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Artykuły w czasopismach na temat "London (England). Libraries"

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Kipel, Zora. "Byelorussian art literature collections". Art Libraries Journal 17, nr 2 (1992): 16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307472200007756.

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In spite of the absence of specialised art libraries, some significant collections of publications on Byelorussian art exist in the State Library, and in some other libraries in Minsk. Other collections of material on Byelorussian art can be found outside Byelorussia, in England (in the Francisk Skaryna Byelorussian Library in London), and in several libraries in the USA.
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Attar, Karen. "Rare Book and Special Collections in Overview: Producing a National Directory". RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage 19, nr 1 (17.05.2018): 14. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/rbm.19.1.14.

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Describing library collections by location is nothing new. In the mid-nineteenth century, Luther Farnham published A Glance at Private Libraries, about libraries in the Boston area of the United States. Reginald Arthur Rye produced his highly praised Students’ Guide to the Libraries of London in England just over fifty years later. That we, no less than our forebears, value such discovery tools collocating collections is evident from their continued publication, whether in print or, more recently, electronic form. National, annual library directories still produced include The American Library Directory. In Britain, the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP)’s Libraries and Information Services in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, a list of libraries by sector with contact details, remains available.
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Varley, Gillian. "An English art librarian in Paris: a report and diary". Art Libraries Journal 14, nr 1 (1989): 9–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307472200006064.

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Following Nicole Picot’s visit to England, the subject of the report printed above, Gillian Varley from the National Art Library of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London spent two weeks at the Bibliothèque Publique d’Information at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, during the summer of 1988. She also visited a number of other art libraries in Paris. The text of her report is followed by extracts from her diary of her trip.
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Katz, David S. "The Abendana Brothers and the Christian Hebraists of Seventeenth-Century England". Journal of Ecclesiastical History 40, nr 1 (styczeń 1989): 28–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046900035417.

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One of the most striking features of the first decades of open Jewish resettlement in England is the speed with which Jews managed to integrate themselves into so many different spheres of English life. From the first appointment of a Jew as a broker on the Exchange in 1657 to the first Jewish knighthood in 1700, the story is one of a dramatic rise in the acquisition of rights, privileges and special consideration. So, too, had Jews long been a part of English intellectual and academic life, but before Cromwell's tacit permission of Jewish residence in 1656 only Jewish converts to Christianity dared to make their appearance at English universities. This pattern was broken with the Abendana brothers, Jacob (d. 1685) and Isaac (d. 1699), Hebrew scholars and bibliophiles who came to London from Holland after the Restoration. Jacob Abendana, in the last four years of his life, was rabbi of the Sephardic community in London; Isaac, from at least 1663, taught Hebrew at Oxford and Cambridge. Both men were very much in demand by English scholars, who turned to them to solve Hebraic problems of various kinds and to procure Hebrew books for themselves and for university libraries. Both brothers worked on the first translations of the Mishnah into European languages and thus helped make available to Christian scholars this central core of the Talmud, the Jewish ‘oral’ law. Finally, it was Isaac Abendana who invented the Oxford diary and thereby made a permanent mark on the social habits of the university in which he laboured.
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Gucer, Kathryn A. "The Copy Room: Imagining a Huguenot Library in Early Modern London". Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 52, nr 2 (1.05.2022): 361–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10829636-9687928.

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This essay illuminates an unexplored intersection between recent work on early modern networks, book history, and the history of libraries. It focuses on a letter book, a continuous record of the French Protestant Church of London's correspondence from 1643 to 1650. The church officials who kept this unusual record found themselves imagining their library and its books as working parts in a vibrant information hub for the Huguenot churches in England. Using methods from microhistory (i.e., plausible inference) and literary criticism to uncover an alternative reading of the letters copied into the letter book, as distinct from the original letters, the article traces the beginnings of a lending library in the church officials’ thinking. In illuminating the letter book's impact, the essay places Huguenots, long treated as a marginalized minority, in the spotlight of a global history, which traces the movements of people, ideas, and goods across newly imagined spaces.
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Goldstein, Scott. "Uneven Adherence to Professional Guidelines and Potential Ethnic Bias in Service Provision Evidenced in Virtual Reference Service Interactions". Evidence Based Library and Information Practice 17, nr 1 (15.03.2022): 131–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.18438/eblip30085.

