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How a German city changed how we read

39 点作者 montrose将近 7 年前

3 条评论

blattimwind将近 7 年前
Couple notes:<p>- The Gutenberg bible is still a rather unique book. It used many specialized ligatures and used variations of letters to achieve a typesetting quality that&#x27;s still regarded a benchmark today. In total some 300 different glyphs have been used (for a latin text).<p>- It took almost two decades, a lot of people and money to develop this technology. Two decades later it has spread across all of Europe. This is a typical pattern of groundbreaking inventions you can observe many times across history.<p>- The major improvement devised by Gutenberg was not press printing, but the movable type. Presses have been used for printing before, though not much in Europe. Similarly, printing wasn&#x27;t really new, but carving one wood block for each individual page was an insane amount of work, and even beech wood (fun fact: beech is called Buche in Germany, and that&#x27;s the root of the word Buch &#x2F; book, both in English and German. Buchstabe (letter) is related as well.) didn&#x27;t last that long.
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WalterBright将近 7 年前
&gt; Of his original print run of about 150 to 180 Bibles, only 48 remain in the world today.<p>Only? It&#x27;s remarkable that any survived!
Tomte将近 7 年前
The publisher Taschen Verlag has just published a facsimile of the exemplar in Göttingen (which they claim to be the best, both in paper quality and illustrations).<p>ISBN 978-3-8365-6221-8
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