Copyright in the Renaissance: Prints and the Privilegio in Sixteenth-Century Venice and Rome

Cover
BRILL, 01.01.2004 - 412 Seiten
This study examines the emergence and early history of copyright in Venice and Rome, focusing in particular on the "privilegio" and the use made of it by printers, publishers, engravers, painters, architects, mapmakers, and others in the sixteenth century to protect their commercial interests in various types of printed images. These include separately sold engravings, woodcuts, and etchings, as well as illustrations in books. The first part of the book surveys printmaking and the "privilegio" in sixteenth-century Venice and Rome together with the related issues of licensing and censorship. The second part documents many of the recipients who were granted the "privilegio," The book introduces the reader to the richly competitive world of printmaking and print publishing in Renaissance Italy.
 

Inhalt

Survey
6
The Venetian Privilegio after 1517
38
The Privilegio in Rome
45
Chapter Three Proprietorship Licensing Censorship
53
Notice of License
74
Chapter Six Publishers of Prints and Books in Venice
111
Recipients
126
Chapter Seven Publishers of Prints and Books in Rome
129
Rome
217
Chapter Ten Maps and Geographical Prints
236
Chapter Eleven Prints and Books on Architecture
257
Chapter Twelve Writing Manuals and Pattern Books
285
Handlist of Prints Granted andor Published
297
Copyright Elsewhere in Italy and Europe
326
Bibliography
345
Index
369

Chapter Five Prints Granted Copyright in Venice
154
Rome
160
Leonardo Parasole
209

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Autoren-Profil (2004)

Christopher L.C.E. Witcombe, Ph.D. (1981) in Art History, Bryn Mawr College, is Professor of Art History at Sweet Briar College. He has published extensively on Italian Renaissance painting, prints, and architecture.

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