Margaret Corbin and Johannes Gutenberg: Difference between pages

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{{dablink| This article is about the introducer of printing in Europe; for other uses, see [[Guttenberg (disambiguation)]] and [[Gutenberg]].}}
'''Margaret Corbin''' ([[November 12]], [[1751]] – [[January 16]], [[1800]]) was a woman who fought in the [[United States|American]] [[American Revolutionary War|Revolutionary War]]. On [[November 16]], [[1776]] she and her husband, John Corbin, both from [[Philadelphia]], along with some 600 American soldiers, were defending [[Fort Washington (New York)|Fort Washington]] in northern [[Manhattan]] from 4,000 attacking [[Hessian (soldiers)|Hessian troops]] under British command. John and Margaret crewed one of two cannons the defenders possessed. After her husband was killed, Margaret took over firing his cannon until she was seriously wounded. Three years later, she became the first woman in the United States to receive pension from Congress.''
{{Infobox_Person | name = Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg
| other_names =
| image = Gutenberg.jpg
| caption =
| birth_date = {{circa}} 1398
| birth_place = [[Mainz]], [[Electorate of Mainz]]
| death_date = {{death date|1468|2|3|mf=y}}
| death_place = [[Mainz]], [[Electorate of Mainz]]
| death_cause
| known =
| occupation = [[Engraver]], [[Invention|Inventor]], and [[printer (publisher)|Printer]]
| title =
| salary =
| term =
| predecessor =
| successor =
| party =
| boards =
| religion =
| spouse =
| children =
| relations =
| website =
| footnotes =
}}


'''Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg''' ({{circa}} 1398 – [[February 3]], [[1468]]) was a [[Holy Roman Empire|German]] [[goldsmith]] and [[printer (publisher)|printer]] who is credited with being the first European to use [[movable type]] [[printing]], in around 1439, and the global inventor of the [[printing press|mechanical printing]]. His major work, the [[Gutenberg Bible]] (also known as the 42-line Bible), has been acclaimed for its high aesthetic and technical quality.
Margaret Corbin was born in West Pennsylvania on November 12, 1751 in what is now [[Franklin County, Pennsylvania|Franklin County]]. Her father was Robert Cochran, a Scottish-Irish pioneer. In 1756, when she was five years old, Margaret’s parents were attacked by Native Americans. Her mother was kidnapped and her father was killed. At the time, Margaret and her brother John were not at home, and so escaped the raid. Margaret lived with her uncle for the rest of her childhood.
Among the specific contributions to printing that are attributed to Gutenberg are the invention of a process for mass-producing movable type, the use of oil-based ink, and the use of a wooden [[printing press]] similar to the screw olive and wine presses of the period. His truly epochal invention was the combination of these elements into a practical system. Gutenberg may have been familiar with printing; it is claimed that he had worked on copper [[engraving]]s
with an artist known as the ''[[Master of the Playing Cards]]''.<ref>{{cite book|author=Lehmann-Haupt, Hellmut|title=Gutenberg and the Master of the Playing Cards|location=[[New Haven]]|publisher=[[Yale University Press]]|year=1966}}</ref> Gutenberg's method for making type is traditionally considered to have included a [[type metal]] alloy and a hand mould for casting type. It should be noted that new research may indicate that standardised moveable type was a more complex evolutionary process spread over multiple locations.<ref>{{cite web|accessdate=2008-05-20|url=http://www.open2.net/historyandthearts/discover_science/gberg_synopsis.html|title=What Did Gutenberg Invent?|publisher=[[BBC]]}}</ref>


The use of movable type was a marked improvement on the handwritten manuscript, which was the existing method of book production in Europe, and upon [[woodblock printing]], and revolutionized European book-making. Gutenberg's printing technology [[Spread of the printing press|spread rapidly throughout Europe]] and is considered a key factor in the European [[Renaissance]].
In 1772, at the age of 21, Margaret married a Virginia farmer named John Corbin.
Gutenberg remains a towering figure in the popular image; in 1999, the [[A&E Network]] ranked Gutenberg #1 on their "People of the Millennium" countdown, and in 1997, [[Time–Life]] magazine picked Gutenberg's invention as the most important of the second millennium.<ref>{{cite web|accessdate=2008-05-20|url=http://pirate.shu.edu/~gottlitr/mil_site/lista.html|title=1,000 Years, 1,000 People: Ranking The Men and Women Who Shaped The Millennium.|publisher=[[Seton Hall University]]}}</ref>


==Life==
==American Revolutionary War==
[[Image:Printing3 Walk of Ideas Berlin.JPG|right|thumb|200px|Sculpture commemorating Gutenberg as the "inventor of modern printing" on the occasion of [[2006 World Cup]] in [[Germany]]]]
When the war began, John enlisted in the First Company of Pennsylvania Artillery as a matross, someone who worked with loading and firing the canons. As was common at the time for wives of soldiers, Margaret became a [[camp follower]], accompanying John during his enlistment. She joined many other women in cooking, washing, and caring for the wounded soldiers.
Gutenberg was born in the German city of [[Mainz]], the youngest son of the upper-class merchant Friele Gensfleisch zur Laden, and his second wife Else Wyrich, who was the daughter of a shopkeeper. According to some accounts Friele was a goldsmith for the [[Archbishop of Mainz|bishop at Mainz]], but most likely he was involved in the cloth trade.<ref name=benz>{{cite web|url=http://www.mainz.de/gutenberg/english/zeitgum.htm|title = Gutenberg and Mainz|author = Hanebutt-Benz, Eva-Maria|accessdate = 2006-11-24}}</ref> Gutenberg's year of birth is not known; it was certainly between 1394 and 1404, most likely around 1398.


At the time, [[patricianship|patricians]] in Mainz were often named after the houses they owned, and around 1427, the name ''zu Gutenberg'', after the family house in Mainz, is documented for the first time.<ref name=benz/> This house had previously been known as "Judenberg," Jewish Hill. According to historian John Man, "In the 1282 [[pogrom]], fifty-four Jewish properties were abandoned and were grabbed by the rich and powerful. It seems that the Gutenberg house fell to the archbishop's treasurers. It was later acquired by the great-great-grandfather of our inventor and stayed in the family."<ref name=Man>{{cite book|author=Man, John|title=Gutenberg: How One Man Remade the World with Word|year=2002|pages=166–7|publisher=[[John Wiley & Sons]]|isbn=0-471-21823-5}}</ref>
On November 16, 1776, Fort Washington, where John's company was stationed, was attacked by the British. John, an artilleryman, was in charge of firing a small cannon atop a ridge, today known as [[Fort Tryon Park|Fort Tryon]]. During an assault by the Hessians, John was killed, leaving his cannon unmanned. Margaret had been with her husband on the battlefield the entire time, and, after witnessing his death, she immediately took his place at the cannon. She fired away until her arm, chest, and jaw were hit by enemy fire. The British ultimately won the [[Battle of Fort Washington]], resulting in the surrender of Margaret and her comrades. As the equivalent of a wounded soldier, Margaret was released by the British on parole.


