Milano (newspaper)

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Milano
an issue of 1660[a]
PublisherMalatesta Family
FoundedNovember 28, 1640 (1640-11-28)
LanguageItalian
Ceased publicationDecember 1768 (1768-12)
CityMilan

Milano was a newspaper published in Milan from 1640 to 1768. It is considered one of the oldest newspapers in Italy.

History[edit]

Milano was the first gazette published in the city of Milan. The first known number still in existence is dated 28 November 1640,[b] but it is probable that the printing started some months before.[1] As all the newspapers of such time, it derived directly from hand-writing newssheets. It is probable, but it is not verified, that the editor of the Milano was Filippo Velasca who during the 1640s was a compiler of handwritten Avvisi in Milan.[1]

An issue of 1727.
An issue of 1727

Since 1640 the typographer was surely the Malatesta family who continued to publish it for all the life of the newspaper.[2] The Malatestas were the official printer of the government in Duchy of Milan, having the monopoly of the official publications. They succeeded to pass this privilege for many generations, from Panfolfo (fl. 1594—1626) to Giulio Cesare (fl. 1635—1664), Giovanni Battista (fl. 1635—1654), Marc'Antonio Pandolfo (fl. 1664—1715) who in January 1672 started to print his name in the last page of the newspaper, and finally his nephew, Giuseppe Richini Malatesta (born in 1694 and died in 1793).[2] Due to their privilege of publishing, the Malatestas were like the voice of the Government.[3]

The Milano suspended its publications from 1697 to June 1706, when it restarted under the new Habsburg government of the Duchy of Milan.[4] It was published on Wednesdays on a weekly basis.

An issue of 1757.
An issue of 1757

In October 1746 the newspaper took the additional title Ragguaglj di varj paesi (transl. News of many countries),[5] always published by the Malatestas[6] on Wednesdays. Following a decision of Karl Joseph von Firmian, at the beginnings of 1769 this newspaper was substituted by the Gazzetta di Milano, which during that year was directed by Giuseppe Parini.[7]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ This issue of 10 March 1660 reports in the first page the death of Gaston, Duke of Orléans.
  2. ^ The issue dated 28 November 1640, along with others, is kept in the Vatican Library, shelfmark Barberini.Q.II.46.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Bellettini, Pierangelo (1998). "Le più antiche gazzette a stampa di Milano (1640) e di Bologna (1642)". La Bibliofilía (in Italian). 100 (2/3): 465–494.
  2. ^ a b Ruggerini, Davide (2007). "Malatesta". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 68: Malatacca–Mangelli (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  3. ^ Cavagna, Anna Giulia (1998). "Printing and publishing in seventeenth-century Lombardy". Gutenberg Jahrbuch. LXXIII: 209–211, 214.
  4. ^ Bellocchi, Ugo (1974). Storia del giornalismo italiano (in Italian). Vol. 3. Bologna: Edizioni Edison. pp. 39–43.
  5. ^ http://id.sbn.it/bid/MIL0572190 Opac SBN
  6. ^ "Giornali del passato a Milano". Città di Milano, bollettino municipale mensile (in Italian). No. XXXI. Milano. May 1915. pp. 206–207.
  7. ^ Cazzamini Mussi, Francesco (1934). Il giornalismo a Milano : dalle origini alla prima guerra d'indipendenza (in Italian). Milano: Famiglia Meneghina. pp. 37–43.