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The press of Filippo Giunti (1450–1517) and Bernardo Giunti (1487–1551)〔Their surname is also found as Giunta or di Giunta.〕 was a leading printing firm in Florence from the turn of the sixteenth century.〔"The chief presses in the city were run by members of the Giunti and Sermatelli families," noted Tim Carter, "Music-Printing in Late Sixteenth- and Early Seventeenth-Century Florence: Giorgio Marescotti, Cristofano Marescotti and Zanobi Pignoni" ''Early Music History'' 9 (1990:27-72) p. 31.〕 The first of the Giunti presses was established in Venice by Luca Antonio Giunti the elder (1457–1538), a Florentine. The Giunti also controlled a press at Lyon. In Venice the Giunti press was the most active publisher and exporter of liturgical texts in Catholic Europe.〔John Rigby Hale, ''A Concise Encyclopaedia of the Italian Renaissance'', 1981:159.〕 In Florence the Giunti sought an effective monopoly of music-printing. Prominent in the output of the press are ''bandi'' and laws promulgated by the Grand Dukes of Tuscany, for whom the Giunti operated virtually as an official press. The classic bibliographic monograph, ''De Florentina luntarum typographia'' by Angelo Maria Bandini, details the output of the press at Florence by year from 1497 to 1550. Bandini was able to build upon a printed catalogue of 1604.〔''Catalogus librorum qui in Iuntarum biblioteca Philippae haeredum Florentiae prostant'', Florence, 1604; noted in Ferruccio Ferrari, ''Notizia bibliografica di alcuni rari opuscoli pubblicati dai Giunti in Firenze dal 1537 al 1591 posseduti alla R. Biblioteca Universitaria di Pisa'', Bologna, 1887.〕 After the death of Bernardo in 1551, the presses continued to be operated by their heirs. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Filippo and Bernardo Giunti」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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