Collana |
Studi di storia
Miscellanea | Printing R-Evolution and Society 1450-1500
Capitolo | 4 Printing the Law in the 15th Century
4 Printing the Law in the 15th Century
With a Focus on Corpus iuris civilis and the Works of Bartolus de Saxoferrato
- Maria Alessandra Panzanelli-Fratoni - 15cBOOKTRADE, University of Oxford, UK - email
Abstract
The editions of legal texts are a major and important part of 15th-century book output, amounting to about 15% of the surviving extant editions. The category comprehends two types of work: (a) the collections of Roman and Canon Law, with their medieval supplements and commentaries; (b) acts and regulations produced by governments and by local authorities as part of their day-to-day activity. After a general overview, this article focuses on the first group of texts, which offers an opportunity to address some key questions related to the impact of printing in a particular cultural context, that of the university. A study of legal texts printed in the 15th century aims to provide a relevant contribution to a better understanding of the impact of printing by comparing elements of continuity and discontinuity with the manuscript and later printed tradition.
Pubblicato 24 Febbraio 2020 | Lingua: en
Keywords History of the book • Textual transmission • Bartolus de Saxoferrato • Scholarly book • Legal texts • Incunabula • Ius commune • Legal history • Corpus iuris civilis • History of Universities • Law books
Copyright © 2020 Maria Alessandra Panzanelli-Fratoni. This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction is permitted, provided that the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. The license allows for commercial use. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-332-8/004
Foreword
- 1 Foreword
- Kristian Jensen
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 2 The ERC: Funding Organisation and European Project
- Martin Stokhof
- 24 Febbraio 2020
Introduction
-
3 Introduction
The 15cBOOKTRADE Project and the Study of Incunabula as Historical Sources - Cristina Dondi
- 24 Febbraio 2020
Illustrations
- Illustrations from the Exhibition Catalogue Printing R-Evolution
- 24 Febbraio 2020
Section 1. The Transmission of Texts in Print and the Distribution and Reception of Books
-
4 Printing the Law in the 15th Century
With a Focus on Corpus iuris civilis and the Works of Bartolus de Saxoferrato - Maria Alessandra Panzanelli-Fratoni
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
5 La stampa medico-scientifica nell’Europa del XV secolo
Con cenni sulla fruizione dei libri di materia medica e ricettari - Sabrina Minuzzi
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
6 Binding Waste as Book History
Patterns of Survival Among the Early Mainz Donatus Editions - Eric White
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 7 Printing in Greek before Aldus Manutius
- Geri Della Rocca de Candal
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
8 Not Wanderers but Faithful Companions
A Brief Overview on the Hebrew Incunabula Held in Italian Libraries - Marco Bertagna
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 9 Hebrew Incunabula in the National Library of Israel as a Source for Early Modern Book History in Europe and Beyond
- Alexander Gordin
- 24 Febbraio 2020
Section 2. Working with Libraries in Europe and the United States
-
10 La formazione delle raccolte marciane
I cataloghi storici: genesi, struttura, presenza di incunaboli - Alessia Giachery
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 11 Acquisizioni e asportazioni alla caduta della Repubblica di Venezia
- Elisabetta Sciarra
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
12 ll contributo del CRELEB e della Regione Lombardia alla catalogazione in MEI
Descrizione, risultati, problemi aperti - Edoardo Barbieri
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 13 Le collezioni di incunaboli delle biblioteche annesse ai monumenti nazionali, come tutelarle e fare ricerca: Santa Scolastica a Subiaco
- Pasqualino Avigliano, Andrea Cappa, Andrea De Pasquale, Cristina Dondi, Adalbert Roth, Marina Venier
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 14 How Provenance Marks from Lithuanian Incunabula are Contributing to Historical Narrative
- Viktorija Vaitkevičiūtė, Agnė Zemkajutė
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 15 Bringing American Collections into MEI
- John Lancaster
- 24 Febbraio 2020
Section 3. The Cost of Living and the Cost of Books in 15th-Century Europe
- 16 Patterns of Consumption in Renaissance Venice
- Isabella Cecchini
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
17 La compravendita di libri nella contabilità dei mercanti fiorentini
Un confronto coi prezzi dei generi di prima necessità e col potere d’acquisto dei salariati nella seconda metà del XV secolo - Paola Pinelli
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
18 Costs We Don’t Think About
An Unusual Copy of Franciscus de Platea, Opus restitutionum (1474), and a Few Other Items - Neil Harris
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 19 Il commercio degli incunaboli a Padova nel 1480: il Quaderneto di Antonio Moretto
- Ester Peric
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 20 From the Corpus Iuris to ‘psalterioli da puti’, on Parchment, Bound, Gilt... The Price of Any Book Sold in Venice 1484-1488
- Cristina Dondi
