October 2, 2020 – Printer's Marks

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Dublin Core

Title

October 2, 2020 – Printer's Marks

Subject

Tufts University. Tisch Library. Special Collections

Description

In the 16th century guild regulations forbade women to train as printers or start presses, but they could inherit and run printing houses as widows. Charlotte Guillard (d. 1557) worked at the important Soleil d’Or press in Paris from 1502 until her death, running it through two periods of widowhood, the second lasting the final twenty years of her life.

In an age when copyright was weak or non-existent, and pirated editions were commonplace, the printer’s mark asserted identity, authenticity, and authority. These are from the 15th through early 17th centuries.

1. Charlotte Guillard’s mark
2. Scholar-printer Aldus Manutius, among whose innovations were the Italic font and the first practicable Greek font.
3. Henri Estienne (Stephanus), whose 1578 edition of Plato’s works established the system of reference and organization used to this day.
4. Ottaviano Scoto
5. Ioannes Maire
6. Paolo Meietti
7. Alessandro Bindoni
8. Giunti family
9. Andreas Torresanus & Bartolomaeus de Blavis
10. Bartlomeo de gli Alberti

Creator

Christopher Barbour

Source

Instagram: @Tischlibrary

Publisher

Tufts University. Tisch Library

Date

October 2, 2020

Contributor

Anna Minasyan

Format

image/jpg

Language

eng

Type

image

Coverage

2020
16th Century

Citation

Christopher Barbour, “October 2, 2020 – Printer's Marks,” Tufts Libraries Omeka, accessed April 30, 2024, https://omeka.library.tufts.edu/items/show/5295.