In 1411, there was an uprising in Mainz against the patricians, and more than a hundred families were forced to leave. The Gutenbergs may have moved to [[Eltville am Rhein]] (Alta Villa), where his mother had an inherited estate. He may have studied at the [[University of Erfurt]], where there is a record of a student in 1419 named Johannes de Alta villa. Following his father's death in 1419, he is mentioned in the inheritance proceedings.
After the battle, Margaret went to Philadelphia, completely disabled from her wound, which would never fully heal. Life was difficult because of her injury, and in 1779 she received aid from the government. On June 29, the Executive Council of Pennsylvania granted her $30 to cover her present needs, and passed her case on to Congress’s Board of War. On July 6, 1779, the Board, sympathetic to Margaret’s injuries and impressed with her service and bravery, granted her half the monthly pay of a soldier in the Continental army and a new set of clothes or its equivalent in cash. With this act, Congress made Margaret the first woman in the United States to receive pension from Congress.


Nothing is now known of Gutenberg's life for the next fifteen years, but in March 1434, a letter by him indicates that he was living in [[Strasbourg]], where he had some relatives on his mother's side. He also appears to have been a goldsmith member enrolled in the Strasbourg militia. In 1437, there is evidence that he was instructing a wealthy tradesman on polishing gems, but where he had acquired this knowledge is unknown. In 1436/37 his name also comes up in court in connection with a broken promise of marriage to a woman from Strasbourg, Ennelin.<ref name=museum>{{cite web|title = Gutenberg und seine Zeit in Daten (Gutenberg and his times; Timeline)|url = http://www.mainz.de/gutenberg/zeitgutb.htm|publisher = [[Gutenberg Museum]]|accessdate = 2006-11-24}}</ref> Whether the marriage actually took place is not recorded.
After Congress’s decision, Margaret was included on military rolls until the end of the war. She was enrolled in the Corps of Invalids, created by Congress for wounded soldiers. In 1781, the Corps of Invalids became part of the garrison at [[West Point, New York]]. She was discharged from the Continental Army in 1783.


==After War Years==
===Printing press===
[[Image:Rossmarkt-ffm018.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Gutenberg with Fust and Schoeffer at ''Rossmarkt'' in Frankfurt]]
After being discharged, Margaret remained near West Point, known to officials and acquaintances as “Captain Molly”. She depended on the government and West Point officials for financial support. She died in Highland Falls, New York ,on January 16, 1800, at the age of forty-nine. In 1926, the [[Daughters of the American Revolution]] had Margaret’s remains reburied in the West Point military cemetery, becoming the only Revolutionary War soldeir to be buried there.
Around 1439, Gutenberg was involved in a financial misadventure making polished metal mirrors (which were believed to capture holy light from religious relics) for sale to pilgrims to [[Aachen]]: in 1439 the city was planning to exhibit its collection of relics from [[Charlemagne|Emperor Charlemagne]] but the event was delayed by one year and the capital already spent could not be repaid. When the question of satisfying the investors came up, Gutenberg is said to have promised to share a "secret". It has been widely speculated that this secret may have been the idea of printing with movable type.<ref>{{cite book | last =Burke | first =James | authorlink =James Burke (science historian) | title =Connections | publisher=[[Macmillan Publishers]] | date =1978 | location =[[London]] | page =101 | isbn=0-333-24827-9 }}</ref> Legend has it that the idea came to him "like a ray of light".<ref name=universe>{{cite book|author = Burke, James|title = The Day the Universe Changed|publisher = [[Little, Brown and Company]]|year = 1985|location = [[Boston]], [[Toronto]]}}</ref>


At least up to 1444, he lived in Strasbourg, most likely in the [[St. Arbogast]] suburb. It was in Strasbourg in 1440 that Gutenberg perfected and unveiled the secret of printing based on his research, mysteriously entitled ''Kunst und Aventur'' (art and enterprise). It is not clear what work he was engaged in, or whether some early trials with printing from movable type may have been conducted there. After this, there is a gap of four years in the record. In 1448, he was back in Mainz, where he took out a loan from his brother-in-law [[Arnold Gelthus]], presumably for a [[printing press]].
While living in the soldier's camp and after, Margaret was poor, rude, drank, swore, and smoked. She was equal to and respected the male soldiers. Her story is often confused and intertwined with that of [[Molly Pitcher]]. Though Margaret Corbin is certain to have lived and fired the cannon, much of the Molly Pitcher story is myth.


By 1450, the press was in operation, and a [[German language|German]] [[poem]] had been printed, possibly the first item to be printed there. Gutenberg was able to convince the wealthy moneylender [[Johann Fust]] for a loan of 800 [[guilder|guilders]]. [[Peter Schöffer]], who became Fust's son-in-law, also joined the enterprise. Schöffer had worked as a scribe in [[Paris]] and designed some of the first [[typeface]]s.
A tablet commemorating her heroism was erected in 1909 in [[Fort Tryon Park]], near the scene of her service, and the entrance to the park is named Margaret Corbin Circle in her honor.<ref>[http://www.nycgovparks.org/sub_your_park/historical_signs/hs_historical_sign.php?id=11275 Margaret Corbin Circle] in [[Fort Tryon Park]], [[New York City Department of Parks and Recreation]]. Accessed [[October 24]], [[2007]].</ref> A large [[art-deco]] mural depicting the battle scene decorates the lobby of nearby 720 [[Fort Washington Avenue (Manhattan)|Fort Washington Avenue]]. She is interred in [[West Point Cemetery]].<ref>[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=231 Profile for Margaret Corbin], [[Find-A-Grave]]. Accessed [[October 24]], [[2007]].</ref>


Gutenberg's workshop was set up at Hof Humbrecht, a property belonging to a distant relative. It is not clear when Gutenberg conceived the Bible project, but for this he borrowed another 800 guilders from Fust, and work commenced in 1452. At the same time, the press was also printing other, more lucrative texts (possibly Latin grammars). There is also some speculation that there may have been two presses, one for the pedestrian texts, and one for the Bible. One of the profit-making enterprises of the new press was the printing of thousands of [[indulgence]]s for the church, documented from 1454–55.
==Footnotes==

{{Reflist}}
In 1455 Gutenberg published his ''42-line Bible'', commonly known as the [[Gutenberg Bible]]. About 180 were printed, most on paper and some on [[vellum]].

