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INVENTION and DISCOVERY: Printed Books from Fifteenth-Century Europe An Exhibition at Bridwell Library, February 1 – May 3, 2010 |
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Gutenberg
Bible, 31 ff., c. 1455. Gutenberg
Bible (vellum
leaf). Gutenberg
Bible (paper leaf).
Durandus.
Rationale, 1459.
Latin Bible (2 vols.), 1462.
Cicero, De officiis, 1465. Indulgence
broadside, 1480. |
Legend has it that once the Bibles were completed, Fust seized Gutenberg’s printing equipment in a devastating legal settlement. However, Gutenberg apparently developed new materials and techniques for the printing of the Catholicon in 1460. Meanwhile, by 1457 Fust had formed a second printing partnership with the calligrapher Peter Schoeffer in Mainz. Within three years, their colleagues had established presses in Strasbourg and Bamberg, and by the end of the fifteenth century more than 240 European towns had employed printing presses. The total output of these presses exceeded thirty thousand editions consisting of several million individual books and broadsides.
Fust and Schoeffer's corporate device ← Click on the thumbnails at left to see larger images and descriptions of the items in the exhibition. |
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