-Caveat Lector-

Kris Millegan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>>Many people know what the first book Gutenberg published was: the Holy
Bible. Few ask what the second book was.  The answer?  Good question.  It
appears the sole purpose of the printing press was to print the Bible and the
Bible alone, and everything else was of little (if any) importance to him.
Before the printing press, the Bible was a document in the hands of a select
few, a corrupt priesthood centered in Rome.  The printing of the Bible (and
it's distribution to the masses) was a questioning of authority, an attack on
the powers that be, a declaration of war.<<

Well, maybe...this is from http://www.slip.net/~graphion/guten.html

>>Many years of Gutenberg's life are lost to history, but by 1450 he was back
in Mainz at work on a printing press. Between 1450 and 1455, while preparing
to produce a large folio Latin Bible, Gutenberg is thought to have printed a
number of smaller books, a calendar, and a papal Letter of Indulgence. The
Bible of 42 lines, the oldest surviving printed book in the western world, was
completed by August 15, 1456, and while it is now credited to Gutenberg, he
appears to have been relieved of his supervisory position, and his press,
before the time of its publication. In fact, no printed material was ever
credited to Gutenberg during his lifetime.

Gutenberg is also believed to have worked on the Catholicon of Johannes de
Janua, an enormous encyclopedia: 748 pages in two columns of 66 lines each. In
later years, he received a position as a courtier to the archbishop of Mainz,
and was buried in the town's Franciscan church.<<

And this is from the Catholic Encyclopedia,
http://www.csn.net/advent/cathen/07090a.htm

>>Johann Gutenberg
(Henne Gänsfleisch zur Laden, commonly called Gutenberg).

Inventor of printing; born about 1400; died 1467 or 1468 at Mainz. Gutenberg
was the son of Friele (Friedrich) Gänsfleisch and Else Wyrich. His cognomen
was derived from the house inhabited by his father and his paternal ancestors
"zu Laden, zu Gutenberg". The house of Gänsfleisch was one of the patrician
families of the town, tracing its lineage back to the thirteenth century. From
the middle of the fourteenth century there were two branches, the line to
which the inventor belongs and the line of Sorgenloch. In the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries it scions claimed an hereditary position as so-called
Hausgenossen, or retainers of the household, of the master of the
archiepiscopal mint. In this capacity they doubtless acquired considerable
knowledge and technical skill in metal working. They supplied the mint with
the metal to be coined, changed the various species of coins, and had a seat
at the assizes in forgery cases. Of Johann Gutenberg's father, Friele
Gänsfleisch, we know only that he was married in 1386 to Else Wyrich, daughter
of a burgher of Mainz, Werner Wyrich zum steinern Krame (at the sign of the
pottery shop), and that he died in 1419, his wife dying in 1433. Of their
three children — Friele (d. 1447), Else, and Johann — the last-named (the
inventory of typography) was born some time in the last decade of the
fourteenth century, presumably between 1394 and 1399, at Mainz in the Hof zum
Gutenberg, known today as Christophstrasse, 2.

All that is known of his youth is that he was not in Mainz in 1430. It is
presumed that he migrated for political reasons to Strasburg, where the family
probably had connections. The first record of Gutenberg's sojourn in Strasburg
dates from 14 March, 1434. He took a place befitting his rank in the patrician
class of the city, but he also at the same time joined the goldsmiths' guild —
quite an exceptional proceeding, yet characteristic of his untiring technical
activity. The trades which Gutenberg taught his pupils and associates, Andreas
Dritzehn, Hans Riffe, and Andreas Heilmann, included gem-polishing, the
manufacture of looking-glasses and the art of printing, as we learn from the
records of a lawsuit between Gutenberg and the brothers Georg and Klaus
Dritzehn. In these records, Gutenberg appears distinctly as technical
originator and manager of the business. Concerning the "new art", one witness
states that, in his capacity of goldsmith, he had supplied in 1436 "printing
requisites" to the value of 100 gulden; mention is also made of a press
constructed by Konrad Saspach, a turner, with peculiar appliances (screws).
The suit was therefore obviously concerned with experiments in typography, but
no printed matter that can be traced to these experiments has so far come to
light.

