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Portrait of founder Leo Olschki (1861-1940) Leo S. Olschki came from a family of typographers of Jewish ancestry. Born in nowadays Poland (then part of Prussia), he moved to Berlin in 1879 and to Verona in 1883, where he became manager of the publishing house Libreria Antiquaria Münster and printed his first incunables. [1]
Until the 1930s, Sansoni devoted almost all its attention to literature, with its works mostly aimed at schools and universities.Some of its most important collections are "Raccolta di opere inedite o rare di ogni secolo della letteratura italiana" (started in 1880), "Biblioteca scolastica di classici italiani (started in 1885), "Collezione di classici greci" (started in 1887), "Biblioteca ...
Oxford University Press signed the first agreement with La Nuova Italia Editrice in 1978, now a brand of Rizzoli Education. [ 44 ] Rizzoli Education also used other imprints such as Fabbri Editori (acquired by RCS Libri in 1990), Tramontana (acquired in 2000), Sansoni per la Scuola (acquired in 1992), Etas (acquired in 1990), Rizzoli Languages ...
Adelphi Edizioni S.p.A. was founded in 1962 by Luciano Foà, Roberto Bazlen, Alberto Zevi and Roberto Olivetti. [1] Among the main collaborators were Giorgio Colli, Sergio Solmi, Claudio Rugafiori, Franco Volpi, and Giuseppe Pontiggia.
Giunti Editore S.p.A. is an Italian publishing house founded in Florence in 1956. The company is based in Villa La Loggia, in via Bolognese, and affiliated offices in Milan. ...
Ignazio Guidi (1844 – 18 April 1935) was an Italian orientalist. He became professor at the University of Rome.He is known as a Hebraist and for many translations.. He learned semitic languages from Pius Zingerle and Father Vincenti, and taught himself Ge'ez.
Piemme stand at the 2018 Turin International Book Fair. The company was founded in 1982 by Pietro Marietti, whose family had been involved in the book trade since 1820. The first books to be published were on religious issues and this theme has remained a fundamental part of the catalogue, with authors including John Paul II and Carlo Maria Martini.
[1] [2] The magazine was started as a notebook-sized publication, and the publisher was Casa Editrice Italia. [3] As of 1926 it was published on a monthly basis, and its editor was Guido Cantini. [4] In 1927 the magazine was acquired by the Rizzoli, [5] [6] now RCS MediaGroup, which is still the owner of the magazine.