===Court case===
Sometime in 1455, there was a dispute between Gutenberg and Fust, and Fust demanded his money back, accusing Gutenberg of embezzling funds. Meanwhile the expenses of the Bible project had proliferated, and Gutenberg's debt now exceeded 2,000 guilders. Fust sued at the archbishop's court. A November 1455 legal document records that there was a partnership for a "project of the books," the funds for which Gutenberg had used for other purposes, according to Fust. The court decided in favour of Fust, giving him control over the Bible printing workshop and half of all printed Bibles.

Thus Gutenberg was effectively bankrupt, but it appears he retained (or re-started) a small printing shop, and participated in the printing of a bible in the town of [[Bamberg]] around 1459, for which he at least supplied the type. But since his printed books never carry his name or a date, it is difficult to be certain, and there is consequently a considerable scholarly literature about it. It is also possible that the large [[Catholicon (religious dictionary)|Catholicon dictionary]], 300 copies of 744 pages, printed in Mainz in 1460, may have been executed in his workshop.

Meanwhile, the Fust–Schöffer shop was the first in Europe to bring out a book with the printer's name and date, the [[Mainz Psalter]] of August 1457, and while proudly proclaiming the mechanical process by which it had been produced, it made no mention of Gutenberg.

===Later life===
In 1462, during a conflict between two archbishops, Mainz was sacked by archbishop [[Adolph II of Nassau|Adolph von Nassau]], and Gutenberg was exiled. An old man by now, he moved to Eltville where he may have initiated and supervised a new printing press belonging to the brothers Bechtermünze.

In January 1465, Gutenberg's achievements were recognized and he was given the title ''Hofmann'' (gentleman of the court) by von Nassau. This honour included a [[stipend]], an annual court outfit, as well as 2180 liters of grain and 2000 liters of wine tax-free. It is believed he may have moved back to Mainz around this time, but this is not certain.

Gutenberg died in 1468 and was buried in the Franciscan church at Mainz, his contributions largely unknown. This church and the cemetery were later destroyed, and Gutenberg's grave is lost.

In 1504, he was mentioned as the inventor of typography in a book by Professor Ivo Wittig. It was not until 1567 that the first portrait of Gutenberg, almost certainly an imaginary reconstruction, appeared in Heinrich Pantaleon's biography of famous Germans.

==Printed books==
{{main|Gutenberg Bible}}
[[Image:Gutenberg Bible.jpg|thumb|thumb|right|''Gutenberg Bible'', [[Library of Congress]], [[Washington D.C.]]]]
Between 1450 and 1455, Gutenberg printed several texts, but details are not known; his texts did not bear the printer's name or date, so attribution is possible only through external references. Certainly several church documents including a papal letter and two indulgences were printed. Some printed editions of ''Ars Minor'', a schoolbook on Latin grammar by [[Aelius Donatus]] may have been printed by Gutenberg; these have been dated either 1451–52 or 1455.

In 1455 (possibly starting 1454), Gutenberg brought out copies of a beautifully executed folio [[Bible]] (''Biblia Sacra''), with 42 lines on each page. The pages of the books were not bound, and the date 1455 is documented on the spine by the binder for a copy bound in Paris.

The Bible sold for 30 [[florins]] each,<ref>{{cite book|author= Cormack, Lesley B.; Ede, Andrew|title=A History of Science in Society: From Philosophy to Utility|publisher=Broadview Press|year=2004|isbn=1-55111-332-5}}</ref> which was roughly three years' wages for an average clerk. Nonetheless, it was significantly cheaper than a handwritten Bible that could take a single scribe over a year to prepare. After printing the text portions, each book was hand illustrated in the same elegant way as manuscript Bibles from the same period written by scribes.

48 substantially complete copies are known to exist, including two at the [[British Library]] that can be viewed and compared online.<ref name=britLibrary>{{cite web|url=http://prodigi.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/search.asp|title=Treasures in Full: Gutenberg Bible|accessdate=2006-10-19|publisher = [[British Library]]}}</ref> The text lacks modern features such as [[Pagination|pagination]], [[Indentation#Indentation_in_typesetting|indentations]], and [[paragraph_break|paragraph breaks]].

Another, 36-line edition of the Bible was also printed, some years after the first edition, and in large part set from a copy of it, thus disproving earlier speculation that this may have been the first Bible of the two.<ref name="Kapr">{{cite book | last =Kapr | first =Albert | title =Johannes Gutenberg: the Man and His Invention |publisher =Scolar Press | date =1996 | page =322 | isbn = 1-85928-114-1}} </ref>

==Printing method with movable type==
[[Image:Metal movable type.jpg|right|thumb|225px|Movable metal type, and composing stick, descended from Gutenberg's press]]
Gutenberg's early printing process, and what tests he may have made with [[movable type]], are not known in great detail. His later Bibles were printed six pages at a time, and would have required 100,000 pieces of type—making the type alone would take years.<ref>{{cite book|author = Singer, C.; [[E. Holmyard|Holmyard, E.]]; Hall, A.; Williams, T.|title = A History of Technology, vol.3 |publisher = [[Oxford University Press]]|year = 1958}}</ref> Setting each page would take at least half a day, and considering all the work in loading the press, inking the type, hanging up the sheets, etc., it is thought that the Gutenberg–Fust shop might have employed about 25 craftsmen.

Gutenberg's technique of making movable type remains unclear. In the following decades, punches and copper matrices became standardized in the rapidly disseminating printing presses across Europe. Whether Gutenberg used this sophisticated technique or a somewhat primitive version has been the subject of considerable debate.

In the standard process of making type, a hard metal punch (with the letter carved back to front) is hammered into the soft metal copper, creating a mould or ''matrix''. This is then placed into a holder, and cast by filling with hot type-metal, which cooled down to create a piece of type. The matrix can now be reused to create hundreds of identical letters, so that the same type appearing anywhere in the book will appear similar, giving rise to the growth of [[font]]s. Subsequently, these letters are placed on a rack and inked; using a press, many hundred copies can be made. The letters can be reused in any combination, earning the process the name of 'movable type'. (For details, see [[Typography]]).

===Was the type produced by punches and copper matrices?===
Such is the process that has been widely attributed to have been Gutenberg's invention, but it appears from recent evidence that Gutenberg's actual process was somewhat different. If he used the punch and matrix approach, all his letters should have been identical, within some variation possibly due to inking. However, the type used in Gutenberg's printed Bibles were quite irregular.

