{"id":15087,"date":"2018-10-11T11:00:46","date_gmt":"2018-10-11T15:00:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=15087"},"modified":"2021-07-23T13:17:57","modified_gmt":"2021-07-23T17:17:57","slug":"fifteenth-century-books-from-the-cradle-of-printing-in-the-west","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2018\/10\/11\/fifteenth-century-books-from-the-cradle-of-printing-in-the-west\/","title":{"rendered":"Fifteenth Century Books: From the Cradle of Printing in the West"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Laura Hartman ~<\/em><\/p>\n

Zodiac Man. Critical Days. Secrets of women. Chiromancy. Plague. Poisons. \u00a0Aristotle.\u00a0 Hippocrates. You can explore these topics and many more common themes of late medieval medical philosophy and practice in the National Library of Medicine collection of incunabula.<\/p>\n

Incunabula is a term coined in the 17th century to refer to books printed \u201cin the cradle\u201d or infancy of the Western printing press, generally from the early 1450s to 1500.\u00a0 The root word derives from the Latin for the leather straps that were used by the Romans to bind or swaddle infants in their cradles.<\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
De pollution nocturna<\/em><\/a> by Jean Gerson (1363\u20131429) Printed in Cologne by Ulrich Zell, ca. 1466<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

The first works printed on the printing press were indulgences and Bibles. \u00a0Religious works were soon followed by secular ones.\u00a0 Medical and scientific works started to appear in the late 1460s.\u00a0 Initially they were simply printed editions of well-known (and frequently copied) manuscripts.<\/p>\n

The earliest printed books resemble their manuscript predecessors in many ways: they typically lack title pages; are rubricated<\/a>, meaning embellished in red ink (though they sometimes used blue); begin each major section with large initials; and frequently abbreviate\u00a0the words of the text or replace them with marks of contraction.\u00a0 \u00a0A few of these marks, such as the ampersand (&), are still used today. \u00a0\u00a0Illustrations, which began to appear in the early 1460s were rarely printed in color, but were hand-colored afterwards.<\/p>\n

Book production was expensive.\u00a0 A typical print run was only 200\u2013300 copies.\u00a0 Everything from the paper, to the ink, to the type, was made by hand.\u00a0 The type was set by hand, letter by letter, upside down and backwards, generally by illiterate typesetters who were following copy they could not read.\u00a0 The pages were printed on sheets<\/a>, to be folded and bound together later.\u00a0 When mistakes were made, the press was stopped and the errors corrected, but the sheets with the errors were not discarded.\u00a0 Thus, minor differences in print settings between copies sometimes allow scholars to track the production history of a book.<\/p>\n

Title pages were rarely used before 1485.\u00a0 The first ones contained only a brief title and perhaps the author\u2019s name.\u00a0 Sometimes printers would add a device or mark, but there are many works printed during the incunable period that do not have a printer\u2019s name or date.\u00a0\u00a0 Scholars study the paper, type fonts, and wood-cuts to identify these printers and establish printing dates for these books.<\/p>\n

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