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Showing posts with label Pioneers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pioneers. Show all posts

Saturday, 19 January 2019

Avvisi - Printed Newssheets

Avvisi
Avvisi (Italian: [avˈviːzo]; plural: avvisi) were hand-written newsletters used to convey political, military, and economic news quickly and efficiently throughout Europe, and more specifically Italy.

Year & Period:
During the early modern era (1500-1700).

General
In the beginning avvisi were very similar to letters written from one dignitary to another, but diverged from such letters in the sixteenth century with more standardized practices.

Meaning
In Italian, the word avviso translates to noticewarningadvice, or announcement.

Origin
The avvisi found their origins, and peaked, in the early modern Italian world - primarily Rome and Venice. The popularity and distribution of the avvisi was driven by each court's desire to know what the opposing and even the allied courts are up to. News networks spread all across Europe, but the avviso itself was generally created in either Rome or Venice, with the rest of Europe simply consuming.

Importance
Avvisi influenced many aspects of the early modern world including public opinion, political battles, the nature of propaganda, careers, and historical records.

Types
Avvisi can be divided into two categories: 'public' avvisi and 'secret' avvisi, though each copy was often written by the same person.

-Public avvisi were news letters that were available to anyone who wished to travel to a distribution center in a city. 

-Secret avvisi were news letters available to a restricted audience, much akin to duplicated personal letters. 

Distribution
Distribution of the avvisi began with the sources of information. Reporters (newsletter writers, menanti, reportisti, gazzettieri) had networks of contacts filtering information from chancelleries, Catholic churches, Protestant churches, foreign embassies, and shops. Information was gathered and put together individually or at a Scrittoria (writer's workshop).

Range of Distribution
The range of information presented within avvisi was very broad, including countries such as France, Italy, and the Netherlands.

Reporters
Writers of avvisi received very little recognition which, quite often, was exactly how they wanted it. Fear of censorship kept writers from signing work under their own name - for in the early modern era censorship could mean death. 

Censorship
Censorship of avvisi began with Pope Pius V's campaign, beginning in 1570CE. Writers caught distributing what the Catholic Church determined to be defamatory were punished severely - several examples of punishments include death, imprisonment, and torture (sometimes to death).
The harsh punishments did not prevent writers from continuing in their task, though they were forced to use pseudonyms.

Protest

The avvisi were blamed for causing disputes by church officials and writers. Religious leaders were not alone in banning newsletters - more secular leaders also laid down limitations and prohibitions, including Venice's Council of Ten who held bans until at least 1567.

Print
It was not until the middle of the seventeenth century that printed avvisi became more common, and even then Venice and Rome abstained from print. Due to restrictions from censorship on printed works, a sense of urgency, and a desire for personalization hand written avvisi would not be easily replaced by the printing press. Further, printed avvisi were less robust in an effort to avoid censors and cut editing time.

Perished
Printed works were produced much more slowly and as a result the public would lose interest in the topic before it came to print.

References
Wikipedia, Cambridge, Unica, Unict, Unibo

Friday, 18 January 2019

Kaiyuan Za Bao - After Dibao

Kaiyuan Za Bao
Kaiyuan Za Bao 開元雜報 ("Bulletin of the Court") of the Chinese Tang Dynasty published government news.

Year & Period:
First appeared in the 8th century, during the Kaiyuan era.

Content
It has been described as the first Chinese newspaper or official gazette, and also as the world's first magazine. Its main subscribers were imperial officials. Every day the political news and domestic news were collected by the editors, and the writers transcribed it to send to the provinces. 

Print
It was hand printed on silk, and appeared between 713 and 734.

Other Info
In 1582, there was the first reference to privately published newssheets in Beijing, during the late Ming Dynasty.

Other Names
It was also called as Kaiyuan Chao Bao

Perished
The progress of the history accompanied with the cultural development. Since the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), a lot of influential Chinese-owned/managed newspapers had emerged, the well-known of these included “Shen Bao”, “Xin Wen Bao”, “Zi Lin Xi Hu Bao” etc.

References
Wikipedia 

Dibao - After Acta Diurna

Dibao
Dibao (Chinese: 邸報; pinyin: dǐbào; Wade–Giles: ti³-pao⁴; Manchu: doolame araha boolara bithe), literally "reports from the [official] residences", were a type of publications issued by central and local governments in imperial China. While closest in form and function to gazettes in the Western world, they have also been called "palace reports" or "imperial bulletins". 

