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oapen-20.500.12657-532002022-03-03T12:14:13Z Privilegi librari nell’Italia del Rinascimento Squassina, Erika Ottone, Andrea Renaissance, Printing privileges, Book trade, Venice, Rome, Milan, Guilds, Legal protection bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBL History: earliest times to present day::HBLH Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700 This work provides an in-depth description of the juridical framework in which the Italian book trade operated during the Renaissance. It is a multi-authored work that discusses issues related to intellectual, literary and artistic proto-property by taking into account some of the main urban centers of pre-unitary Italy such as Venice, Milan and Rome. It investigates the different legal systems put in place by the states and the dynamics that generated around them. The volume frames the topic at task within the general discourse on technologic innovation and state patronage in economic history hence exploring patenting systems (e.g., Florence and Venice) along with book privilege systems (e.g., Milan and Venice). In so doing it also investigates instances of conflicting interests occuring between the political and the economic sphere (e.g., Rome and Venice). 2022-03-03T11:38:45Z 2022-03-03T11:38:45Z 2019 book ONIX_20220303_9788891797254_2 9788891797254 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/53200 ita Studi e ricerche di storia dell’editoria application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9788891797254.pdf https://series.francoangeli.it/index.php/oa/catalog/view/430/235/2049 FrancoAngeli This work provides an in-depth description of the juridical framework in which the Italian book trade operated during the Renaissance. It is a multi-authored work that discusses issues related to intellectual, literary and artistic proto-property by taking into account some of the main urban centers of pre-unitary Italy such as Venice, Milan and Rome. It investigates the different legal systems put in place by the states and the dynamics that generated around them. The volume frames the topic at task within the general discourse on technologic innovation and state patronage in economic history hence exploring patenting systems (e.g., Florence and Venice) along with book privilege systems (e.g., Milan and Venice). In so doing it also investigates instances of conflicting interests occuring between the political and the economic sphere (e.g., Rome and Venice). e2ddfb5e-9202-4851-8afe-1e09b020b018 9788891797254 410 Milan open access
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This work provides an in-depth description of the juridical framework in which the Italian book trade operated during the Renaissance. It is a multi-authored work that discusses issues related to intellectual, literary and artistic proto-property by taking into account some of the main urban centers of pre-unitary Italy such as Venice, Milan and Rome. It investigates the different legal systems put in place by the states and the dynamics that generated around them. The volume frames the topic at task within the general discourse on technologic innovation and state patronage in economic history hence exploring patenting systems (e.g., Florence and Venice) along with book privilege systems (e.g., Milan and Venice). In so doing it also investigates instances of conflicting interests occuring between the political and the economic sphere (e.g., Rome and Venice).
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