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  1. 2 de ene. de 2003 · Save to Bookshelf. The Stationers' Company was a guild, formed out of the Brotherhood of Manuscript Producers (formed 1357) and the Brotherhood of the Craft of Writers of Text-Letters (formed 1405), and established by Royal Charter from King Philip and Queen Mary in 1557 with the aim of preventing the publication of Protestant propaganda.

  2. The Stationers’ Company is truly an extraordinary organisation. The combined knowledge and experience of our members within the communication and content trades bring inherent energy to discuss and contribute to the future of our industries. Find out more about becoming a member and get involved.

  3. 4 de mar. de 2015 · This ubiquity is not surprising. The Stationers’ Company was a dominant force in the English book trade throughout the early modern period. With few exceptions, one could not be a successful printer or bookseller in post-1557 England without having some kind of relationship with the Company. Yet, despite the Company’s importance, there is ...

  4. 27 de jun. de 2019 · The Stationers' Company : a history, 1403-1959 by Blagden, Cyprian. Publication date 1960 Topics Stationers' Company (London, England) Publisher London ...

  5. The Stationers’ Company, founded in 1403 and incorporated in 1557, dominated London’s trade in printed books during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Following the loss of its monopoly over printing in 1695, its regulatory powers diminished, but it retained a vital role in the life of the London trade, not least through its lucrative joint-stock publishing venture, known as the ...

  6. The Stationers’ Company before 1557 . While the first recorded use of the term “stationer” referred to a bookseller in Bologna in the thirteenth century, the earliest use of the word in England suggests that “stationer” referred to almost anyone engaged in the business of making, finishing, or selling books.

  7. Stationers and Sir Thomas Bodley: how our nation’s written heritage was collected and preserved for the benefit of all. On 12 December 1610, the Master of the Stationers’ Company, Thomas Man, reached an agreement with Sir Thomas Bodley to supply Oxford’s Bodleian Library with a free copy of every book registered at Stationers' Hall.