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Gutenberg Bible


 

The Gutenberg Bible (also known as the 42-line Bible, and as the Mazarin Bible) is a print of the Latin Vulgate translation of the Bible that was printed by its namesake, Johann Gutenberg, in Mainz, Germany. It was mass-produced, with the print-run starting on February 23, 1455, using moveable type. This Bible is the most famous incunabulum and its production marked the beginning of the mass production of books in the West.

Related Topics:
Latin - Vulgate - Bible - Johann Gutenberg - Mainz - Germany - February 23 - 1455 - Moveable type - Incunabulum - Mass production - Book - The West

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A very complete copy comprises 1282 pages; most were bound in two volumes.

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It is believed that about 180 copies of the Bible were produced, 40 on vellum and 140 on hemp paper, a number which boggled minds in societies which, from time immemorial, had to produce copies of written works labouriously by hand. Gutenberg produced these Bibles (which were printed, then rubricated and illuminated by hand), over a period of three years, the time it would have taken to produce one copy in a Scriptorium. Because of the hand illumination, each copy is unique. Two-color printing techniques, which would have eliminated the need for rubrication, were developed later. As of 2003, the number of known extant Gutenberg Bibles includes eleven complete copies on vellum, one copy of the New Testament only on vellum, and 48 substantially complete integral copies on paper, with another divided copy on paper. The country with the most copies is Germany, which has twelve. Four cities have two copies: Paris, New York, Leipzig, and Moscow; London has three copies plus the Bagford Fragment.

Related Topics:
Vellum - Hemp - Paper - Time immemorial - Rubricated - Illuminated - Scriptorium - As of 2003 - New Testament

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