Part of
Transnational Books for Children 1750-1900: Producers, consumers, encounters
Edited by Charlotte Appel, Nina Christensen and M.O. Grenby
[Children’s Literature, Culture, and Cognition 15] 2023
► pp. 4668
References

Primary sources

Almanach des enfants. Amusements et jeux pour jeunes filles et jeunes garçons
[1877–1900] Paris: Bailly.Google Scholar
Almanach dramatischer Spiele für die Jugend
1824 Augsburg: Martin Engelbrecht.Google Scholar
Almanach Payot 1923, agenda de poche de la jeunesse française
Paris: Payot.
Almanach voor Kinderen
[1780–1798] Amsterdam: Vermandel & Smidt.Google Scholar
Amico dei fanciulli (L’). Almanacco per l’anno
1850 Milan: Giovanni Silvestri.Google Scholar
Barbadoro figlio di Barbanera. Lunario per ragazzi
[1901] Florence: Bemporad.Google Scholar
Child’s Book and youth’s book in two parts (The)
. The first teaching an easie and delightful way to read true English […] The second containing a method for spelling, a catechism, a confession of faith, a copy book, a perpetual almanack […] 1672 London: Printed by E.T. and R.H. for R. Royston.Google Scholar
Circle of the sciences. Chronology
1748 London: printed for J. Newbery.Google Scholar
Deutscher Jugendkalender
[1847–1858] Leipzig: Bürkner.Google Scholar
Diaria Britannica, or, The British Diary: an Almanack, for the Year of our Lord […]
[1788–1796] Birmingham: Thomas Pearson.Google Scholar
Draper, John
1772The Young Student’s Pocket Companion, or Arithmetic, Geometry, Trigonometry, and Mensuration, Calculated for the Improvement of Youth at School […] With an Appendix, of the Gregorian Kalendar […]. Whitehaven: printed by Allason Foster for the Author.Google Scholar
Erinnerungs-Almanach für die Jugend, auf das Jahr
1828 Linz: Friedrich Eurich.Google Scholar
Gentleman and lady’s Palladium (The), for the year of Our Lord […]
[1750–1763] London: printed for […].Google Scholar
Jugendkalender für das Schaltjahr
1804 Nürnberg: Penker [1804–1808].Google Scholar
Jugend-Kalender. Jahrbuch für die Jugend und Familie für 1863
Wien: Förster & Bartelmus.
Juvenile almanack (the), or, Series of monthly emblems
. [c. 1825] London: printed for William Cole.Google Scholar
Mère Gigogne. Almanach des petits enfants
[1849–1904] Paris: Pagnerre.Google Scholar
Naamlijst van uitgekomen boeken, kaarten, prentiverken
1799–1803, 4. Amsterdam: De Visser.Google Scholar
Nieuw-jaars geschenkje voor kinderen
[1807 and 1809] Amsterdam: Erven van Houtgraaf.Google Scholar
Nürnbergischer Kinderalmanach
[1781–1787] Nuremberg: Christoph Weigel.Google Scholar
Pinnock, William
1835The explanatory English spelling-book, calculated to assist youth in attaining with ease a perfect knowledge of their native tongue […]. London: printed fro Whittaker, Treacher & Co. (earlier editions attested from 1820).Google Scholar
Prentjes Almanach Voor Kinderen
[1794–1839] Amsterdam: Erve van Houtgraaf.Google Scholar
Primer and a cathechisme (A), and also the notable fayres in the kalender set forth by the quenes maiesty to betaught [sic] vnto children
1570 London: by Thomas Purfoote.Google Scholar
Taschenkalender zur belehrenden Unterhaltung für die Jugend und ihre Freunde
[1795] Bayreuth: Johann Andreas Lübecks Erben.Google Scholar
Vermaaklyke horologie-almanach (De), bevattende alles wat tot een compleeten almanach behoort […]. Voor het jaar
1795 Amsterdam: De Vries.Google Scholar
Youth’s annual remembrancer, or, A new and curious perpetual calendar […]
[1751] London: Printed for W. Owen.Google Scholar
Youth’s entertaining and instructive calendar for the jubilee year 1750 […]
[1749] London: printed for W. Owen.Google Scholar
Youth’s Entertaining and Instructive Calendar for the Year 1759
London: printed for J. Wren.

