Editoria, Librerie, Edizioni Tauchnitz, Book Mark, Antico Segnalibri, 1915, Araldica immagine 1

Editoria, Librerie, Edizioni Tauchnitz, Book Mark, Antico Segnalibri, 1915, Araldica

Valore stimato —€83.3

Per informazioni su questo oggetto contattami.

 BOOK MARK

FOR THE

TAUCHNITZ EDITION

...

 


Interessante edizione antica e d'epoca,

grazioso segnalibro, pubblicitario delle edizioni Tauchnitz, con elenco di alcuni libri pubblicati, quasi un piccolo listino, datato gennaio 1915,

con pubblicizzati i volumi di G. Meredith, Alice Perrin, W. E. Norris, M. Betham Edwards, E. W. Hornung;

 

bella grafica, con al recto anche allegorie araldiche, tra cui uno stemma araldico sorretto da due leoni (forse il marchio di fabbrica della casa editrice ?), e una aquila che tiene tra le sue zampe uno scudo con le insegne degli Stati Uniti d'America;

 

misura circa cm. 16x6,5 (l'intero foglio, compresi i margini bianchi diseguali); stampa al recto e al verso; datato 1915.

 

 

 

DI INTERESSE PUBBLICITARIO, SPECIALISTICO EDITORIALE, ARALDICO, COLLEZIONISTICO 

Buona conservazione generale, segni e difetti d'uso e d'epoca, sparse fioriture e difetti vari marginali,


esemplare meritevole anche di essere inserito sotto passpartout ed incorniciato.


(l'immagine allegata raffigura un particolare dell'intero oggetto, ossia la sola parte anteriore, eventuali ulteriori informazioni a richiesta)




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Karl Christoph Tauchnitz

Karl Christoph Traugott Tauchnitz (1761–1836), born at Grossbardau near GrimmaSaxony, established a printing business in Leipzig in 1796 and a publishing house in 1798. He specialized in the publication of dictionaries, Bibles, and stereotyped editions of the Greek and Roman classics. He was the first publisher to introduce stereotyping into Germany.[1]

The business was carried on by his son, Karl Christian Phillipp Tauchnitz (1798–1884), until 1865, when the business was sold to O. Holtze. He left large sums to the city of Leipzig for philanthropic purposes.

[edit]
Founding of Bernhard Tauchnitz

Christian Bernhard, Freiherr von Tauchnitz (August 25, 1816 Schleinitz, present day Unterkaka – August 11, 1895 Leipzig),[1] the founder of the firm of Bernhard Tauchnitz, was the nephew of the first-mentioned. Christian's father died when he was young and his uncle played an important part in his development.[1] His printing and publishing firm was started at Leipzig (Germany) on February 1, 1837.[1]

Bernhard started the Collection of British and American Authors in 1841, a reprint series familiar to anglophone travellers on the continent of Europe. These inexpensive, paperbound editions, a direct precursor to mass-market paperbacks, was begun in 1841, and eventually ran to over 5000 volumes. In 1868 he began the Collection of German Authors, followed in 1886 by the Students' Tauchnitz Editions.

[edit]
Early copyright reformer

In the early 1900s, a journalist writing about the company suggested that the warning on the covers of Tauchnitz' English-language books, "Not to be introduced into England or into any British colony," might lead some to believe that the books were not legitimate. In fact the books were authorised by the authors or their representatives for Continental sale only. The authors were paid royalties even at a time when no copyright protection for English and American books existed in Germany. That was Baron Tauchnitz' policy from the foundation of his company. He wrote in his original prospectus,

"Allow me to remark that I, as well as any other publisher in Germany, have at present the right to embark in such undertakings without any permission from the authors; and that my propositions arise solely from a wish thereby to take the fist step towards a literary relationship between England and Germany, and towards an extension of the rights of copyright, and to publish my editions in accordance with those rights."[1]

Christian Karl Bernhard, 2nd Baron of Tauchnitz. from a portrait by Vilma Lwoff-Parlaghy

