Licensing loyalty : printers, patrons and the state in early modern France / Jane McLeod


Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Prêt normal | Enssib | Papier | Pôle Métiers du livre et de la culture | 070.5 HIS m (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 8491895 |
Bibliogr. p. [275]-292. Index
Introduction The early history of printers in provincial France, 1470-1660 The vicissitudes of a royal decree : enforcing the October 1667 Order in Council regulating printers in the provinces The royal council takes control : the 1701 inquiry and the Bureau de la Librairie The purges : the enforcement of printer quotas in the provinces after 1704 Arguments offered by printers in petitions for licences, 1667-1789 Patronage and bureaucracy intersect : five case studies in the reign of Louis XVI Behind the rhetoric : the social position and politics of provincial printers, 1750-1789 Conclusion Appendix A. Printers' wealth in the eighteenth century Appendix B. Some licensed provincial printers involved in the clandestine book trade, 1750-89, by town
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