The appearance at Avignon of the silversmith Waldvogel, who taught "artificial
writing" there in 1444, and possessed steel alphabets, a press with iron
screws and other contrivances, seems to have had some connection with the
experiments of Gutenberg. As of Gutenberg's, so of Waldvogel's early
experiments, no sample has been preserved. In the year 1437 Gutenberg was sued
for "breach of promise of marriage" by a young patrician girl of Strasburg,
Ennel zur eisernen Tür. There is nothing to show whether this action led to a
marriage or not, but Gutenberg left Strasburg, presumably about 1444. He seems
to have perfected at enormous expense his invention shortly afterwards, as is
shown by the oldest specimens of printing that have come down to us
("Weltgerichtsgedicht", i.e. the poem on the last judgment, and the "Calendar
for 1448"). The fact that Arnolt Gelthuss, a relative of Gutenberg, lent him
150 gulden in the year 1448 at Mainz points to the same conclusion. In 1450
Gutenberg formed a partnership with the wealthy burgher, Johann Fust of Mainz,
for the purpose of completing his contrivance and of printing the so-called
"42-line Bible", a task which was finished in the years 1453-1455 at the Hof
zum Humbrecht (today Schustergasse, 18, 20). Fust brought suit in 1455 to
recover the 2000 gulden he had advanced and obtained judgment for a portion of
the amount with interest. As a result of Gutenberg's insolvency, the machinery
and type which he had made and pledged to Fust became the property of the
latter. In addition to the types for the 42-line Bible, the mortgage covered
the copious stock of type which had evidently been already prepared for the
edition of the Psalter, which was printed by Fust and Schäffer in August,
1457. This included new type in two sizes, as well as the world-famous initial
letters with their ingenious contrivance for two-color printing. About 1457
Gutenberg also parted with his earliest-constructed founts of type, which he
had made for the 36-line Bible, and which were in existence as early as the
fourth decade of the century. Long before this Bible was printed the type had
been used in an edition of the "Weltgerichtsgedicht", in the "Calendar for
1448", in editions of Donatus, and various other printed works. Most of this
type fell into the possession of Albrecht Pfister in Bamberg. Gutenberg next
manufactured a new printer's outfit with the assistance he received from
Conrad Humery, a distinguished and wealthy doctor of law, leader of the
popular party, and chancellor of the council. This outfit comprised a set of
small types fashioned after the round cursive handwriting used in books at
that time and ornamented with an extraordinary number of ligatures. The type
was used in the so-called "Catholicon" (grammar and alphabetic lexicon) in the
year 1460, and also in several small books printed in Eltville down to the
year 1472 by the brothers Echtermünze, relatives of Gutenberg.

Little more is known of Gutenberg. We are aware that his declining years were
spent in the court of Archbishop Adolf of Nassau, to whose suite he was
appointed on 18 January, 1465. The distinction thus conferred on him carried
with it allowances of clothing and other necessities which saved him from
actual want. In all likelihood he died at Mainz towards the end of 1467 or the
beginning of 1468, and was buried probably as a tertiary in the Franciscan
church, no longer in existence.

A cloud of deep obscurity thus conceals for the most part the life of the
inventor, his personality, the time and place of his invention, and
particularly the part he personally took in the production of the printed
works that have come down to us from this period. On the other hand, expert
research has thrown much light on the printed works connected with the name of
Gutenberg, and has established more definitely the nature of his invention.
Mainly from the technical examination of the impressions of the earliest
Gutenberg productions, the "Poem of the Last Judgment" and the "Calendar for
1448", it has been shown that he effected substantial improvements in methods
of printing and in its technical auxiliaries, especially in the printer's ink
and in the building of printing presses. Of course he had to invent neither
letter-cutting, nor the die, nor the mode of obtaining impressions from the
die. All these had been long known, and were in common use in Gutenberg's
time, as is shown by the steel dies of the goldsmiths and bookbinders, as well
as the punches used for stamping letters and ornamental designs in the
striking of coins and seals. The mechanical manifolding of handwriting also
had been known for a long time. The prints of the so-called Formschneider
(that is, engravers on wood), especially the playing-cards, pictures of the
saints, ad block books, prove beyond question that writing had been reproduced
in manifold by means of woodcuts as early as the beginning of the fifteenth
century. But with woodcutting and its technic Gutenberg's invention had
nothing to do; Gutenberg was a goldsmith, a worker in metals, and a lapidary,
and his invention both in conception and execution shows the worker in metals.
Gutenberg multiplied the separate types in metal moulds. The types thus
produced he built in such a way that they might be aligned like the manuscript
he was copying.