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A Review of: Hamer, S. (2021). Colour blind: Investigating the racial bias of virtual reference services in English academic libraries. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 47(5), 102416. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2021.102416 Abstract Objective – To investigate whether there is evidence for implicit ethnic bias in virtual reference service interactions. Design – Email-based structured observation study. Setting – Academic libraries in England. Subjects – 158 email-based virtual reference service interactions from one of 24 academic libraries in England. Methods – The study used a sample of 24 academic libraries across eight of the nine regions of England (excluding London). The body of the email message sent to each library consisted of one of five questions and was identical except for personalization to the institution. The first three questions were designed to be more likely to be answered in response to an unaffiliated user, and the last two questions were designed to be less likely to be answered in response to such a user. Each library received an email with each question from a different sender during each of five weeks, plus a repeat of question one in week six with slightly altered wording to serve as a control question. Emails were sent on randomized work days at different times of day. The messages were signed with one of six names representing the largest distinct ethnic population groups in England and Wales: Hazel Oakland (White British), Natasza Sakowicz (White Other), Zhao Jinghua (North Asian), Priya Chakrabarti (South Asian), Ebunoluwa Nweke (Black African), and Aaliyah Hajjar (Arab). All names were feminine and represented unaffiliated users. Email replies were coded according to a set of 27 characteristics based on the two most well-known professional guidelines for providing best practice reference services, namely, IFLA and RUSA. Main Results – 133 out of 144 sent queries received a reply, of which 66 partially or fully answered the question. 158 total emails were received (since an email might receive multiple responses), and 67 of these partially or fully answered the question. Differences in how the librarian’s reply addressed the user were evident. Hazel was the only one never referred to by her full name, whereas Jinghua was the least likely to be referred to by her given name and most likely to be referred to by her full name or no name at all. Greeting phrases were used in most responses. About 20% of responses included a reiteration of the original request. Elements of the response which could be seen as promoting information literacy skills were provided in only 11% of responses. Natasza was the most likely to be referred to another source to answer her query, whereas Jinghua was least likely. Ebunoluwa was the least likely to receive a response to her query and least likely to have her question answered overall. Conclusion – The findings point to some evidence of unequal service provision based on unconscious bias. In the aggregate, Ebunoluwa received the lowest quality of service, while Jinghua received the highest. There were several instances of inappropriately addressing the user, or what the author refers to as name-based microaggressions, and this was most common for Jinghua. The likeliest explanation is that many librarians are unfamiliar with the ordering of names traditionally found in East Asian cultures. The most noticeable result of the study is an overall lack of consistent adherence to professional guidelines. For instance, most queries received a reply within a reasonable timeframe, and greeting and closing phrases were included almost universally. However, other elements of the author’s rubric, such as those corresponding to clarity and information literacy, were not consistently applied. The results point to a greater need for librarians to follow best practice in virtual reference services. Furthermore, the author believes that best-practice guidelines must actively engage with anti-racist ideas to address the issues that were found in the study.
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Fehrenbach, R. J. "Another Pre-1592 Copy of the English Faust Book". Library 20, nr 3 (1.09.2019): 395–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/library/20.3.395.

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Abstract A second copy of a pre-1592 edition of the English Faust Book, Marlowe’s source for Doctor Faustus, has been uncovered in a catalogue of books owned by a London apothecary. This catalogue, of which at least a quarter are books associated with an apothecary’s profession, was compiled by the owner himself, one Edward Barlow, and, most importantly, is firmly dated 17 November 1589/90. This discovery, made by Peter Murray Jones of King’s College, Cambridge, is the second appearance of that book prior to the publication of its only extant edition in 1592, providing confirmation that Marlowe could have written Faustus prior to 1592. But whenever Marlowe wrote his play, the medico-magical material he employed had its source in a work that a practising apothecary judged valuable enough to add to his other professional books. The complete record of Jones’s discovery is found in Volume IX of Private Libraries in Renaissance England, PLRE 263.157.
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Dietze, Horst. "Arthur Segal: picture lending and an artist’s life". Art Libraries Journal 15, nr 2 (1990): 10–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307472200006696.

