Early Illustrated Books. Alfred W. Pollard

Early Illustrated Books - Alfred W. Pollard


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       Alfred W. Pollard

      Early Illustrated Books

      A History of the Decoration and Illustration of Books in the 15th and 16th Centuries

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066219635

       Preface

       EARLY ILLUSTRATED BOOKS

       CHAPTER I

       RUBRISHERS AND ILLUMINATORS

       CHAPTER II

       THE COMPLETION OF THE PRINTED BOOK

       CHAPTER III

       GERMANY—1470-1486

       CHAPTER IV

       GERMANY, FROM 1486

       CHAPTER V

       ITALY—I THE FIRST ILLUSTRATED BOOKS AND THOSE OF VENICE

       CHAPTER VI

       ITALY—II FLORENCE AND MILAN—ITALIAN PRINTERS' MARKS

       CHAPTER VII

       FRANCE—FIFTEENTH CENTURY

       CHAPTER VIII

       THE FRENCH BOOKS OF HOURS

       CHAPTER IX

       HOLLAND

       CHAPTER X

       SPAIN

       CHAPTER XI

       ENGLAND

       INDEX

       Table of Contents

      This little book was written nearly a quarter of a century ago in the enthusiasm of a first acquaintance with a fascinating subject, and with an honest endeavour to see for myself as many as possible of the books I set out to describe. If I had tried to rewrite it now I might have made it more interesting to experts, but at the cost of destroying whatever merit it possesses as an introductory sketch. I have therefore been content to correct, as thoroughly as I could, its many small errors (not all of my own making), more especially those due to the ascription of books to impossible dates and printers, which before the publication of Robert Proctor's Index to the Early Printed Books in the British Museum, in 1898, was very difficult to avoid. In these emendations, and in getting the titles of foreign books into better form, I have had much kind help from Mr. Victor Scholderer of the British Museum. I am grateful also to Mr. E. Gordon Duff for his leave to use again the chapter on English Illustrated Books which he kindly wrote for me for the first edition.

      A. W. P.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      No point in the history of printing has been more rightly insisted on than that the early printers were compelled to make the very utmost of their new art in order to justify its right to exist. When a generation had passed by, when the scribes trained in the first half of the fifteenth century had died or given up the struggle, when printing-presses had invaded the very monasteries themselves, and clever boys no longer regarded penmanship as a possible profession, then, but not till then, printers could afford to be careless, and speedily began to avail themselves of their new license. In the early days of the art no such license was possible, and the striking similarity in the appearance of the printed books and manuscripts produced contemporaneously in any given city or district, is the best possible proof of the success with which the early printers competed with the most expert of the professional scribes.

      All this is trite enough, but we are somewhat less frequently reminded that, after some magnificent experiments by Fust and Schoeffer at Mainz, the earliest printers deliberately elected to do battle at first with the scribes alone, and that in the fifteenth century the scribes were very far, indeed, from being the only persons engaged in the production of books. The subdivision of labour is not by any means a modern invention; on the contrary, it is impossible to read a list of the medieval guilds in any important town without being struck with the minuteness of the sections into which some apparently quite simple callings were split up. Of this subdivision of labour, the complex art of book-production was naturally an instance. For a proof of this, we need go no further than the records of the Guild of St. John the Evangelist at Bruges, in which, according to Mr. Blades's quotation of the extracts made by Van Praet, members of at least fourteen branches of industry connected with the manufacture of books joined together for common objects. In the fifteenth century a book of devotions, commissioned by some wealthy book-lover, such as the Duke of Bedford, might be written by one man, have its rubrics supplied by another, its small initial letters and borders by a third, and then be sent to some famous miniaturist in France or Flanders for final completion. The scribe only supplied the groundwork, all the rest was


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