Page:De Vinne, Invention of Printing (1876).djvu/510

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The Spread of Printing.

Gouda and Antwerp. Gerard Leeu, the most industrious[1] printer of his time, began to print at Gouda in 1477, but he went to Antwerp in 1484, where he continued to print until his death in 1493. Imitating Verard of Paris, he gave his later years to the translation and printing of romances and popular books. In 1493, he began to print Caxton's Chronicle of England, in English and obviously for sale in England, but he died before the work was finished.[2]


IN ITALY.


This is the order in which printing was established in Italy:

Place. Printer. Date.
Subiaco Sweinheym & Pannartz 1465
Rome Sweinheym & Pannartz 1467
Venice John de Spira 1469
Milan Anthony Zarot 1470
Foligno John Nummeister 1470
Trevi John Reynard 1470
Verona John of Verona 1470
Treviso Gerard de Lisa 1471
Bologna Balthazar Azzoguidi 1471
Ferrara Andrew Belfort 1471
Naples Sixtus Riessinger 1471
Pavia Antonio de Carcano 1471
Florence Bernard Cennini 1471
Fivizano Jacobus and others 1472
Padua Balt. de Valdezochio 1472
Mantua Pietro Adam de Michael 1472
Place. Printer. Date.
Mondovi Antonio Mathiae, et al. 1472
Jesi Frederic Veronensis 1472
Cremona Paravisinus, et al. 1472
Parma Andrew Portiglia 1473
Brescia Thomas Ferrandus 1473
Messina Henry Alding 1473
Vicenza John de Reno 1473
Como De Orcho, et al. 1474
Turin Fabri and John de Petro 1474
Genoa Matthew Moravus, et al. 1474
Modena John Vurster 1475
Trent Hermann Schindeleyp 1476
Palermo Andrew de Wormatia 1477
Ascoli William de Linis 1477
Lucca Bart. de Civitali 1477
Casal William de Canepa 1481

Cotton, in his Typographical Gazetteer, specifies thirty-seven other places in Italy in which printing was done before 1500.

  1. He printed eight books in 1478; seven in 1479; nine in 1480; ten in 1482. In fifteen days he printed three books, one of 85, and another of 305 leaves. During the seventeen years he was in business he printed 150 books. His last book at Gouda was dated June 23, 1484; on the 18th of September, 1484, he published at Antwerp, a book of 400 pages. Fifteen days after, he completed another book. During the first six months of 1485, he published one volume each month. One of these books had 34, and another 76 engravings specially cut for the work.
  2. The colophon of this book is a queer piece of mysterious English: … Enprentyd in the duchye of Braband, in the town of Andewarpe, in the yere of our Lord M. CCCC. XCIIII. By maistir Gerard de Leew, a man of grete wysedom in all maner of kunyng: whych nowe is come from Lyfe unto the doth, which is grete harme for many of poure man. On whas sowle God almythy for hys hygh grace haue mercy. Amen. Van der Meersch. Imprimeurs Belges et Néerlandais, vol. I, p. 119.