Copyright stems from book publishing and is, generally speaking (there may be country variations), the right of the author of a work to declare their ownership of the work and their ability to control how and for what recompense the work is reproduced. You'll often see a copyright message followed by "All rights reserved" which is explicitly declaring that the author is not imbuing you with an rights over the work itself.
Copyright in the UK at least does not require any kind of registration of same, the author can simply declare their copyright by stating (normally within the work) "Copyright Year-asserted Their Name". This goes back to the Statute of Ann in 1709.
Creative Commons is a license to use a copyrighted work under specific guidelines, normally all copyrighted works are subject to some kind of license that details how and when you can 'use' the work.