In 2001, the physicist Blaise Aguera y Arcas and [[Princeton University|Princeton]] librarian Paul Needham, used digital scans of the Gutenberg Bible in the [[Scheide Library]], Princeton, to carefully compare the same letters (types) appearing in different parts of the Gutenberg 42-line Bible.<ref> {{cite conference | first = Blaise | last = Agüera y Arcas | coauthors = Needham, Paul | title = Computational analytical bibliography | booktitle = Proceedings Bibliopolis Conference ''The future history of the book'' | publisher = [[Koninklijke Bibliotheek]] | year = 2002 | month = November | location = [[The Hague]] ([[Netherlands]])}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.open2.net/home/view?entityID=15599&jsp=themed_learning%2Fexpanding_viewer&sessionID=-1161756493749&entityName=object|title= What Did Gutenberg Invent? - Discovery|accessdate=2006-10-25|date= 2006|publisher = [[BBC]]}}</ref> The irregularities in Gutenberg's type, particularly in simple characters such as the hyphen, made it clear that the variations could not have come from either ink smear or from wear and damage on the pieces of metal on the types themselves. While some identical types are clearly used on other pages, other variations, subjected to detailed image analysis, made for only one conclusion: that they could not have been produced from the same matrix. Transmitted light pictures of the page also revealed substructures in the type that could not arise from [[punchcutting]] techniques. They hypothesized that the method involved impressing simple shapes to create alphabets in "cuneiform" style in a mould like sand. Casting the type would destroy the mould, and the alphabet would need to be recreated to make additional type. This would explain the non-identical type, as well as the substructures observed in the printed type.

Thus, they feel that "the decisive factor for the birth of typography", the use of reusable moulds for casting type, might have been a more progressive process than was previously thought.<ref>{{cite book|author = Adams, James L.|title = Flying Buttresses, Entropy and O-Rings: the World of an Engineer|year = 1991|publisher=[[Harvard University Press]]}}</ref> They suggest that the additional step of using the punch to create a mould that could be reused many times was not taken until twenty years later, in the 1470s.

===Other hypotheses about European origins===
The nineteenth century printer and typefounder [[Fournier Le Jeune]] suggested that Gutenberg might not have been using type cast with a reusable matrix, but possibly wooden types that were carved individually. However, this appears unlikely given the uniformity
of the bulk of the type he used.

It has also been questioned whether Gutenberg used movable types at all. In 2004, Italian professor Bruno Fabbiani claimed that examination of the 42-line Bible revealed an overlapping of letters, suggesting that Gutenberg did not in fact use movable type (individual cast characters) but rather used whole plates made from a system somewhat like a modern typewriter, whereby the letters were stamped successively into the plate and then printed. However, most specialists regard the occasional overlapping of type as caused by paper movement over pieces of type of slightly unequal height.

A 1568 history by Hadrianus Junius of Holland claims that the basic idea of the movable type came to Gutenberg from [[Laurens Janszoon Coster]] via Fust, who was apprenticed to Coster in the 1430s and may have brought some of his equipment from [[Haarlem]] to Mainz. While Coster appears to have experimented with moulds and castable metal type, there is no evidence that he had actually printed anything with this technology. He was an inventor and a goldsmith. However, there is one supporter of the claim that Coster might be the inventor. In the [[Kölner Chronik]] of 1499 [[Ulrich Zell]], the first printer of [[Cologne]], mentions that printing was performed in [[Mainz]] in 1450, but that some type of printing of lower quality had previously occurred in the Netherlands. However the name of Coster is not mentioned in that chronicle.<ref name="Kapr"/>

===Hypotheses about East Asian origins===
{{main|History of typography in East Asia}}
Since the use of printing from movable type arose in East Asia well before it did in Europe, it is relevant to ask whether Gutenberg may have been influenced, directly or indirectly, by the Chinese or Korean [[inventions]] of movable type printing, or their earlier [[discovery (observation)|discoveries]] of block printing.
There are no historical documents which single out that Gutenberg was aware of existing Asian printing techniques. Nonetheless, several historians have drawn inferences. The earliest woodblocks used for printing in Europe, in the fourteenth century, using exactly the same technique as Chinese woodblocks, led some early writers on Asian subjects to speculate about a connection: "the process of printing them must have been copied from ancient Chinese specimens, brought from that country by some early travelers, whose names have not been handed down to our times" ([[Robert Curzon, 14th Baron Zouch|Robert Curzon]], 1810-1873).<ref name="Polo-1875">{{cite book | last = Polo | first = Marco | authorlink = Marco Polo | title = The Book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian: Concerning the Kingdoms and Marvels of the East, Volume 1 | edition = 2nd edition, revised | year = 1875 | publisher= [[William Clowes Ltd.]] | location = [[London]] | page =133}}</ref> Since the 13th century, with the expansion of the [[Mongol Empire]] to the door of Europe, numerous travelers bridged the distance between Europe and China, such as [[Marco Polo]] or the Mongol Chinese [[Rabban Bar Sauma]], and numerous direct contacts occurred in attempts at creating a [[Franco-Mongol alliance]], giving ample opportunity for the transmission of printing technology from China.

However, European woodblock printing shows a clear progression from patterns to images, both printed on cloth, then to images printed on paper, when it became widely available in Europe in about 1400.<ref name="Hind">{{cite book|title=An Introduction to a History of Woodcut|author= Hind, Arthur M.|pages=64–127|publisher= [[Dover Publications]]|year=1963|isbn=0-486-20952-0}}</ref> In particular, text and images printed together only appear in about 1460, some sixty years later than images alone, and after Gutenberg's invention of metal movable type.<ref>{{cite journal|title=The Sexuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and in Modern Oblivion|date=Summer 1983|volume=25|publisher=[[MIT Press]]}}</ref>

Joseph Needham's ''Science and Civilization in China'' has a chapter that suggests that "European block printers must not only have seen Chinese samples, but perhaps had been taught by missionaries or others who had learned these un-European methods from Chinese printers during their residence in China."<ref name="Tsien">{{cite book | last = Tsien | first = Tsuen-Hsuin | title = Paper and Printing | series = Joseph Needham, Science and Civilisation in China (Volume 5, Part I) | year = 1985 | publisher = [[Cambridge University Press]] | location =[[Cambridge]] | isbn = 0521086906 | pages = 313}}</ref>

But historians of the Western prints themselves see no need for such a direct and late connection. Rather, they assume that European woodcut appeared "spontaneously and presumably as a result of the use of paper as it had been observed that paper was better suited than rough-surfaced parchment for making the impressions from wood-reliefs".<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]|title=printing}}</ref> Also, A. Hyatt Mayor states:

:''A little before 1400 Europeans had enough paper to begin making holy images and playing cards in woodcut. They need not have learned woodcut from the Chinese, because they had been using woodblocks for about 1,000 years to stamp designs on linen.''<ref>{{cite journal|author= Mayor, A. Hyatt|title=A Historical Survey of Printmaking|publisher=Art Education|volume=17|issue=4|date=April 1964|pages=4–9}}</ref>

Whatever the facts regarding Asian influences in this invention, there can be no doubt about Gutenberg's genius in putting together the technologies that eventually went on to fuel the European [[Renaissance]].<ref name=Man/>

==Legacy==
[[Image:915h Johannes Gutenberg (Gensfleisch) statue, Mainz, 1 Ma.jpg|thumb|right|Gutenberg statue by [[Bertel Thorvaldsen]] in [[Mainz, Germany]]]]

Although Gutenberg was financially unsuccessful in his lifetime, the printing technologies spread quickly, and news and books began to travel across Europe much faster than before. It fed the growing [[Renaissance]], and since it greatly facilitated scientific publishing, it was a major catalyst for the later [[scientific revolution]].

