Abstract
This article analyzes the printing of capitulary acts of the Order of Preachers in Mexico during the 17th century. First, a review of the acts documented in the bibliographic tradition is used to compare the information with the located editions. This procedure provides results in three ways: a) The coincidence of the copies located and the bibliographic data collected, b) The identification of sine notis editions that need to be assigned to a printer and place, and c) The discovery of new Mexican editions of the period. In order to identify the printer and year of publication of editions without editorial data, the theoretical and methodological criteria of typobibliography and biblioiconography are applied. Conclusively, this research leads to the enrichment of the Mexican documentary heritage by identifying six new editions.
Authors who publish in Bibliographica automatically accept the following terms:
a. Authors will keep their authorship rights and will guarantee the journal the first time publication rights of their submitted work, which will be liable to a Creative Commons license that will allow third parties to share their work as long as they give appropriate credit to the author and the first publication is attributed to Bibliographica, it is not used for commercial purposes and modified material is not distributed in case of remix, transformation or recreation.
b. Authors can adopt other non-exclusive distribution license agreements of the published version of the work (for example: deposit it in an institutional telematic archive or publish it in a monographic volume) as long as the first publication is attributed to Bibliographica.
c. Authors are encouraged to self-archive their work (for example: in institutional telematic archives or their website), for this can promote interesting exchanges and increase the citation impact of the published work. (See The effect of open access).