Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q19901602> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 53 of
53
with 100 triples per page.
- Q19901602 subject Q6997742.
- Q19901602 subject Q7470204.
- Q19901602 subject Q7470206.
- Q19901602 subject Q7470208.
- Q19901602 subject Q7470211.
- Q19901602 subject Q8296658.
- Q19901602 subject Q8595477.
- Q19901602 abstract "During the handpress era (roughly 1450–1800), and especially in the 16th century, the Southern Netherlands (corresponding largely to what is now Belgium) was an international centre for the printing of books and images. There were printers in many of the towns, and some towns had many printers.The laws of Charles V required all printers and booksellers to acquire a license in order to exercise their trade, a requirement that was in place through the subsequent period of Spanish rule. His son, Philip II of Spain, further ordered that the Antwerp printers enrol with the Guild of St Luke, adding another layer of control. The business records of one of the most important printing houses of the era, the Plantin Office in Antwerp, have remained intact, and are now the archive of the Plantin-Moretus Museum. As a result, the records of who was involved in printing are extremely accessible to historians and have been much studied.This list is arranged alphabetically by town. Booksellers or print publishers who did not own a printing press but who commissioned printing under their own name are included. Some of the dates given are approximate. As of January 2015 the list is largely limited to printers who were active at some point during the rule of the Archdukes Albert and Isabella (1598–1621).".
- Q19901602 thumbnail PrintingPress.JPG?width=300.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q1110992.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q12892.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q1379395.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q144334.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q158256.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q167335.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q18147734.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q18922721.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q1913333.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q19288495.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q19288565.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q19288591.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q19667007.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q19667812.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q19668660.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q20687427.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q20687493.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q20811320.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q232916.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q2332042.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q31.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q311452.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q32500.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q34417.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q380360.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q595802.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q622783.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q6238539.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q640361.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q6581823.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q6997742.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q729188.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q7470204.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q7470206.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q7470208.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q7470211.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q7921165.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q8003619.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q8296658.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q8595477.
- Q19901602 wikiPageWikiLink Q927871.
- Q19901602 comment "During the handpress era (roughly 1450–1800), and especially in the 16th century, the Southern Netherlands (corresponding largely to what is now Belgium) was an international centre for the printing of books and images. There were printers in many of the towns, and some towns had many printers.The laws of Charles V required all printers and booksellers to acquire a license in order to exercise their trade, a requirement that was in place through the subsequent period of Spanish rule.".
- Q19901602 label "List of printers in the Southern Netherlands".
- Q19901602 depiction PrintingPress.JPG.