The capital of printing in Europe shifted to [[Venice]], where visionary printers like [[Aldus Manutius]] ensured widespread availability of the major Greek and Latin texts. The claims of an Italian origin for movable type have also focused on this rapid rise of Italy in movable-type printing. This may perhaps be explained by the prior eminence of Italy in the paper and printing trade. Additionally, Italy's economy was growing rapidly at the time, facilitating the spread of literacy. Finally, the city of Mainz was sacked in 1462, driving many (including a number of printers and punch cutters) into exile.

Printing was also a factor in the [[Protestant Reformation|Reformation]]: [[Martin Luther]] found that the [[95 Theses]], which he posted on the door of his church, were printed and circulated widely; subsequently he also issued [[broadsheet]]s outlining his anti-[[indulgences]] position (ironically, indulgences were one of the first items Gutenberg had printed). The broadsheet evolved into [[newspaper]]s and defined the [[mass media]] we know today.

In the decades after Gutenberg, many conservative patrons looked down on cheap printed books; books produced by hand were considered more desirable. At one point the [[papal court]] debated a policy of requiring printing presses to obtain a license, but this could not be decreed.

Today there is a large [[antique]] market for the earliest printed objects. Books printed prior to 1500 are known as ''[[incunabula]]''.

There are many statues of Gutenberg in Germany, including the famous one by [[Bertel Thorvaldsen]] (1837) in Mainz, home to the [[Gutenberg Museum]] and the eponymous [[Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz]].

[[Project Gutenberg]] commemorates Gutenberg's name.

Matthew Skelton's book [[Endymion Spring]] explores a controversial theory about Johann Gutenberg and his partner Fust.

In 1961 the Canadian philosopher and scholar [[Marshall McLuhan]] entitled his pioneering study in the fields of print culture, cultural studies, and media ecology, ''[[The Gutenberg Galaxy|The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man]]''

Johann Gutenberg has been ranked #8 in [[Michael H. Hart]]'s controversial book, ''[[The 100]]: A Ranking Of The Most Influential Persons In History''.

In 2006, ''[[Gutenberg! The Musical!]]'', a musical about two people who wrote a musical about Johann Gutenberg inventing the printing press, began its [[Off-Broadway]] run in [[New York City]].

==See also==
*[[Printing]]
*[[Printing press]]
*[[Typography]]
*[[Incunabulum]]
*[[History of the book]]
*[[Gutenberg Bible]]

==References==
{{reflist|2}}

==Further reading==
*[[Michael H. Hart]], ''[[The 100]]'', Carol Publishing Group, July 1992, paperback, 576 pages, ISBN 0-8065-1350-0
'''Standard biographic works on Gutenberg'''
*Albert Kapr, ''Johann Gutenberg: the Man and his Invention.''Translated from the German by Douglas Martin, Scolar Press, 1996. "Third ed., revised by the author for ... the English translation'''.

'''On the effects of Gutenberg's printing'''
*Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, ''The Printing Press as an Agent of Change'', Cambridge University Press, September 1980, Paperback, 832 pages, ISBN 0-521-29955-1
*[[Marshall McLuhan]], ''The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man'' (1962) Univ. of Toronto Press (1st ed.); reissued by Routledge & Kegan Paul ISBN 0-7100-1818-5.


==External links==
==External links==
{{commonscat|Johannes Gutenberg}}
*[http://www.cbsd.org/pennsylvaniapeople/level2_biographies/Level_2_biographies/margaret_corbin_level_2.htm Biography of Margaret Corbin]
*[http://www.gutenberg-museum.de?language=e English homepage of the Gutenberg-Museum Mainz], Germany.
*[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=231 Profile for Margaret Corbin], [[Find-A-Grave]]
*[http://www.silk-road.com/artl/printing.shtml Historical overview of printing] at the Silk Road site.
*[http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/permanent/gutenberg/project/ The Digital Gutenberg Project]: the [[Gutenberg Bible]] in 1,300 digital images, every page of the [[University of Texas at Austin]] copy.
*{{fr icon}} [http://histoireetgeographie.free.fr/index.php?2004/12/07/41-biographie-de-johannes-gutenberg-inventeur-de-limprimerie Biographie de Johannes Gutenberg], inventeur de l'Imprimerie (a biography of Gutenberg at the Histoire et Geographie site).
*[http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/homepage.html Treasures in Full – Gutenberg Bible] View the British Library's Digital Versions Online

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|SHORT DESCRIPTION=German inventor who invented movable type
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|PLACE OF BIRTH=Mainz, Germany
|DATE OF DEATH=3 February 1468
|PLACE OF DEATH= Mainz, Germany <!-- ? -->
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[[Category:German inventors]]
[[Category:German printers]]


[[Category:People from Mainz]]
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[[Category:Women in the American Revolution]]
[[Category:Walhalla enshrinees]]
[[Category:Continental Army soldiers]]
[[Category:Printers of incunabula]]
[[Category:1751 births]]
[[Category:Typographers]]
[[Category:1800 deaths]]
[[Category:University of Erfurt alumni]]
[[Category:People of New York in the American Revolution]]


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Revision as of 15:46, 10 October 2008

Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg
Bornc. 1398
Died(1468-02-03)February 3, 1468
Occupation(s)Engraver, Inventor, and Printer

Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg (c. 1398 – February 3, 1468) was a German goldsmith and printer who is credited with being the first European to use movable type printing, in around 1439, and the global inventor of the mechanical printing. His major work, the Gutenberg Bible (also known as the 42-line Bible), has been acclaimed for its high aesthetic and technical quality.

