Preliminary Material /Joad Raymond and Noah Moxham -- News Networks in Early Modern Europe /Joad Raymond and Noah Moxham -- European Postal Networks /Nikolaus Schobesberger , Paul Arblaster , Mario Infelise , André Belo , Noah Moxham , Carmen Espejo and Joad Raymond -- The Lexicons of Early Modern News /Paul Arblaster , André Belo , Carmen Espejo , Stéphane Haffemayer , Mario Infelise , Noah Moxham , Joad Raymond and Nikolaus Schobesberger -- News Networks: Putting the ‘News’ and ‘Networks’ Back in /Joad Raymond -- Maps versus Networks /Ruth Ahnert -- International News Flows in the Seventeenth Century: Problems and Prospects /Brendan Dooley -- The Papal Network: How the Roman Curia Was Informed about South-Eastern Europe, the Ottoman Empire and the Mediterranean (1645–1669) /Johann Petitjean -- The Iberian Position in European News Networks: A Methodological Approach /Javier Díaz Noci -- Mapping the Fuggerzeitungen: The Geographical Issues of an Information Network /Nikolaus Schobesberger -- The History of a Word: Gazzetta / Gazette /Mario Infelise -- International Relations: Spanish, Italian, French, English and German Printed Single Event Newsletters Prior to Renaudot’s Gazette /Henry Ettinghausen -- War News in Early Modern Milan: The Birth and the Shaping of Printed News Pamphlets /Massimo Petta -- Elizabethan Diplomatic Networks and the Spread of News /Tracey A. Sowerby -- Time in English Translations of Continental News /Sara Barker -- Cartography, War Correspondence and News Publishing: The Early Career of Nicolaes van Geelkercken, 1610–1630 /Helmer Helmers -- News Exchange and Social Distinction /André Belo -- ‘Newes also came by Letters’: Functions and Features of Epistolary News in English News Publications of the Seventeenth Century /Nicholas Brownlees -- ‘My Friend the Gazetier’: Diplomacy and News in Seventeenth-Century Europe /Jason Peacey -- Intelligence Offices in the Habsburg Monarchy /Anton Tantner -- Authors, Editors and Newsmongers: Form and Genre in the Philosophical Transactions under Henry Oldenburg /Noah Moxham -- News from the New World: Spain’s Monopoly in the European Network of Handwritten Newsletters during the Sixteenth Century /Renate Pieper -- The Prince of Transylvania: Spanish News of the War against the Turks, 1595–1600 /Carmen Espejo -- ‘Fishing after News’ and the Ars Apodemica: The Intelligencing Role of the Educational Traveller in the Late Sixteenth Century /Elizabeth Williamson -- ‘It is No Time Now to Enquire of Forraine Occurrents’: Plague, War, and Rumour in the Letters of Joseph Mead, 1625 /Kirsty Rolfe -- ‘Our Valiant Dunkirk Romans’: Glorifying the Habsburg War at Sea, 1622–1629 /Paul Arblaster -- A Sense of Europe: The Making of this Continent in Early Modern Dutch News Media /Joop W. Koopmans -- The Hinterland of the Newsletter: Handling Information in Space and Time /Mark Greengrass , Thierry Rentet and Stéphane Gal -- ‘We have been Informed that the French are Carrying Desolation Everywhere’: The Desolation of the Palatinate as a European News Event /Emilie Dosquet -- Promoting the Catholic Cause on the Italian Peninsula: Printed Avvisi on the Dutch Revolt and the French Wars of Religion, 1562–1600 /Nina Lamal. News Networks in Early Modern Europe attempts to redraw the history of European news communication in the 16th and 17th centuries. News is defined partly by movement and circulation, yet histories of news have been written overwhelmingly within national contexts. This volume of essays explores the notion that early modern European news, in all its manifestations – manuscript, print, and oral – is fundamentally transnational. These 37 essays investigate the language, infrastructure, and circulation of news across Europe. They range from the 15th to the 18th centuries, and from the Ottoman Empire to the Americas, focussing on the mechanisms of transmission, the organisation of networks, the spread of forms and modes of news communication, and the effects of their translation into new locales and languages
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