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/de/
AIzaSyAYiBZKx7MnpbEhh9jyipgxe19OcubqV5w
June 15, 2024
2143369
303688
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1450 - 1550 INCUBABULA - The age of EARLY PRINTING (1 Jan 1450 Jahr – 1 Jan 1550 Jahr)

Beschreibung:

Before the invention of printing, the number of manuscript books in Europe could be counted in thousands. By 1500, after only 50 years of printing, there were more than 9,000,000 books. These figures indicate the impact of the press, the rapidity with which it spread, the need for an artificial script, and the vulnerability of written culture up to that time.

The printed books of this initial period, up to 1500, are known as incunabula; i.e., “swaddling clothes” or “cradle,” from a Latin phrase used in 1639 to describe the beginnings of typography. The dividing line, however, is artificial. The initial period of printing, a restless, highly competitive free-for-all, runs well into the 16th century. Printing began to settle down, to become regulated from within and controlled from without, only after about 1550. In this first 100 years, the printer dominated the book trade. The printer was often his own typefounder, editor, publisher, and bookseller; only papermaking and, usually, bookbinding were outside his province.

*INCUNABULA, singular incunabulum, books printed during the earliest period of typography—i.e., from the invention of the art of typographic printing in Europe in the 1450s to the end of the 15th century (i.e., January 1501). Such works were completed at a time when books—some of which were still being hand-copied—were sought by an increasingly large number of readers.

Zugefügt zum Band der Zeit:

Datum:

1 Jan 1450 Jahr
1 Jan 1550 Jahr
~ 100 years

Abbildungen: