Peter_Keshko.jpg
Summary
Description Peter Keshko.jpg |
English:
Peter Keshko (1830–1865), father of Queen Natalie of Serbia
|
Date | circa 1860 |
Source | https://imus.org.rs/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/N.Obrenovic.pdf |
Author | Anonymous Unknown author |
Licensing
Public domain Public domain false false |
The
copyright
of this image has expired in the
European Union
because it was published more than 70 years ago without a public claim of authorship (anonymous or
pseudonymous
), and no subsequent claim of authorship was made in the 70 years following its first
publication
.
|
||
To use this template, the image must meet both of the following two conditions:
Images that lack either of these two conditions should not use this template. Reasonable evidence must be presented that the author's name (e.g., the original photographer, portrait painter) was not published with a claim of copyright in conjunction with the image within 70 years of its original publication. Works which had not entered Public Domain in their country in 1996 that were uploaded before 1 March 2012 should be marked additionally with {{Not-PD-US-URAA}} . Note: In some countries anonymous works are copyrighted until 70 years after the death of the author if the author's identity became public in any way during the original term. In Germany this applies to certain works published before July 1, 1995; see Übergangsrecht .English | español | français | italiano | македонски | മലയാളം | sicilianu | slovenščina | 中文 | +/− |
Public domain Public domain false false |
This work was published on territory of the
Russian Empire
(
Russian Republic
) except for territories of the
Grand Duchy of Finland
and
Congress Poland
before
7 November 1917
and wasn't re-published for 30 days following initial publications on the territory of
Soviet Russia
or any other countries.
The Russian Federation (early Soviet Russia, RSFSR ) is the historical heir but not legal successor of the Russian Empire, and the Russian Empire was not party to the Berne Convention (it was not country of Union for the protection of the rights of authors in their literary and artistic works), so according to article 5 of the Convention this work has no country of origin except:
¹ - Author who is not a national of a country of the Union but who has his habitual residence in a country of the Union, be assimilated to national of that country. The exclusive rights to this work do not extend on territory of the Russian Federation according to article 1256 of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation ( details ), because this work does not meet the requirements on the territory of publication, on the author's nationality, and on obligations for international treaties. If applicable, {{PD-Russia-expired}} should be used instead of this tag. This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office ) before January 1, 1929. |