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"Pezzana e Consorti" case: supporting documents, Venice (1780)

Source:
N/A

Citation:
"Pezzana e Consorti" case: supporting documents (1780), Primary Sources on Copyright (1450-1900), eds L. Bently & M. Kretschmer, www.copyrighthistory.org

Record Images


Record-ID:
i_1780

Full title
"Pezzana e Consorti" case (1781): copies of the decrees and rulings issued by the Commissioners of the University of Padua and the Venetian Senate in 1780 which Pezzana and his colleagues petitioned against.

Full title original language
N/A

Abstract
For three centuries the practice of the authorities in Venice had been to grant privileges of limited duration, usually with the clause that the books were to be sold at "a fair price" ("giusto prezzo"). By the second half of the eighteenth century, however, Venetian publishing was in a state of crisis because of the proliferation of cheap reprint editions. In order to survive, members of the Guild had to save on production costs, leading to a general decline in the typographical and aesthetic qulity of the once so renowned Venetian editions. This state of affairs so appalled Gasparo Gozzi (the brother of the famous dramatist), who was Superintendent of the Venetian Guild, that he prevailed upon the Riformatori (Commissioners) of the University of Padua (the agency in charge of the book trade in Venice) to pass a law on 30 July 1780, which effectively established a perpetuity of privileges by declaring that the original privilege-holder of a work was always entitled to apply for a renewal of it. This drastic measure, albeit a triumph of corporate protectionism, was not to the liking of several members of the Guild, especially the major publishing houses of Venice, which, by taking part in the lucrative reprinting business, had been able to drive their less powerful colleagues out of the market. Twelve of the major publishers' families, led by the Heirs of Niccolò Pezzana, submitted a very skilfully drafted petition to the Riformatori, laying the blame for the publishing crisis on foreign competition, and lobbying for the old legislation to be restored. The petition of Pezzana & C. was heard by the Riformatori but immediately followed by a counter-petition from those members of the Guild (including the Prior, Marcantonio Manfré) who supported protectionism. On 18 September 1781, the Riformatori decided against Pezzana & Co., but the law of 30 July 1780 would eventually be revoked a few years later anyway, after a ruling of 1 May 1789 which declared that all books whose privileges had expired were public property. The case presents some parallels with Donaldson v. Becket (1774) in which the House of Lords rejected a London publisher's claim of a perpetual common law copyright.

Bibliography
Berengo, Marino, "La crisi dell'arte della stampa veneziana alla fine del XVIII secolo", in "Studi in onore di Armando Sapori", vol.2 (Milan, 1957), 1320-1338
Borghi, Maurizio, "Writing Practices in the Privilege- and Intellectual Property Systems" (2003). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1031639
Castellani, Carlo, "I privilegi di stampa e la proprietà letteraria in Venezia: Dalla introduzione della stampa nella città fin verso la fine del secolo XVIII" (Venice: Fratelli Visentini, 1888)
Infelise, Mario, "L'editoria veneziana nel 700" (Milan: Franco Angeli, 1988)

Related documents in this database

Author
N/A

Publisher
Pezzana e Consorti

Location
Venice

Year
1780

Language
Italian

Source
not available

Physical description
8vo,31cm x 21cm

Illustrations tables
N/A

Persons referred to
Albrizzi, Angelo (fl.1780-1794)
Albrizzi, Giambattista (1698-1777)
Bembo, Diodato (fl.1770-1780)
Bettinelli, Niccolò (fl.1780-1807)
Caroboli, Giacomo (fl.1764-1780)
Fenzo, Giuseppe (fl.1780-1811)
Fenzo, Modesto (fl.1741-1779)
Foscarini, Sebastian (fl.1780)
Gradenigo, Bortolo (fl.1780)
Manfré, Marcantonio (fl.1743-1780)
Marchesini, Davidde (fl.1765-1780)
Martinengo, Venceslao (fl.1780-1797)
Memo, Anzolo (fl.1780)
Novelli, Giambattista (fl.1768-1780)
Occhi, Simone (fl.1742-1780)
Pasquali, Giambattista (1702-1784)
Pezzana, Francesco di Niccolò (fl.1768-1780)
Pezzana, Giannantonio (fl.1780-1804)
Pezzana, Lorenzo (1680-1754)
Pezzana, Niccolò (fl.1669)
Pitteri, Francesco (fl.1735-1780)
Remondini, Giuseppe (1745-1811)
Renier, Paolo (d.1789)
Savioni, Girolamo (fl.1728)
Savioni, Pietro (fl.1774-1799)
Soranzo, Tomà Mocenigo (fl.1770-1797)
Tron, Andrea (1712-1785)
Vallaresso, Alvise (fl.1771-1785)
Zatta, Antonio (fl.1765-1797)
Zino, Carlo (fl.1780-1797)

Persons referred to in commentary
Gozzi, Count Carlo (1720-1806)
Gozzi, Count Gasparo (1713-1786)
Manfré, Marcantonio (fl.1743-1780)

Places referred to
Venice

Places referred to in commentary
London
Venice

Legislation referred to
Venetian decree on privileges (1517)
Venetian decree on privileges for new books and reprints (1603)
Venetian decree establishing perpetuity of privileges (1780)

Legislation referred to in commentary
Venetian decree establishing perpetuity of privileges (1780)
Venetian decree, declaring books whose privileges had expired to belong to the public domain (1789)

Cases referred to
Pezzana e Consorti (1780-81)

Cases referred to in commentary
Donaldson v. Becket (1774) 4 Burr. 2408, 2 Bro. P.C. 129
Pezzana e Consorti (1780-81)

Institutions referred to
Riformatori dello Studio di Padova (Venetian Board of Governors for the University of Padua)
Università di Stampatori e Librai (Venetian Guild of Printers and Booksellers)
Venetian Senate

Institutions referred to in commentary
House of Lords
Riformatori dello Studio di Padova (Venetian Board of Governors for the University of Padua)
Università di Stampatori e Librai (Venetian Guild of Printers and Booksellers)
Venetian Senate

Key words
barter trade
duration, prolongation of privileges
editions, new
guilds
interest groups
lobbying
perpetual protection
privileges, printing
privileges, Venetian
public domain
public good
registration
Università di Stampatori e Librai (Venetian Guild of Printers and Booksellers)
utility

Responsible editor
Joanna Kostylo




Copyright status

Original document is out of copyright. In so far as these scans are protected by copyright, they are made available on the same terms as translations and commentaries (see home page).




Primary Sources on Copyright (1450-1900), Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge, 10 West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DZ, UK