- Source: Serbian printing
Serbian printing refers to the history of printing among Serbs, and focusing on development of book printing in Serbian, with the use of the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet, from the end of the 15th century up to the end of the 18th century. The first state printing house, the Serbian Printing House, was established in 1832.
Printing houses
Early modern period
Crnojević printing house (1493—1496)
Vuković printing house (1519/1520—1521) and (1536—1540)
Goražde printing house (1519—1523)
Rujno Monastery printing house (1537)
Luka Primojević
Gračanica printing house (1539)
Mileševa printing house (1544—1557)
Belgrade printing house (1552)
South Slavic Bible Institute where Jovan Maleševac and Matija Popović worked as translators (1561-1565)
Mrkšina crkva printing house (1562—1566)
Skadar printing house (1563)
Zagurović printing house (1569—1570)
Rampazetto and Heirs (1597—1616)
Trojan Gundulić
Hieromonk Pahomije
Hieromonk Makarije
Josef von Kurzböck printing house, in Vienna, Cyrillic works, from 1771 until 1792 until the sale to Stefan von Novaković
Stefan von Novaković's printing house, in Vienna, printed and published books until 1796 until the sale to the University of Pest
Srbulje
Radoslav's Gospel
See also
Serbian literature
References
Sources
External links
Pavle Ivić, Mitar Pešikan (1995). "Serbian printing". The history of Serbian Culture. Rastko.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Vertical (penerbit)
- Victoria dari Britania Raya
- Sinema digital
- Dinasti Han
- Swarga
- Serbian printing
- List of people from Serbia
- Nedeljko Čabrinović
- Crnojević printing house
- Goražde printing house
- Rujno Monastery printing house
- Culture of Serbia
- Vuković printing house
- Božidar Vuković
- Serbs
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