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For much of his life the Rumanian-born artist Arthur Segal championed the cause of picture lending for the benefit of the public and as a means of helping artists to earn a living. In Germany in the mid-1920s, Segal put forward his plans for lending institutions for works of art, akin to lending libraries for books. Widespread support was not forthcoming, and an experimental scheme organised by an artists’ association in Berlin ceased in 1927. Segal could give only qualified support to an alternative concept of hire purchase. Arthur Segal settled in England in 1936; some years after his death, his ideas contributed to the devising of an art loan scheme, launched by the London Borough of Holborn public library, which featured the work of local artists. Segal deserves to be remembered; his life and achievements have been celebrated by exhibitions in Berlin and Cologne, and the following article has been translated into English so that his ideas and endeavours can be more widely appreciated.
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Pichugina, Victoria. "Mikhail Kutorga in the System of European Scientific Coordinates: London Coordinate". ISTORIYA 13, nr 5 (115) (2022): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.18254/s207987840021591-9.

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The article discusses a number of episodes from the biography of the outstanding Russian researcher of antiquity Mikhail Koutorga (1809—1886), which give an idea of his personal characteristics, scientific routes, contacts and sympathies. His development as a scientist is considered in the system of European scientific coordinates, among which there were many countries and cities, but so far there was no England and London. The European educational path of Mikhail Koutorga began at the Professorial Institute of the University of Dorpat and continued in Berlin, largely predetermining his formation as a scientist. Even in Dorpat, there was an acquaintance with the peculiarities of the educational space of Europe, because Koutorga got acquainted with the advanced works on the history of Greece and Rome at that time and the critical method of European historical science. The works of the French historian François Guizot had the greatest influence on Koutorga. Having adopted his ideas, Mikhail Koutorga further developed the concept of class struggle in relation to Athens. After graduating from the Professorial Institute, Koutorga was attached to the Berlin professor F. Kranichfeld, and a new stage in his development as a scientist began. Illness prevented Koutorga from visiting Italy, but probably allowed him to work in the libraries of Vienna, Berlin and Munich. The scarce information about this scientific trip suggests that Koutorga from his youth sought to expand the horizons of his educational travels, and over the years did not lose this desire. Despite the fact that Koutorga was critical of the teaching of German professors, he attended lectures by prominent researchers of that time (L. von Ranke, F. Raumer, and others). Taking into account his subsequent interest in archaeological and topographic research, the course of lectures on archeology of one of the founders of the archeology of Rome, E. Gerhard, should have seemed important to Koutorga. The knowledge gained at these lectures was probably useful to Mikhail Koutorga during his travels in Greece in 1860—1861. One of the main merits of M. Koutorga in the Western scientific community is still considered a detailed description of the ancient city of Halae in central Greece that meets high scientific standards, which he published in the French edition of the Revue Archéologique for 1860. Before traveling to Greece, he visited France and England in 1859. A visit to England is still one of the blank spots in his scientific and educational travels, where in addition to the obvious ones, there were also hidden routes. The materials stored in the Department of Manuscripts of the National Library of Russia allow us to state that Kutorga managed to enter into correspondence and establish contacts with English antiquities, especially with the outstanding topographer of Greece, Colonel William Martin Leake (1777—1860). The authors of the article transcribed, analyzed and for the first time offered for publication in the original language and translated into Russian five letters stored in the Manuscripts Department of the Russian National Library (F. 410. Items 45, 46, 211). A comparative analysis of the letters made it possible to broaden our understanding of not only the peculiarities of Koutorga's interaction with Western colleagues and to see how carefully he planned his scientific work in England. The letters make it possible to outline the circle of outstanding scientists of that time, to whom Leake addresses about Koutorga. That is, they make it possible to trace the scientific contacts of Colonel Leake in Cambridge, Oxford and the British Museum, as well as point out those of them that can be called personal connections rather than official appeals. The content of the correspondence, which lasts from August 8 to 12, 1859, as well as the information present on the two surviving envelopes, not only proves Koutorga's visit to England, but also allows us to establish the exact address of his residence and the purpose of his stay.
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Hawkins, Richard A. "Paprika Schlesinger". Journal of Historical Research in Marketing 9, nr 1 (20.02.2017): 66–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-10-2015-0043.

