Galliot du Pré

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Imprint used from 1512

Galliot du Pré (- April 1560) was a Parisian bookseller and publisher.

In May 1514 the Royal Chancery of Louis XII granted du Pré the privilege of exclusive rights. This was confirmed in 1515 by Francis I.[1]

Galliot du Pré's imprint device featured a ship with an angel blowing a trumpet, which issues the words "La vogue du guallee" which means "come what may".[2]

Publications[]

  • Le Grand Coustumier de France (1514)
  • L'Instruction et manière de procéder ès cours du Parlement (1514)
  • Les Grandes Chroniques de Bretaigne by (1514 bis 1531)
  • les Mémoires by Philippe de Commynes (1524)
  • les Annales et chroniques de France by (1525)
  • les Œuvres by Alain Chartier (1529)
  • Les dictz moraux des philosophes by (1531)
  • Libri de re rustica by Cato the Elder, Varro and Columella et Palladius (1533);
  • Biblia sacra (1541, Folio);
  • Les Divines institutions de Lactance Firmian traduites by René Fumé (1542, Folio);
  • Tractatus juris regaliorum (1542, Folio);
  • Tractatus duo de origine et usu jurisdictionum by Pierre Bertrand (1551).

References[]

  1. ^ Rideau, Frédéric. "Primary Sources on Copyright - Record Viewer". www.copyrighthistory.org. Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Printer's Device of Galliot Du Pré". Pitts Digital Image Archive. Emory University. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
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