Secondary sources

Alderson, Brian
1999New Playthings and Gigantick Histories: The nonage of English children’s books. Princeton University Library Chronicle: 178–195. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Alderson, Brian & Felix de Marez Oyens
2006Be Merry and Wise. Origins of Children’s Book Publishing in England, 1650–1850. New Castle, Delaware: Oak Knoll Press & The British Library.Google Scholar
Austermann, Simone
2019Gewissen, Geographie und Gartenidylle. Eine Analyse der Kleinen Kinderbibliothek von Joachim Heinrich Campe. Bad Heilbrunn: Klinkhardt.Google Scholar
Baggerman, Arianne & Dekker, Rudolf
2014Child of the Enlightenment. Revolutionary Europe Reflected in a Boyhood Diary. Leiden, Boston: Brill.Google Scholar
Berengo, Marino
2012Intellettuali e librai nella Milano della Restaurazione. Milan: FrancoAngeli (first published Turin: Einaudi, 1980).Google Scholar
Bollème, Geneviève
1969Les almanachs populaires aux XVII et XVIII siècles. Essai d’histoire sociale. Paris, La Haye: Mouton.Google Scholar
Braida, Lodovica
1996Les almanachs italiens. Évolution et stéréotypes d’un genre (XVIè–XVIIè siècles). In Colportage et lecture populaire. Imprimés de large circulation en Europe XVIe–XIXe siècles, 183–208. Paris: Imec.Google Scholar
Brunken, Otto, Hurrelmann, Bettina & Pech Klaus-Ulrich
(eds) 1998Handbuch zur Kinder- und Jugendliteratur. Von 1800 bis 1850. Stuttgart and Weimar: Metzler.Google Scholar
Burke, Peter
1978Popular Culture in Early Modern Europe. New York: New York University Press.Google Scholar
Capp, Bernard
1979Astrology and the Popular Press. English Almanacs, 1500–1800. London, Boston: Faber & Faber.Google Scholar
Carreño, Miryam
1997Almanaque y calendarios para maestros. Historia de la educación: Revista interuniversitaria 16: 47–63.Google Scholar
Chartier, Roger & Lüsebrink, Hans-Jürgen
(eds) 1996Colportage et lecture populaire. Imprimés de large circulation en Europe, XVIe-XIXe siècles. Paris: Imec.Google Scholar
Giddens, Eugene
2019Christmas Books for Children. Elements in Publishing and Book Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Green, Ian
1996The Christian’s ABC. Catechisms and Catechizing in England c.1530–1740. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Grenby, M. O.
1999Children’s Literature: Birth, Infancy, Maturity. In Children’s Literature. Approaches and Territories, Janet Maybin & Nicola J. Watson (eds), 39–56. Basingstoke & Milton Keynes: Palgrave Macmillan & Open University.Google Scholar
2011The Child Reader, 1700–1840. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
(ed) 2013Little Goody Two-Shoes and Other Stories. Originally Published by John Newbery. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Hill Curth, Louise
2007English Almanacs, Astrology and Popular Medicine. 1550–1700. Manchester & New York: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Lüsebrink, Hans-Jürgen, Mix, York-Gothart, Mollier, Jean-Yves & Sorel, Patricia
(eds) 2002Les lectures du peuple en Europe et dans les Amériques (XVIIe–XXe siècle). Bruxelles: Complexe.Google Scholar
Maiello, Francesco
1994Storia del calendario. La misurazione del tempo, 1450–1800. Turin: Einaudi.Google Scholar
Marazzi, Elisa
2008Editoria scolastica e cultura regionale: la Collezione Mondadori Almanacchi regionali (1924–1926). Acme. Annali della Facoltà di lettere e filosofia dell’Università degli studi di Milano, 61: 239–269.Google Scholar
2017Sotto il segno di Barbanera. Continuità e trasformazioni di un almanacco tra XVIII e XXI secolo. Milan: Mimesis.Google Scholar
2019Crossing genres: A newcomer in the transnational history of almanacs. In Crossing Borders, Crossing Cultures. Popular Print in Europe (1450–1900), Massimo Rospocher, Jeroen Salman & Hannu Salmi (eds), 227–243. Berlin & Boston: De Gruyter: 227–243. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Meyers, Lindsay
2011Making the Italians. Poetics and Politics of Italian Children’s Fantasy. Bern: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Myers, Robin
2009The Stationers’ Company and the almanack trade. In The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, vol. 5, 1695–1830, Michael F. Suarez, S. J. & Michael L. Turner (eds) 723–735. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Nières-Chevrel, Isabelle
2014Des sources nouvelles pour L’Ami des enfants de Berquin. Revue d’histoire littéraire de la France, 114.4: 807–828. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Ó Ciósain, Niall
2011Almanacs. In The Oxford History of the Irish Book, Volume IV: The Irish Book in English, 1800–1891, James H. Murphy (ed), 198–203. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Perkins, Maureen
2011Visions of the Future. Almanacs, Time, and Cultural Change 1775– 1870. Oxford Scholarship Online 2011 DOI logo (first published 1996).Google Scholar
Richards, Edward G.
1998Mapping Time. The Calendar and its History. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1998.Google Scholar
Salman, Jeroen
1999Populair drukwerk in de Gouden Eeuw. De almanak als lectuur en handelswaar. Zutphen: Walburg Pers.Google Scholar
2000“Die ze niet hebben wil mag het laaten”. Kinderalmanakken in de achttiende eeuw. Literatuur, 17.2: 76–83.Google Scholar
2001Children’s books as a commodity: the rise of a new literary subsystem in the eighteenth-century Dutch republic. Poetics 28: 399–421. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Spalding, Almut & Marianne Grützner
2005Elise Reimarus (1735–1805). The Muse of Hamburg. A Woman of the German Enlightenment. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.Google Scholar
Truglio, Maria
2017Italian Children’s Literature and National Identity. Childhood, Melancholy, Modernity. New York: Routledge. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Vaquero Piñero, Manuel
2015Readings for farmers: Agrarian almanacs in Italy (eighteenth-twentieth centuries). Agricultural History Review 63.2: 243–264.Google Scholar