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Purpose This paper explores the development of a luxury retail shoe brand in Belle Époque Vienna. Design/methodology/approach Footwear retailing and marketing history is a neglected area. Unfortunately, no business records have survived from Robert Schlesinger’s shoe stores. However, it has been possible to reconstruct the history of the development of the Paprika Schlesinger brand from its extensive advertising in the Viennese newspaper, the Neue Freie Presse, with the guidance of the founder’s grandson, Prof Robert A. Shaw, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, Birkbeck, University of London, England. This case study would not have been possible without the digitization of some major collections of primary sources. In 2014, the European Union’s Europeana digitization initiative launched a new portal via the Library of Europe website which provides access to selected digitized historic newspaper collections in libraries across Europe. The project partners include the Austrian National Library which has digitized full runs of several major historic Austrian newspapers, including the Neue Freie Presse. Other project partners which have digitized historic newspapers which are relevant to this paper are the Landesbibliothek Dr Friedrich Teßmann of Italy’s Südtirol region, the National Library of France and the Berlin State Library. An associate project partner library, the Slovenian National and University Library’s Digital Library of Slovenia, has also digitized relevant historic newspapers. Furthermore, the City of Vienna has digitized a complete set of Vienna city directories as part of its Wienbibliothek Digital project. Findings This paper suggests that Robert Schlesinger created one of the first European luxury retail shoe brands. Originality/value This is the first academic study of the historical development of the advertising and marketing of a European luxury retail shoe brand.
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Rozprawy doktorskie na temat "London (England). Libraries"

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Borda, Ann Elizabeth. "The museum library : a survey of libraries in the museums and related institutions of the Greater London area, together with a study on the evolution of the museum library in England". Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1996. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1317513/.

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The central focus of the present research is a survey of libraries located in, and associated with, the museums and related institutions of the Greater London area. This investigation arises from an awareness of a general absence in the literatures of both the library and museum professions concerning the role and function of these special libraries. A first means of analysis involved an historical survey illustrating the evolution of museums and libraries in England, with particular reference to the South East. This preliminary stage in the research confirmed the historical significance of London in terms of the development of the two communities, locally and nationally, as well as providing a contextual basis from which to approach the present state and status of the museum library. A statistical survey of eighty-four museum institutions and their libraries in the Greater London area comprised the second stage of analysis. The survey population was grouped by sectors as defined, with some modification, by the official advisory body, the Museums and Galleries Commission. Five categories represented the survey sectors under examination: National, Central Government, Local Authority, University and Independent. During the 1993-94 period, data were gathered on individual institutions in each sector through the use of a designed questionnaire and in-person interviews concerning various aspects of library operation and function, namely; Administration and Staff; Finance; Collections; Catalogues; Services; and Networks. Findings suggested that broad parameters existed in what constituted a museum library, i.e., ranging from a service facility to an informal curatorial collection. Consequently, organisation of the library and its role in relation to the parent body varied accordingly. More defined roles generally corresponded to those institutions supporting libraries which were formally organised and professionally staffed. The levels of public access, collections management and services were also significantly related to the sector under which an institution was grouped. These designations indicated, for instance, that the Nationals had the most comprehensive library facilities and services, whereas smaller institutions across the remaining sectors showed considerable variation in library provision. By default, the funding arrangements specific to certain groups and/or maintaining bodies had a documented effect on the state of the museum libraries surveyed. In general, a greater number of libraries are housed in or associated with museums than described in available sources. However, their role as information partner to the museum organisation is not significant on all levels of provision, particularly as an internally networked resource for the study of respective collections and as an accessible facility for the research public. This limitation in potential may be due to its perception within both the organisation and the wider community, although insufficient allocations to the parent body and the library itself are additional factors.
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Książki na temat "London (England). Libraries"

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Cook, Christopher D. Incunabula in the Westminster Abbey and Westminster School libraries. London: Bibliographical Society, 2013.

