INVENTION and DISCOVERY:
Printed Books from Fifteenth-Century Europe



An Exhibition at Bridwell Library, February 1 – May 3, 2010

                                                                             PRINTING IN FRANCE

Latin Bible. Paris,  c. 1476-77.
Osma.
Quicunque vult,  c. 1478.
 Maillard. Confession, c. 1492.
Secreta mulierum, c. 1493.
Memoriale pro pueris, c. 1497.
Book of Hours. Paris, 1499.

A trio of German-speaking émigrés, Ulrich Gering, Michael Friburger, and Martin Crantz, established the first French press at the University of Paris in 1470. Although Paris remained the capital of French printing, the new art spread quickly throughout the kingdom. By the end of the fifteenth century, French printers had produced more than five thousand different editions. Two of the books exhibited in this section reflect the importance of French printing for English book buyers, while another exemplifies the greatest of all the exports offered by the French presses: ornately illustrated Books of Hours. Two of the books exhibited here are known in only two recorded copies, and Olivier Maillard’s Confession is unique.

 

Click on the thumbnails at left to see larger images and descriptions of the items in the exhibition.

Introduction

Special Collections 

Census of Incunabula at Bridwell Library

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