215 resultados para Almanacs
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"The material ... is partly a preprint of selected pages from The American ephemeris and nautical almanac."
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Called: Complete ed., 1929-
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Mode of access: Internet.
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No more published?
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"By Thomas Tennent."
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Also includes: highlights of the events of the previous year; and, summaries of political platforms.
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The almanacs for 1838, 1843-1855 are published under the title: The Whig almanac ...; for 1839-41: The Politician's register; for 1838-1854 they are photolithographic reproductions with a general title-page reading: The Tribune almanac ... 1838-1868, ... comprehending the Politician's register and The Whig almanac ... Vol. 1.
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Editor: R. Ingram-Brown.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"The Anatomy of Man's Body" on page [3] is the only illustration.
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Case in which the Court of Common Pleas decided that the Crown did not have the authority to grant exclusive prerogative rights over the printing of almanacs, a monopoly which the Stationers' Company had enjoyed, uncontested, since the formation of the ‘English Stock' in the early seventeenth century.
The commentary describes the background to the litigation, as well as the various strategies that the Stationers' Company employed in their efforts to regain control of the almanac market in the wake of the decision. It also explores how the decision provided the springboard for the emergence of a more contemporary concept of prerogative copyright. It was no longer thought that the Crown could grant printing patents over certain classes of work as of right. Rather, it was the monarch's unique constitutional position as head of both church and state that imposed an obligation to ensure the dissemination of authentic and authoritative versions of both legal and religious materials, and, from this obligation, the right to print the same arose.