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Creaser, Claire. Deprivation and library performance: The DoE index of local conditions and library use in London and the metropolitan districts of England. Loughborough: Library and Information Statistics Unit, Dept. of Information and Library Studies, Loughborough University of Technology, 1995.

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Borda, Ann Elizabeth. The museum library: A survey of libraries in the museums and related institutions of the Greater London Area; together with a study on the evolution of the museum library in England. [London]: British Library, British Thesis Service, 1996.

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1954-, Gillespie Vincent, Doyle A. I. 1925-, British Library i British Academy, red. Syon Abbey. London: British Library in association with the British Academy, 2001.

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Stonehouse, Roger. The architecture of the British Library at St. Pancras. London: Spon Press, 2004.

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Stonehouse, Roger. The architecture of the British Library at St. Pancras. New York: Spon Press, 2003.

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Colwell, Stella. The Family Records Centre: A user's guide. Wyd. 2. Kew, Surrey: Public Record Office, 2002.

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Jones, E. A. Syon Abbey and its books: Reading, writing and religion, c.1400-1700. Woodbridge, U.K: Boydell, 2010.

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Brookner, Anita. Look at me. London: Triad, 1985.

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Nickson, M. A. E. The British Library: Guide to the catalogues and indexes of the Department of Manuscripts. Wyd. 3. London: British Library, 1998.

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Części książek na temat "London (England). Libraries"

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Howsam, Leslie. "1. An Unthinkable Job for a Woman". W Eliza Orme’s Ambitions, 9–20. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0392.01.

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This chapter sets the context for Eliza Orme’s ambitions, in England from the 1860s to the 1890s, given that the extraordinary achievement of earning a degree in law was, as it happened, the easy part. She came of age into a burgeoning women’s suffrage movement whose leaders were committed to securing the electoral vote for women as well as access to a wide range of jobs and occupations; they also set their sights on the profession of medicine, but not that of law. The legal professions, encompassing both barristers and solicitors, were so totally closed to women that even the most ambitious suffragist and other feminist politicians did not consider them as institutions open to challenge. This meant that, whatever her contemporaries saw when they looked at Orme, they did not see her as we do today. When Leslie Howsam first encountered Orme in the 1980s, as a postgraduate student of British history in a Canadian university, she could discover very little information about this elusive figure. She had access to libraries and archives at home and in London, but there was no internet searching or digitized newspapers. Almost forty years later, newly available sources have made it possible to speculate that Eliza Orme’s ambition might have transcended even the practice of law, and reached as far as aiming for a seat in Parliament.
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"Report from the Select Committee on Public Libraries, Together with the Proceedings of the Committee, Minutes of Evidence, and Appendix (London: House of Commons, 1849), pp. vii—ix, 77—83, 124—5". W Victorian Print Media, redaktorzy Andrew King i John Plunkett, 254–67. Oxford University PressOxford, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199270378.003.0043.

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Abstract In 1849 a parliamentary select committee examined the state of library provision. The committee was headed by William Ewart (1798—1869), the reforming Liberal MP for Dumfries, and included Joseph Brotherton (1783—1857), the first MP for Salford, Manchester, and Disraeli (1804—81), then head of the ‘Young England’ group of Tories. The committee’s unflattering findings led to the passing of a bill in 1850 that allowed town councils to levy taxes for the creation of public libraries. The evidence given to the inquiry exposed the lack of accessible reading spaces for working-class readers and the failure of existing initiatives like mechanics’ institutes.
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Guy, John. "Monarchy and counsel: models of the state". W The Sixteenth Century1485-1603, 113–44. Oxford University PressOxford, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198207672.003.0005.