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
21 «Con un altro piccolo Indice in 4° bislungo»
Un inventario di libri conservato dentro il Zornale di Francesco de Madiis - Sara Mansutti
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
22 Da Vespasiano da Bisticci a Franz Renner e Bartolomeo Lupoto
Appunti sul commercio librario tra Venezia, la Toscana e Genova (ca. 1459-1487) - Lorenz Böninger
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
23 «Heredes de Plauto stampadore deno avere infrascritte robe e dinari»
Consumo del libro, prezzi e mercato librario a Bologna alla fine del Quattrocento - Elena Gatti
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 24 «Emptus Ferrarie». I prezzi del libro a stampa nella città estense fra Quattro e primi del Cinquecento
- Paolo Tinti
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 25 The Memmingen Book Network
- Claire Bolton
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 26 Sellers and Buyers of the Lyon Book Market in the Late 15th Century
- Monique Hulvey
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 27 Tra il libro manoscritto e l’edizione a stampa in Catalogna nella seconda metà del XV secolo (1450-1500)
- J. Antoni Iglesias Fonseca
- 24 Febbraio 2020
Section 4. Illustration and Digital Tools
-
28 The Decoration and Illustration of Venetian Incunabula
From Hand Illumination to the Design of Woodcuts - Lilian Armstrong
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 29 La Biblioteca pubblica veneziana e gli incunaboli miniati
- Susy Marcon
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- 30 The Use and Reuse of Printed Illustrations in 15th-Century Venetian Editions
- Cristina Dondi, Abhishek Dutta, Matilde Malaspina, Andrew Zisserman
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
31 The Essling LOD Project
From the Census to the Copies - Ilaria Andreoli, Ilenia Maschietto
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
32 Visual Interpretation of the ISTC
The Atlas of Early Printing and the Material History of Data - Gregory Prickman
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
33 The Incunabula Short Title Catalogue (ISTC)
Past, Present and Future - John Goldfinch, Karen Limper-Herz
- 24 Febbraio 2020
-
34 A New Tool for Describing Provenance Images
CERL’s Provenance Digital Archive - Marieke van Delft
- 24 Febbraio 2020
Indexes
- Artists, Binders, Booksellers, etc.
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- Cited Incunabula
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- Digital Tools and Catalogues
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- Names and Places
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- Printers and Publishers
- 24 Febbraio 2020
- Provenance
- 24 Febbraio 2020
DC Field | Value |
---|---|
dc.identifier |
ECF_chapter_3680 |
dc.contributor.author |
Panzanelli-Fratoni Maria Alessandra |
dc.title |
4 Printing the Law in the 15th Century. With a Focus on Corpus iuris civilis and the Works of Bartolus de Saxoferrato |
dc.type |
Capitolo |
dc.language.iso |
en |
dc.description.abstract |
The editions of legal texts are a major and important part of 15th-century book output, amounting to about 15% of the surviving extant editions. The category comprehends two types of work: (a) the collections of Roman and Canon Law, with their medieval supplements and commentaries; (b) acts and regulations produced by governments and by local authorities as part of their day-to-day activity. After a general overview, this article focuses on the first group of texts, which offers an opportunity to address some key questions related to the impact of printing in a particular cultural context, that of the university. A study of legal texts printed in the 15th century aims to provide a relevant contribution to a better understanding of the impact of printing by comparing elements of continuity and discontinuity with the manuscript and later printed tradition. |
dc.relation.ispartof |
Studi di storia |
dc.publisher |
Edizioni Ca’ Foscari - Digital Publishing, Fondazione Università Ca’ Foscari |
dc.issued |
2020-02-24 |
dc.identifier.uri |
http://edizionicafoscari.it/it/edizioni4/libri/978-88-6969-333-5/4-printing-the-law-in-the-15th-century/ |
dc.identifier.doi |
10.30687/978-88-6969-332-8/004 |
dc.identifier.issn |
2610-9883 |
dc.identifier.eissn |
2610-9107 |
dc.identifier.isbn |
978-88-6969-333-5 |
dc.identifier.eisbn |
978-88-6969-332-8 |
dc.rights |
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License |
dc.rights.uri |
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
item.fulltext |
with fulltext |
item.grantfulltext |
open |
dc.peer-review |
yes |
dc.subject |
Bartolus de Saxoferrato |
dc.subject |
Bartolus de Saxoferrato |
dc.subject |
Corpus iuris civilis |
dc.subject |
Corpus iuris civilis |
dc.subject |
History of Universities |
dc.subject |
History of Universities |
dc.subject |
History of the book |
dc.subject |
History of the book |
dc.subject |
Incunabula |
dc.subject |
Incunabula |
dc.subject |
Ius commune |
dc.subject |
Ius commune |
dc.subject |
Law books |
dc.subject |
Law books |
dc.subject |
Legal history |
dc.subject |
Legal history |
dc.subject |
Legal texts |
dc.subject |
Legal texts |
dc.subject |
Scholarly book |
dc.subject |
Scholarly book |
dc.subject |
Textual transmission |
dc.subject |
Textual transmission |
Download data |