Stationers' Hall

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Stationers' Hall

Middlesex


Stationers' Hall
Type: Livery hall
Location
Grid reference: TQ31848119
Location: 51°30’51"N, 0°6’5"W
City: London
History
Built 1670
For: The Worshipful Company
of Stationers
Livery hall
Information
Owned by: The Worshipful Company of
Stationers and Newspaper Makers

Stationers' Hall is the livery hall of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers, usually known as the 'Stationers' Company', one of the livery companies of the City of London.

The hall dates from the seventeenth century, having been rebuilt after the Great Fire of London. It stands on Ave Maria Lane near Ludgate Hill and St Paul's Cathedral. This was formerly the site of Abergavenny House, which was purchased by the Stationers in 1606 for £3,500, but destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666.[1]

The current building and hall date from c. 1670. It is designated a Grade I listed building.[2]

History

At the time the Stationers' Company received its royal charter in 1557, it was based at Peter's College, which the Company had bought from St Paul's Cathedral. In 1606 though, the Company bought Abergavenny House in Ave Maria Lane for £3,500 and moved out of Peter's College. The new building became its livery hall.

This first Stationers' Hall burnt down in the Great Fire of London of 1666, and with it were lost books to the value of about £40,000.[3]

The hall was rebuilt and its present interior is much as it was when it reopened in 1673. The Court Room was added in 1748. In 1800 the external façade was remodelled to its present form by the architect Robert Mylne.[4]

The Company

The Worshipful Company of Stationers was formed in 1403, as a guild of stationers, which at this time included scribes, lymners (illuminators), bookbinders and booksellers who worked at a fixed location (stationarius) beside the walls of St Paul's Cathedral.[5]

The guild received a royal charter in 1557. Once the company received its charter, “the company’s role was to regulate and discipline the industry, define proper conduct and maintain its own corporate privileges.”[6] It held a monopoly over the publishing industry and was legally empowered to seize 'offending books', through which many of the arguments of the Reformation and the Civil War turned. The Stationers' Company remained officially responsible for setting and enforcing regulations until the enactment of the Copyright Act of 1710 provided explicit protection for authors. The term 'copyright' derives from the former regualtuion by the Statuiners' Company of the right to copy printed works.

In 1937, the Company adopted its current name, by adding 'and Newspaper Makers'.

Although the company has lost its role as a regulator, and exists today mainly for charitable endeavours, its members are mostly involved with the modern visual and graphic communications industries that have evolved from the company's original trades, including printing, papermaking, packaging, office products, engineering, advertising, design, photography, film and video production, publishing of books, newspapers and periodicals and digital media.

Stationers' Hall has hosted the Shine School Media Awards, where students compete in the creation of websites and magazines.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Stationers' Hall)

References

  1. Stationers Livery Company website. Accessed 17 February 2015
  2. Images of England — details from listed building database (199293) Stationers' Hall
  3. Stationers Livery Company
  4. Cyprian Blagden (1977) [1960]. "The Property". The Stationers' Company: A History, 1403-1959. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804709354. https://books.google.com/books?id=xDysAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA206. 
  5. Patterson, Lyman Ray: 'Copyright in Historical Perspective' (Vanderbilt University Press, 1968)
  6. Lyons, Martyn (2011). Books: A Living History. Los Angeles, CA: J. Paul Getty Museum. pp. 61. 


Livery Halls of the City of London

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