First Publication
Different sources place their first publication as early as the Han Dynasty (206 BC–220 AD) or as late as the Tang Dynasty (June 18, 618–June 4, 907).

Han Dynasty
Han government carried out the “Jun xian zhi” 郡县制, the eparch and county system which is helpful in concentrating the central power. The country was divided into many eparches and counties but governed by the central government as a whole. Every eparch sets up its office in the capital Chang’an, which has the same function as the provincial office in today Beijing. These offices were called “Di”s. “Di” Officers are selected by the eparchial government. 

Origin of Name Dibao
Their responsibilities included collecting the messages announced by the administrative agents or even the empire, then writing them on the bamboo placard or the damask, and deliver them to their shire leaders via the early post station for reading. So these placards or damasks with information were called “Dibao”s 《邸报》.

Content
They contained official announcements and news, and were intended to be seen only by bureaucrats (and a given dibaomight only be intended for a certain subset of bureaucrats). Selected items from a gazette might then be conveyed to local citizenry by word of mouth and/or posted announcements. 

Flourish
The continuous enforcement of central royal power in ancient China has also brought the development of “Dibao” into full bloom. Although the name of “Dibao” had been changed for many times in the period from the Han, Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming, to Qing Dynasty, its publication has never been interrupted. In addition, its essence and contents hadn’t been changed a lot. 

Variation
Frequency of publication varied widely over time and place. Before the invention of moveable type printing they were hand-written or printed with engraved wooden blocks.

European Style 
The introduction of European-style Chinese language newspapers, along with the growing intersection of Chinese and global affairs generally, applied pressure for the Dibao to adapt, and circulation of the Beijing Gazette was in the tens of thousands by the time publication ceased altogether with the fall of the Qing Dynastyin 1911.

Beijing Gazette
The gazettes from Beijing at this time were known as Jingbao (京報), literally "reports from the capital".

Other Names
Dibao (ti-pao), sometimes called headmen or constables, were local officials in Qing and early Republican China, typically selected from among the prominent landowners.

Administrative System
The dibao administered villages under the ordinary Chinese administrative system. A similar office called the shoubao (shou-pao) was established under the Qing in 1725 to manage the Banner system.

Perished
After 1900, they began to be replaced by less autonomous cunzheng, although this transition was not completed until the Republican era.

YouTube Video
https://youtu.be/3jfcJIxZ4qs

References
Wikipedia, iloveyou4096 WordPress, History of Information, Chai Library, Jstor

First Newspaper Born - Acta Diurna


Acta Diurna
Acta Diurna were daily Roman official notices, a sort of daily gazette. They were carved on stone or metal and presented in message boards in public places like the Forum of Rome. They were also called simply Acta.

Year: The first proto-newspaper appeared as early as 131 B.C. 

Content
Its contents were partly official (court news, decrees of the emperor, senate and magistrates), partly private (notices of births, marriages and deaths). Thus to some extent it filled the place of the modern newspaper.

Origin
The origin of the Acta is attributed to Julius Caesar, who first ordered the keeping and publishing of the acts of the people by public officers (59 B.C.; Suetonius, Caesar, 20). The Acta were drawn up from day to day, and exposed in a public place on a whitened board called an Album. After remaining there for a reasonable time they were taken down and preserved with other public documents, so that they might be available for purposes of research.

Introduced
Acta Diurna introduced the expression “publicare et propagare”, which means "make public and propagate." This expression was set in the end of the texts and proclaimed a release to both Roman citizens and non-citizens.

Civil War
After the Civil War, the Acta Diurna were used to communicate events other than military exploits, such as news concerning gladiatorial games, government decisions, births and deaths, and even astrological readings, just like a modern-day newspaper or online news site. The tabulae would be posted in places like the Roman Forum. The Acta later became the main source of information for historians like Suetonius and Tacitus.

Perished 
The Acta Diurna continued to be published for centuries, right up until the seat of the empire was transferred to Constantinople.

Legacy
Today, there are many academic periodicals with the word acta in their titles (the publisher Elsevierhas 64 such titles). Acta Diurna was also used as the title of a Latin newspaper, published by Centaur Books.

YouTube Videos 
https://youtu.be/RkOhE3h3mUc
https://youtu.be/nIMGmbbx37A

Site References
Wikipedia, Ancient Origins, Britannica, Carment A Blog, History of Information, PR Museum