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Before Copyright

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Before Copyright Synopsis

When printing first began, a new book automatically fell into the public domain upon publication. Only a special law or privilegium enacted by a competent authority could protect it from being reprinted without the consent of the author or publisher. Such privileges for books are attested before 1480, but in Germany and Italy their efficacy was limited to a relatively small area by the political fragmentation of the country. During the 1480s and 1490s France became one of Europe's main centres of book production and, as competition intensified, privileges were sought there from 1498. Although privileges were to last as long as the Ancien Régime, the period to 1526 is the least-known stage of their development and the most important. Most privilege-holders printed the full text of their grant, and many others a summary.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521893152
Publication date:
Author: Elizabeth Armstrong
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 336 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in Publishing and Printing History
Genres: Media, entertainment, information and communication industries
Publishing industry and journalism
Social and cultural history