Statute of Anne
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Categories: Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain | United Kingdom copyright law | Copyright legislation | 1709 in law | 1709 in Great Britain
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Several monographs on copyright date the text to 1709. However, due to changes in the reckoning of the New Year from March to January, the correct year of enactment according to the modern calendar would be 1710.[1] See also Calendar (New Style) Act 1750. The Statute replaced the monopoly enjoyed by the Stationer's Company granted in 1557 during the reign of Mary I which, after several renewals, expired in 1695. Under this regime, company members would buy manuscripts from authors but once purchased, would have a perpetual monopoly on the printing of the work. Authors themselves were excluded from membership in the company and could not therefore legally self-publish, nor were they given royalties for books that sold well. The statute of 1709 vested authors rather than printers with the monopoly on the reproduction of their works. It created a 21 year term for all works already in print at the time of its enactment and a fourteen year term for all works published subsequently. It also required that printers provide nine copies to the Stationer's Company for distribution to the Royal Library, the libraries of Oxford, Cambridge, St Andrews, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Edinburgh, Sion College and the Faculty of Advocates library in Edinburgh. When Ireland united with Great Britain in 1801, Trinity College and King's Inns in Dublin were added as two further depositories. The Act has since been repealed and replaced by more modern laws. The current law governing UK copyright is the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. References
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