Among the specific contributions to printing that are attributed to Gutenberg are the invention of a process for mass-producing movable type, the use of oil-based ink, and the use of a wooden printing press similar to the screw olive and wine presses of the period. His truly epochal invention was the combination of these elements into a practical system. Gutenberg may have been familiar with printing; it is claimed that he had worked on copper engravings with an artist known as the Master of the Playing Cards.[1] Gutenberg's method for making type is traditionally considered to have included a type metal alloy and a hand mould for casting type. It should be noted that new research may indicate that standardised moveable type was a more complex evolutionary process spread over multiple locations.[2]

The use of movable type was a marked improvement on the handwritten manuscript, which was the existing method of book production in Europe, and upon woodblock printing, and revolutionized European book-making. Gutenberg's printing technology spread rapidly throughout Europe and is considered a key factor in the European Renaissance. Gutenberg remains a towering figure in the popular image; in 1999, the A&E Network ranked Gutenberg #1 on their "People of the Millennium" countdown, and in 1997, Time–Life magazine picked Gutenberg's invention as the most important of the second millennium.[3]

Life

Sculpture commemorating Gutenberg as the "inventor of modern printing" on the occasion of 2006 World Cup in Germany

Gutenberg was born in the German city of Mainz, the youngest son of the upper-class merchant Friele Gensfleisch zur Laden, and his second wife Else Wyrich, who was the daughter of a shopkeeper. According to some accounts Friele was a goldsmith for the bishop at Mainz, but most likely he was involved in the cloth trade.[4] Gutenberg's year of birth is not known; it was certainly between 1394 and 1404, most likely around 1398.

At the time, patricians in Mainz were often named after the houses they owned, and around 1427, the name zu Gutenberg, after the family house in Mainz, is documented for the first time.[4] This house had previously been known as "Judenberg," Jewish Hill. According to historian John Man, "In the 1282 pogrom, fifty-four Jewish properties were abandoned and were grabbed by the rich and powerful. It seems that the Gutenberg house fell to the archbishop's treasurers. It was later acquired by the great-great-grandfather of our inventor and stayed in the family."[5]

In 1411, there was an uprising in Mainz against the patricians, and more than a hundred families were forced to leave. The Gutenbergs may have moved to Eltville am Rhein (Alta Villa), where his mother had an inherited estate. He may have studied at the University of Erfurt, where there is a record of a student in 1419 named Johannes de Alta villa. Following his father's death in 1419, he is mentioned in the inheritance proceedings.

Nothing is now known of Gutenberg's life for the next fifteen years, but in March 1434, a letter by him indicates that he was living in Strasbourg, where he had some relatives on his mother's side. He also appears to have been a goldsmith member enrolled in the Strasbourg militia. In 1437, there is evidence that he was instructing a wealthy tradesman on polishing gems, but where he had acquired this knowledge is unknown. In 1436/37 his name also comes up in court in connection with a broken promise of marriage to a woman from Strasbourg, Ennelin.[6] Whether the marriage actually took place is not recorded.

Printing press

Gutenberg with Fust and Schoeffer at Rossmarkt in Frankfurt

Around 1439, Gutenberg was involved in a financial misadventure making polished metal mirrors (which were believed to capture holy light from religious relics) for sale to pilgrims to Aachen: in 1439 the city was planning to exhibit its collection of relics from Emperor Charlemagne but the event was delayed by one year and the capital already spent could not be repaid. When the question of satisfying the investors came up, Gutenberg is said to have promised to share a "secret". It has been widely speculated that this secret may have been the idea of printing with movable type.[7] Legend has it that the idea came to him "like a ray of light".[8]

At least up to 1444, he lived in Strasbourg, most likely in the St. Arbogast suburb. It was in Strasbourg in 1440 that Gutenberg perfected and unveiled the secret of printing based on his research, mysteriously entitled Kunst und Aventur (art and enterprise). It is not clear what work he was engaged in, or whether some early trials with printing from movable type may have been conducted there. After this, there is a gap of four years in the record. In 1448, he was back in Mainz, where he took out a loan from his brother-in-law Arnold Gelthus, presumably for a printing press.

By 1450, the press was in operation, and a German poem had been printed, possibly the first item to be printed there. Gutenberg was able to convince the wealthy moneylender Johann Fust for a loan of 800 guilders. Peter Schöffer, who became Fust's son-in-law, also joined the enterprise. Schöffer had worked as a scribe in Paris and designed some of the first typefaces.

Gutenberg's workshop was set up at Hof Humbrecht, a property belonging to a distant relative. It is not clear when Gutenberg conceived the Bible project, but for this he borrowed another 800 guilders from Fust, and work commenced in 1452. At the same time, the press was also printing other, more lucrative texts (possibly Latin grammars). There is also some speculation that there may have been two presses, one for the pedestrian texts, and one for the Bible. One of the profit-making enterprises of the new press was the printing of thousands of indulgences for the church, documented from 1454–55.

In 1455 Gutenberg published his 42-line Bible, commonly known as the Gutenberg Bible. About 180 were printed, most on paper and some on vellum.

Court case

Sometime in 1455, there was a dispute between Gutenberg and Fust, and Fust demanded his money back, accusing Gutenberg of embezzling funds. Meanwhile the expenses of the Bible project had proliferated, and Gutenberg's debt now exceeded 2,000 guilders. Fust sued at the archbishop's court. A November 1455 legal document records that there was a partnership for a "project of the books," the funds for which Gutenberg had used for other purposes, according to Fust. The court decided in favour of Fust, giving him control over the Bible printing workshop and half of all printed Bibles.

Thus Gutenberg was effectively bankrupt, but it appears he retained (or re-started) a small printing shop, and participated in the printing of a bible in the town of Bamberg around 1459, for which he at least supplied the type. But since his printed books never carry his name or a date, it is difficult to be certain, and there is consequently a considerable scholarly literature about it. It is also possible that the large Catholicon dictionary, 300 copies of 744 pages, printed in Mainz in 1460, may have been executed in his workshop.

Meanwhile, the Fust–Schöffer shop was the first in Europe to bring out a book with the printer's name and date, the Mainz Psalter of August 1457, and while proudly proclaiming the mechanical process by which it had been produced, it made no mention of Gutenberg.

Later life

In 1462, during a conflict between two archbishops, Mainz was sacked by archbishop Adolph von Nassau, and Gutenberg was exiled. An old man by now, he moved to Eltville where he may have initiated and supervised a new printing press belonging to the brothers Bechtermünze.

In January 1465, Gutenberg's achievements were recognized and he was given the title Hofmann (gentleman of the court) by von Nassau. This honour included a stipend, an annual court outfit, as well as 2180 liters of grain and 2000 liters of wine tax-free. It is believed he may have moved back to Mainz around this time, but this is not certain.

Gutenberg died in 1468 and was buried in the Franciscan church at Mainz, his contributions largely unknown. This church and the cemetery were later destroyed, and Gutenberg's grave is lost.

In 1504, he was mentioned as the inventor of typography in a book by Professor Ivo Wittig. It was not until 1567 that the first portrait of Gutenberg, almost certainly an imaginary reconstruction, appeared in Heinrich Pantaleon's biography of famous Germans.

Printed books

Gutenberg Bible, Library of Congress, Washington D.C.

