Eric White (Princeton University): “Evidence for the Earliest Export of Printing from Mainz.” (Houghton Library-Medieval Studies Lecture in Early Book History)

Date and Time

April 10, 2023
05:30PM - 07:00PM EDT

Location

Houghton Library, Harvard Yard. Registration encouraged, but not required.

By 1450, Johannes Gutenberg was operating the first movable-type printing press in Mainz, Germany. In this lecture, White explores the available evidence for the long-distance export of printed materials in Europe prior to the pivotal dispersion of printers from Mainz in 1462. It includes, for purposes of comparison, examples from Italian editions from the mid-1460s that represent Italy’s earliest upstream marketing of printed books across northern Europe. Whereas many editions produced during the earliest period of the typographic revolution were never intended for export abroad, the first “international best-sellers” spread awareness of the new technology across Europe and accelerated its expansion and impact.

Reception to follow. Registration is encouraged but not required. More information.

In conjunction with his lecture, White will also be leading two hands-on workshops at Houghton on Thursday, April 13 on "Looking at 15th-Century Printing Here and Now, but in Terms of There and Then." Register here for either the morning or afternoon sessions.

About the speaker: Eric Marshall White, PhD, is the Scheide Librarian and Assistant University Librarian for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts at Princeton University Library. He specializes in the study of early European printed books and the material and historical evidence of their use and survival. His publications include Editio princeps: A History of the Gutenberg Bible (2017), which won SHARP’s DeLong Prize as the year’s outstanding book in the field of book history.