th c. the Venetian printing industry was still one of the major econo...
This Study endeavors to reconstruct the Vatican’s precursor system of copyright, and the author’s pl...
In November 1490, Bernardino Rizo da Novara issued the earliest printed anonymous portolano. Several...
This article accounts the tense dialectic that arose in 1601 between the Roman Curia and the Venetia...
Presenting the most comprehensive account of official print in the Holy Roman Empire during the sixt...
The paper provides a general view of different typologies of privilege existing in the Republic of V...
This essay is a contribution to the history of governmental printing houses in Italy in the nineteen...
This paper aims at offering a reconstruction of the salient features of the most important formal in...
This article traces the history of the book privileges granted by the Republic of Venice in the year...
The first book to be printed in Venice was published in 1469. Between this date and the 1530s, the p...
First best seller of Italian literature, the Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto was printed at Ferr...
This work provides an in-depth description of the juridical framework in which the Italian book trad...