
Última actualización: 26/07/2010
This volume brings formal coherence to the overwhelming mass of prints published in sixteenth-century Rome. It is introductory in scope and does not attempt to include every print published by every publisher. The aim is to provide an overview of who was publishing what prints and when over the course of the sixteenth century. The five chapters provide an outline of the history of print publishing while the appendices serve to clarify chronologies and reveal groupings and patterns. A document central to this book deserves some comment.
The record of the hearing into the murder of Gerolamo da Modena provided an opportunity to meet a number of the publishers, printers, and engravers at work in Rome in the decades after the mid-century and to understand better their lives, activities, and relationships.
This volume brings formal coherence to the overwhelming mass of prints published in sixteenth-century Rome. It is introductory in scope and does not attempt to [...]
ver másThe hundred years prior to the mid-19th century saw a flowering of ephemeral publishing often referred to by the shorthand 'chapbooks'. This book is an [...]
ver másLongmans is the oldest commercial publisher in the UK founded in London in 1724 by Thomas Longman. Asa Briggs' history is told within the context [...]
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Organisé par l'Institut de recherche et d'histoire des textes (CNRS) sous le patronage de l'Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres
édités par Guy Lanoë
avec la collaboration [...]
La Biblioteca Nacional conmemora con la exposición titulada 'Amadís de Gaula (1508): 500 años de libros de caballerías' los cinco siglos de existencia de una [...]
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This publication is the first to appear in a major new series of Catalogues covering all the Western medieval illuminated manuscripts in Cambridge.
Some 3,000 manuscripts [...]