His aim, technically and æsthetically so extremely difficult, was the
mechanical reproduction of the characters used in the manuscripts, i.e. the
books of the time. The works printed by Gutenberg plainly prove that the types
used in them were made by a casting process fundamentally the same as the
method of casting by hand in vogue today. The letter-patterns were cut on
small steel rods termed patrices, and the dies thus made were impressed on
some soft metal, such as copper, producing the matrices, which were cast in
the mould in such a manner as to form the "face" and "body" of the type at one
operation. The printing type represents therefore a multiplicity of cast
reproductions of the original die, or patrix. In addition to this technical
process of type-founding, Gutenberg found himself confronted with a problem
hardly less difficult, namely, the copying of the beautiful calligraphy found
in the books of the fifteenth century, constantly bearing in mind that it must
be possible to engrave and to cast the individual forms, since the types, when
set, must be substantially replicas of the model. The genius of Gutenberg
found a brilliant solution to this problem in all its complicated details.
Even in the earliest types he made (e.g. in the Calendar for 1448), we can
recognize not only the splendid reproduction of the actual forms of the
original handwriting, but also the extremely artistic remodeling of individual
letters necessitated by technical requirements. In other words, we see the
work of a calligraphic artist of the highest order. He applied the well-tested
rules of the calligraphist's art to the casting of types, observing in
particular the rudimentary principle of always leaving the same space between
the vertical columns of the text. Consequently Gutenberg prepared two markedly
different forms of each letter, the normal separate form, and the compound or
linked form which, being joined closely to the type next to it, avoids gaps.
It is significant that this unique kind of letter is to be found in only four
types, and these four are associated with Gutenberg. No typographer in the
fifteenth century was able to follow the ideal of the inventor, and
consequently research attributes to Gutenberg types of this character, namely,
the two Bible and the two Psalter types. Especially in the magnificent design
and in the technical preparation of the Psalter of 1457 do we recognize the
pure, ever-soaring inventive genius of Gutenberg which achieved so marked a
technical improvement in the two-coloured Psalter initials. The precision and
richness that had now become possible in colour-printing effected a
substantial advance over the standard displayed in other editions.

Gutenberg's invention spread rapidly after the political catastrophe of 1462
(the conquest of the city of Mainz by Adolf of Nassau). It met in general with
a ready, any an enthusiastic reception in the centres of culture. The names of
more than 1000 printers, mostly of German origin, have come down to us from
the fifteenth century. In Italy we find well over 100 German printers, in
France 30, in Spain 26. Many of the earliest printers outside of Germany had
learned their art in Mainz, where they were known as "goldsmiths". Among those
who were undeniably pupils of Gutenberg, and who probably were also assistants
in the Gutenberg-Fust printing house were (besides Schäffer), Numeister,
Keffer, and Ruppel; Mentel in Strasburg (before 1460), Pfister in Bamberg
(1461), Sweynheim in Subiaco and Rome (1464), and Johann von Speyer in Venice
(1469).

The invention of Gutenberg should be classed with the greatest events in the
history of the world. It caused a revolution in the development of culture,
equalled by hardly any other incident in the Christian Era. Facility in
disseminating the treasure of the intellect was a necessary condition for the
rapid development of the sciences in modern times. Happening as it did just at
the time when science was becoming more secularized and its cultivation no
longer resigned almost entirely to the monks, it may be said that the age was
pregnant with this invention. Thus not only is Gutenberg's art inseparable
from the progress of modern science, but it has also been an indispensable
factor in the education of the people at large. Culture and knowledge, until
then considered aristocratic privileges peculiar to certain classes, were
popularized by typography, although in the process it unfortunately brought
about an internal revolution in the intellectual world in the direction of
what is profane and free from restraint.

FALKENSTEIN, Gesch. der Buchdruckerkunst (2nd ed., Leipzig, 1856); DE VINNE,
Invention of Printing (London, 1877); VAN DER LINDE, Gesch. der Erfind. der
Buchdruckkunst (Berlin, 1886); HARTWIG (etc., etc.), Festschrift zum 500 jähr.
Geburstage v. J. Gutenberg (Mainz, 1900); also publications of the GUTENBERG
SOCIETY (Mainz, 1902-).

HEINRICH WILHELM WALLAU
Transcribed by Bryan R. Johnson

>From the Catholic Encyclopedia, copyright © 1913 by the Encyclopedia Press,
Inc. Electronic version copyright © 1997 by New Advent, Inc.<<





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