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Abstract It cannot be said that distinctively British theories of monarchy and politics evolved in the sixteenth century. Renaissance culture was pan-European: ideas (like printed books and manuscripts) crossed the Channel freely in both directions. This was equally true after the Reformation as before. Libraries were acquired in Paris, Bas1e, or Venice rather than in London, Dublin, or Edinburgh. Translations of classical and later writings were in vogue. Young aristocrats often travelled on the Continent after they had studied at university or the Inns of Court. Still, it was in the sixteenth century that classic ‘British’ models of sacral monarchy (mainly England) and popular sovereignty (mainly Scotland) emerged. These were the ideas that underlay the British Civil Wars of the seventeenth century and shaped the Atlantic and colonialist traditions, notably in North America. They survived until the French Revolution unleashed more stridently ‘nationalist’ theories of popular sovereignty, and until the rise of nationalism in post-Enlightenment Germany created the stimulus for ideals of autonomy and self-determination that were more closely indexed to ethnic and racial concerns.
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Lyons, Tara L. "‘A Gifte of good Moment’". W The Oxford Handbook of the History of the Book in Early Modern England, 427—C23P57. Oxford University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198846239.013.23.

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Abstract This essay offers a new assessment of the London Stationers’ Company and their 1610 agreement with the Bodleian Library. Manuscript documents in Bodleian Library Records show that London publishers were a vital part of building the Oxford library’s holdings through their many ‘gifts’ of books and services to the library. While earlier scholars have studied the agreement for evidence of why it failed in the seventeenth century, this essay considers to what extent it succeeded. A fresh look at the evidence challenges received wisdom that pits the ‘averse’, ‘parsimonious’, and ‘recalcitrant’ Stationers against the noble Sir Thomas Bodley and his library’s commitment to educational advancement. By highlighting the Stationers’ acts of generosity, this essay reveals the significance of gift-exchange in forging bonds between company and library, two burgeoning institutions of the book in the seventeenth century.
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Streszczenia konferencji na temat "London (England). Libraries"

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Куцева, Е. А. "THE BOOK CULTURE IN ENGLAND IN XVIIIth CENTURY". W Конференция памяти профессора С.Б. Семёнова ИССЛЕДОВАНИЯ ЗАРУБЕЖНОЙ ИСТОРИИ. Crossref, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.55000/mcu.2021.90.39.009.

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В XVIII веке Англия становится одной из самых читающих стран в Европе, количество публикаций растет, как в Лондоне, так и в провинции. Развитие книжной торговли было связано с повышением грамотности населения, что стимулировало рост спроса на печатную продукцию. Периодические издания активно развивались, появлялись новые их виды и жанры (обзоры, еже-дневные издания). Повышению спроса также способствовало развитие рекламы и обострение по-литической борьбы в стране. Отмена предварительной цензуры 1695 г. и Статут королевы Анны 1710 г. сыграли важную роль в формировании английской книжной культуры XVIII века, послед-ний заложил основу авторского права в Англии. В статье исследуется организация книжного рын-ка в Англии XVIII века, анализируется развитие авторского права, особенности книгоиздания, проблема пиратства или нарушения авторских прав, создание системы библиотек. In the XVIIIth century England becomes one of the most reading countries in Europe, the number of publications is growing, both in London and in the provinces. The development of the book trade was due to an increase in literacy of the population, which stimulated an increase in demand for printed products. Periodicals are actively developing, new types of printed publications and new genres (reviews, daily editions) appear. The rise in demand also contributed to the development of advertising and intensification of political strife in the country. The abolition of preliminary censorship in 1695 and the Statute of Queen Anne of 1710 were significant for the formation of English book culture in the XVIIIth century, the latter laid the foundation for copyright in England. The article examines the organization of the book market in England in the XVIIIth century, analyzes the development of copyright, features of book publishing, the problem of piracy or copyright infringement, the creation of a system of libraries.
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