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Manuscripts, Books, and Maps:
The Printing Press and a Changing
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The Development of Print
Technology
In the Mid-15th Century, things begin to
change with the advent of the printing press. In 1452,
Gutenberg
conceives of the idea for movable type. In his workshop, he brings
together the technologies of paper, oil-based ink and the wine-press to
print books. The printing press is not a single invention. It is the
aggregation in one place, of technologies known for centuries before
Gutenberg.
One thing to remember is that Gutenberg
gets credit for an invention that is thought to have been developed
simultaneously in Holland and in Prague.
The other inventions brought together by
Gutenberg in his pursuit of a printing press were:
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The adaptation for printing, of the
wine or olive oil, screw-type press that had been in use for
hundreds of years, throughout Europe and Asia.
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The adaptation of block-print
technology - known in Europe since the return of Marco Polo from
Asia at the end of the 13th century.
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The development of mass production
paper-making techniques. Paper was brought from China to Italy in
the 12th C. but was thought too flimsy for books.
Prior to the advent of the printing
press, books were made of vellum (calf or lamb skin) because of its
durability. Vellum is extremely durable. In San Simeon (also known
as Hearst's Castle), there are lampshades that William Randolph
Hearst had made from 15th century Gregorian prayer books and the
vellum is still in excellent condition. For books that took more
than a year to produce, paper was too flimsy.
However, for print books, vellum was
too costly to produce.
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The development of oil-based inks.
These had been around since the 10th century, but smeared on the
vellum used to make books. The religious manuscripts used an
egg-based tempura. This was unsuitable for printing with type.
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Gutenberg's contribution to printing
was the development of a a punch and mold system which
allowed the mass production of the movable type used to reproduce a
page of text. These letters would be put together in a type tray
which was then used to print a page of text. If a letter broke down,
it could be replaced. When the printing of the copies of one page
was finished, the type could be reused for the next page or the next
book.
These technological improvements stretch
across five centuries. They do not cluster around Gutenberg's time.
But the advent of the printing press did
not bring about a great shift in the social organization of learning in
Europe.
The first books to show up in print shops
were bibles and religious tracts. The next books to attract publishers
were the "humanist" texts brought back from Byzantium by the Crusades,
and other texts of antiquity but there was little or no printing of new
ideas.
Many people went into the printing business
and went right back out again. The reason was that the distribution of
books was poorly organized. The market was there, and the potential for
filling the demand, but the transport and control and "advertising"
mechanisms were not in place.
In addition, there was still a low literacy
rate in Europe. Most people did not know how to read at all. But
non-literates were still affected by the book trade because the elites,
who controlled society, were affected by books. And people who could not
read still had access to book culture because there were travelling
raconteurs who stood in the market and read from books as a means of
making a living as entertainers.
The printed book quickly becomes a regular
object in the world. By 1501 there were 1000 printing shops in Europe,
which had produced 35,000 titles and 20 million copies.
source:http://en.wikipedia.org
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