In 1841, when Tauchnitz started his English-language editions, there were no copyright treaties between England or the United States and Continental countries. Although Tauchnitz' editions were authorised, they were not protected from copyright infringement and he could offer none to the authors he paid. A few years later, various Continental States formed copyright treaties with Britain: Prussia and Saxony in 1846, France in 1852, and successively nearly all European states. In these countries, the Tauchnitz Authorised Edition became the Copyright Edition. Finally, theBerne Convention of 1886 conferred copyright upon authors in its fullest form over the greater part of the developed world. Tauchnitz editions were the only authorised editions of works by American authors on the Continent of Europe until 1891, when, by the Copyright Treaty with the United States of America, they too became copyright editions.[1]

[edit]
Honours bestowed

In 1860 he was ennobled with the title of Freiherr (Baron) for his services to literature, and in 1877 was made a life member of the Saxon Upper Chamber.[2] From 1866 to 1895 he was British Consul-General for the kingdom and duchies of Saxony.

[edit]
Christian Karl Bernhard

Christian Bernhard was succeeded in the business by his son, Christian Karl Bernhard, 2nd Baron of Tauchnitz (May 29, 1841 – ?). Christian Karl received his education at the Federal School of Saxony–Saint Afra in Meissen, studied law at the Universities of BerlinZürich and Leipzig, and was a Doctor of Jurisprudence, and had passed the state examination by the age of twenty-one. He made a tour of Europe, stayed some time in England, and learned to speak and write English with barely a flaw. In 1866, he entered into partnership with his father at his firm.[1]

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Catalogue

Two Tauchnitz books from the 1930s. The last line on the cover reads: Not to be introduced into the British Empire or U.S.A. (Details)

The two authors who first attracted Tauchnitz' attention were Dickens and Lytton with the novels Pickwick Papers and Pelham which appeared in 1841. Twenty-two years later, in 1863, the five-hundredth volume of the series was published under the title Five Centuries of the English Language and Literature. In 1869, an English-language edition of The New Testament, exhibiting the differences between the original AlexandrineSinaitic andVatican manuscripts, was the one-thousandth volume. It was dedicated by the Baron "To my English and American Authors, as a Token of Esteem for the Living, and a Tribute of Remembrance to the Dead." In 1881, the two-thousandth volume, Of English Literature in the Reign of Victoria byHenry Morley was issued, in which facsimiles of the signatures of all the authors who had been published in the Tauchnitz series appeared. By 1901, 3,500 books had been published.[1]

It was not only a catalogue of English works. German and French works filled a large space as well as the Greek and Latin classics which had been a speciality of his uncle Karl. His German edition of the Bible was a scholarly work. It included contributions from important German scholars including, Karl Gottfried Wilhelm Theile, Seligman BaerFranz DelitzschConstantin von Tischendorf and Oscar von Gebhardt, together with theBibliotheca Patrum. Scientific works, books on jurisprudence, and dictionaries covering most of the world's major languages, filled the catalogue as well.[1]

The publishers amassed a huge amount of correspondence from authors of the day which amounted to an important Who's Who of the time. Letters of thanks and dedications from many authors were in the Tauchnitz archive. These included letters from Harrison AinsworthWilkie CollinsMaria Susanna CumminsLouisa M. AlcottMarguerite Gardiner, Baron Lytton, Dinah CraikThomas Carlyle, Charles Dickens, Benjamin DisraeliGladstoneThomas Babington MacaulayGeorge Henry LewesGeorge EliotNathaniel Hawthorn,Washington IrvingLongfellowElizabeth GaskellCharles LeverThackerayCharles ReadeTennysonRobert BrowningGerald Du MaurierJames Payn and Robert Louis Stevenson.[1]

[edit]
The Todd-Bowden Collection of Tauchnitz Editions

The Todd-Bowden Collection is an important collection of Tauchnitz editions in the British Library. It was acquired in 1992, with the aid of the German KulturStiftung der Länder and the National Heritage Memorial Fund. The collection includes approximately 6,700 volumes, together with sale catalogues, leaflets, and other advertising materials and is one of the most important collections of Tauchnitz books outside Germany.[3] (dal web, wikipedia)




Editoria, Librerie, Edizioni Tauchnitz, Book Mark, Antico Segnalibri, 1915, Araldica immagine 0