Between 1450 and 1455, Gutenberg printed several texts, but details are not known; his texts did not bear the printer's name or date, so attribution is possible only through external references. Certainly several church documents including a papal letter and two indulgences were printed. Some printed editions of Ars Minor, a schoolbook on Latin grammar by Aelius Donatus may have been printed by Gutenberg; these have been dated either 1451–52 or 1455.

In 1455 (possibly starting 1454), Gutenberg brought out copies of a beautifully executed folio Bible (Biblia Sacra), with 42 lines on each page. The pages of the books were not bound, and the date 1455 is documented on the spine by the binder for a copy bound in Paris.

The Bible sold for 30 florins each,[9] which was roughly three years' wages for an average clerk. Nonetheless, it was significantly cheaper than a handwritten Bible that could take a single scribe over a year to prepare. After printing the text portions, each book was hand illustrated in the same elegant way as manuscript Bibles from the same period written by scribes.

48 substantially complete copies are known to exist, including two at the British Library that can be viewed and compared online.[10] The text lacks modern features such as pagination, indentations, and paragraph breaks.

Another, 36-line edition of the Bible was also printed, some years after the first edition, and in large part set from a copy of it, thus disproving earlier speculation that this may have been the first Bible of the two.[11]

Printing method with movable type

Movable metal type, and composing stick, descended from Gutenberg's press

Gutenberg's early printing process, and what tests he may have made with movable type, are not known in great detail. His later Bibles were printed six pages at a time, and would have required 100,000 pieces of type—making the type alone would take years.[12] Setting each page would take at least half a day, and considering all the work in loading the press, inking the type, hanging up the sheets, etc., it is thought that the Gutenberg–Fust shop might have employed about 25 craftsmen.

Gutenberg's technique of making movable type remains unclear. In the following decades, punches and copper matrices became standardized in the rapidly disseminating printing presses across Europe. Whether Gutenberg used this sophisticated technique or a somewhat primitive version has been the subject of considerable debate.

In the standard process of making type, a hard metal punch (with the letter carved back to front) is hammered into the soft metal copper, creating a mould or matrix. This is then placed into a holder, and cast by filling with hot type-metal, which cooled down to create a piece of type. The matrix can now be reused to create hundreds of identical letters, so that the same type appearing anywhere in the book will appear similar, giving rise to the growth of fonts. Subsequently, these letters are placed on a rack and inked; using a press, many hundred copies can be made. The letters can be reused in any combination, earning the process the name of 'movable type'. (For details, see Typography).

Was the type produced by punches and copper matrices?

Such is the process that has been widely attributed to have been Gutenberg's invention, but it appears from recent evidence that Gutenberg's actual process was somewhat different. If he used the punch and matrix approach, all his letters should have been identical, within some variation possibly due to inking. However, the type used in Gutenberg's printed Bibles were quite irregular.

In 2001, the physicist Blaise Aguera y Arcas and Princeton librarian Paul Needham, used digital scans of the Gutenberg Bible in the Scheide Library, Princeton, to carefully compare the same letters (types) appearing in different parts of the Gutenberg 42-line Bible.[13][14] The irregularities in Gutenberg's type, particularly in simple characters such as the hyphen, made it clear that the variations could not have come from either ink smear or from wear and damage on the pieces of metal on the types themselves. While some identical types are clearly used on other pages, other variations, subjected to detailed image analysis, made for only one conclusion: that they could not have been produced from the same matrix. Transmitted light pictures of the page also revealed substructures in the type that could not arise from punchcutting techniques. They hypothesized that the method involved impressing simple shapes to create alphabets in "cuneiform" style in a mould like sand. Casting the type would destroy the mould, and the alphabet would need to be recreated to make additional type. This would explain the non-identical type, as well as the substructures observed in the printed type.

Thus, they feel that "the decisive factor for the birth of typography", the use of reusable moulds for casting type, might have been a more progressive process than was previously thought.[15] They suggest that the additional step of using the punch to create a mould that could be reused many times was not taken until twenty years later, in the 1470s.

Other hypotheses about European origins

The nineteenth century printer and typefounder Fournier Le Jeune suggested that Gutenberg might not have been using type cast with a reusable matrix, but possibly wooden types that were carved individually. However, this appears unlikely given the uniformity of the bulk of the type he used.

It has also been questioned whether Gutenberg used movable types at all. In 2004, Italian professor Bruno Fabbiani claimed that examination of the 42-line Bible revealed an overlapping of letters, suggesting that Gutenberg did not in fact use movable type (individual cast characters) but rather used whole plates made from a system somewhat like a modern typewriter, whereby the letters were stamped successively into the plate and then printed. However, most specialists regard the occasional overlapping of type as caused by paper movement over pieces of type of slightly unequal height.

A 1568 history by Hadrianus Junius of Holland claims that the basic idea of the movable type came to Gutenberg from Laurens Janszoon Coster via Fust, who was apprenticed to Coster in the 1430s and may have brought some of his equipment from Haarlem to Mainz. While Coster appears to have experimented with moulds and castable metal type, there is no evidence that he had actually printed anything with this technology. He was an inventor and a goldsmith. However, there is one supporter of the claim that Coster might be the inventor. In the Kölner Chronik of 1499 Ulrich Zell, the first printer of Cologne, mentions that printing was performed in Mainz in 1450, but that some type of printing of lower quality had previously occurred in the Netherlands. However the name of Coster is not mentioned in that chronicle.[11]

Hypotheses about East Asian origins

Since the use of printing from movable type arose in East Asia well before it did in Europe, it is relevant to ask whether Gutenberg may have been influenced, directly or indirectly, by the Chinese or Korean inventions of movable type printing, or their earlier discoveries of block printing.

There are no historical documents which single out that Gutenberg was aware of existing Asian printing techniques. Nonetheless, several historians have drawn inferences. The earliest woodblocks used for printing in Europe, in the fourteenth century, using exactly the same technique as Chinese woodblocks, led some early writers on Asian subjects to speculate about a connection: "the process of printing them must have been copied from ancient Chinese specimens, brought from that country by some early travelers, whose names have not been handed down to our times" (Robert Curzon, 1810-1873).[16] Since the 13th century, with the expansion of the Mongol Empire to the door of Europe, numerous travelers bridged the distance between Europe and China, such as Marco Polo or the Mongol Chinese Rabban Bar Sauma, and numerous direct contacts occurred in attempts at creating a Franco-Mongol alliance, giving ample opportunity for the transmission of printing technology from China.

