PRIMARY SOURCES

ON COPYRIGHT

(1450-1900)

William Seres' Printing Patent, Westminster (1553)

Source: Photographed by the National Editor at the National Archives: c.66/853

Citation:
William Seres' Printing Patent, Westminster (1553), Primary Sources on Copyright (1450-1900), eds L. Bently & M. Kretschmer, www.copyrighthistory.org

Back | Record | Images | No Commentaries
Record-ID: uk_1553a

Permanent link: https://www.copyrighthistory.org/cam/tools/request/showRecord.php?id=record_uk_1553a

Full title:
William Seres' Printing Patent

Full title original language:
N/A

Abstract:
This document is associated with the following core document: uk_1553.

Commentary: No commentaries for this record.

Bibliography:
N/A

Related documents in this database:
1553: Totell's Printing Patent
1553: John Day's Privilege for the Catechism
1559: Seres' patent for Primers and Psalters
1559: Totell's patent for Common Law Books

Author: N/A

Publisher: N/A

Year: 1553

Location: Westminster

Language: English

Source: Photographed by the National Editor at the National Archives: c.66/853

Persons referred to:
Edward VI
Seres, William

Places referred to:
London

Cases referred to:
N/A

Institutions referred to:
High Court of Parliament
Privy Council

Legislation:
N/A

Keywords:
duration
licensing, Imprimatur
price regulation
privileges, printing
religious works

Responsible editor: Ronan Deazley



Copyright History resource developed in partnership with:


Our Partners


Copyright statement

You may copy and distribute the translations and commentaries in this resource, or parts of such translations and commentaries, in any medium, for non-commercial purposes as long as the authorship of the commentaries and translations is acknowledged, and you indicate the source as Bently & Kretschmer (eds), Primary Sources on Copyright (1450-1900) (www.copyrighthistory.org).

With the exception of commentaries that are available under a CC-BY licence (compliant with UKRI policy) you may not publish individual documents or parts of the database for any commercial purposes, including charging a fee for providing access to these documents via a network. This licence does not affect your statutory rights of fair dealing.

Although the original documents in this database are in the public domain, we are unable to grant you the right to reproduce or duplicate some of these documents in so far as the images or scans are protected by copyright or we have only been able to reproduce them here by giving contractual undertakings. For the status of any particular images, please consult the information relating to copyright in the bibliographic records.


Primary Sources on Copyright (1450-1900) is co-published by Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge, 10 West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DZ, UK and CREATe, School of Law, University of Glasgow, 10 The Square, Glasgow G12 8QQ, UK