However, European woodblock printing shows a clear progression from patterns to images, both printed on cloth, then to images printed on paper, when it became widely available in Europe in about 1400.[17] In particular, text and images printed together only appear in about 1460, some sixty years later than images alone, and after Gutenberg's invention of metal movable type.[18]

Joseph Needham's Science and Civilization in China has a chapter that suggests that "European block printers must not only have seen Chinese samples, but perhaps had been taught by missionaries or others who had learned these un-European methods from Chinese printers during their residence in China."[19]

But historians of the Western prints themselves see no need for such a direct and late connection. Rather, they assume that European woodcut appeared "spontaneously and presumably as a result of the use of paper as it had been observed that paper was better suited than rough-surfaced parchment for making the impressions from wood-reliefs".[20] Also, A. Hyatt Mayor states:

A little before 1400 Europeans had enough paper to begin making holy images and playing cards in woodcut. They need not have learned woodcut from the Chinese, because they had been using woodblocks for about 1,000 years to stamp designs on linen.[21]

Whatever the facts regarding Asian influences in this invention, there can be no doubt about Gutenberg's genius in putting together the technologies that eventually went on to fuel the European Renaissance.[5]

Legacy

File:915h Johannes Gutenberg (Gensfleisch) statue, Mainz, 1 Ma.jpg
Gutenberg statue by Bertel Thorvaldsen in Mainz, Germany

Although Gutenberg was financially unsuccessful in his lifetime, the printing technologies spread quickly, and news and books began to travel across Europe much faster than before. It fed the growing Renaissance, and since it greatly facilitated scientific publishing, it was a major catalyst for the later scientific revolution.

The capital of printing in Europe shifted to Venice, where visionary printers like Aldus Manutius ensured widespread availability of the major Greek and Latin texts. The claims of an Italian origin for movable type have also focused on this rapid rise of Italy in movable-type printing. This may perhaps be explained by the prior eminence of Italy in the paper and printing trade. Additionally, Italy's economy was growing rapidly at the time, facilitating the spread of literacy. Finally, the city of Mainz was sacked in 1462, driving many (including a number of printers and punch cutters) into exile.

Printing was also a factor in the Reformation: Martin Luther found that the 95 Theses, which he posted on the door of his church, were printed and circulated widely; subsequently he also issued broadsheets outlining his anti-indulgences position (ironically, indulgences were one of the first items Gutenberg had printed). The broadsheet evolved into newspapers and defined the mass media we know today.

In the decades after Gutenberg, many conservative patrons looked down on cheap printed books; books produced by hand were considered more desirable. At one point the papal court debated a policy of requiring printing presses to obtain a license, but this could not be decreed.

Today there is a large antique market for the earliest printed objects. Books printed prior to 1500 are known as incunabula.

There are many statues of Gutenberg in Germany, including the famous one by Bertel Thorvaldsen (1837) in Mainz, home to the Gutenberg Museum and the eponymous Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz.

Project Gutenberg commemorates Gutenberg's name.

Matthew Skelton's book Endymion Spring explores a controversial theory about Johann Gutenberg and his partner Fust.

In 1961 the Canadian philosopher and scholar Marshall McLuhan entitled his pioneering study in the fields of print culture, cultural studies, and media ecology, The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man

Johann Gutenberg has been ranked #8 in Michael H. Hart's controversial book, The 100: A Ranking Of The Most Influential Persons In History.

In 2006, Gutenberg! The Musical!, a musical about two people who wrote a musical about Johann Gutenberg inventing the printing press, began its Off-Broadway run in New York City.

See also

References

  1. ^ Lehmann-Haupt, Hellmut (1966). Gutenberg and the Master of the Playing Cards. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  2. ^ "What Did Gutenberg Invent?". BBC. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
  3. ^ "1,000 Years, 1,000 People: Ranking The Men and Women Who Shaped The Millennium". Seton Hall University. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
  4. ^ a b Hanebutt-Benz, Eva-Maria. "Gutenberg and Mainz". Retrieved 2006-11-24.
  5. ^ a b Man, John (2002). Gutenberg: How One Man Remade the World with Word. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 166–7. ISBN 0-471-21823-5.
  6. ^ "Gutenberg und seine Zeit in Daten (Gutenberg and his times; Timeline)". Gutenberg Museum. Retrieved 2006-11-24.
  7. ^ Burke, James (1978). Connections. London: Macmillan Publishers. p. 101. ISBN 0-333-24827-9.
  8. ^ Burke, James (1985). The Day the Universe Changed. Boston, Toronto: Little, Brown and Company.
  9. ^ Cormack, Lesley B.; Ede, Andrew (2004). A History of Science in Society: From Philosophy to Utility. Broadview Press. ISBN 1-55111-332-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ "Treasures in Full: Gutenberg Bible". British Library. Retrieved 2006-10-19.
  11. ^ a b Kapr, Albert (1996). Johannes Gutenberg: the Man and His Invention. Scolar Press. p. 322. ISBN 1-85928-114-1.
  12. ^ Singer, C.; Holmyard, E.; Hall, A.; Williams, T. (1958). A History of Technology, vol.3. Oxford University Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Agüera y Arcas, Blaise (2002). "Computational analytical bibliography". Proceedings Bibliopolis Conference The future history of the book. The Hague (Netherlands): Koninklijke Bibliotheek. {{cite conference}}: Unknown parameter |booktitle= ignored (|book-title= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  14. ^ "What Did Gutenberg Invent? - Discovery". BBC. 2006. Retrieved 2006-10-25.
  15. ^ Adams, James L. (1991). Flying Buttresses, Entropy and O-Rings: the World of an Engineer. Harvard University Press.
  16. ^ Polo, Marco (1875). The Book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian: Concerning the Kingdoms and Marvels of the East, Volume 1 (2nd edition, revised ed.). London: William Clowes Ltd. p. 133.
  17. ^ Hind, Arthur M. (1963). An Introduction to a History of Woodcut. Dover Publications. pp. 64–127. ISBN 0-486-20952-0.
  18. ^ "The Sexuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and in Modern Oblivion". 25. MIT Press. Summer 1983. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ Tsien, Tsuen-Hsuin (1985). Paper and Printing. Joseph Needham, Science and Civilisation in China (Volume 5, Part I). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 313. ISBN 0521086906.
  20. ^ "printing". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  21. ^ Mayor, A. Hyatt (April 1964). "A Historical Survey of Printmaking". 17 (4). Art Education: 4–9. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Further reading

Standard biographic works on Gutenberg

  • Albert Kapr, Johann Gutenberg: the Man and his Invention.Translated from the German by Douglas Martin, Scolar Press, 1996. "Third ed., revised by the author for ... the English translation.

On the effects of Gutenberg's printing

  • Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, The Printing Press as an Agent of Change, Cambridge University Press, September 1980, Paperback, 832 pages, ISBN 0-521-29955-1
  • Marshall McLuhan, The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man (1962) Univ. of Toronto Press (1st ed.); reissued by Routledge & Kegan Paul ISBN 0-7100-1818-5.

External links

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