Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T00:47:34.085Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

8 - Importation of printed books into England and Scotland

from TECHNIQUE AND TRADE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Get access

Summary

The printed book may be seen as the natural outgrowth of several factors which were beginning to influence the manuscript book by the fifteenth century: specialization, standardization and speculation. All three contributed to the rapidly expanding market in books, which importation sought to satisfy. Manuscript books of hours produced in the Netherlands for an English market show evidence of standardization in the decoration programme, and of speculation in the shields left blank, to be filled in with the coats-of-arms of prospective owners. Rouen also supported a specialist book-trade in, among other texts, books of hours, which seems to have supplied Scotland as well as England. On native ground, there was routine production of Chaucer, Lydgate and Hoccleve texts in the fifteenth century which observed a scribal economy in a standardization of format for those texts. A centre in Suffolk ‘seems to have specialized in issuing Lydgate’s poems in copies ranging from the luxurious to the more routine’. Thus specialization and standardization in some sorts of manuscript text already led to a speculative market before the introduction of printing.

Unlike manuscripts, which were produced in England and Scotland as well as on the Continent, no printed books were produced on native soil before Caxton set up his shop in Westminster in 1476, more than twenty years after the introduction of printing in Mainz. It was not until the sixteenth century that books were printed in Scotland. Thus any demand for printed books from the 1450s to 1476 – which, as we shall see, was considerable – had to be met from abroad.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Armstrong, E. 1979English purchases of printed books from the Continent 1465–1526’, English Historical Review, 94.Google Scholar
Avis, F. C. 1973England’s use of Antwerp printers 1500–1540’, Gutenberg-Jahrbuch 1973.Google Scholar
Bietenholz, Peter G. 1971 Basle and France in the sixteenth century, Toronto.
Cherry, T. A. F. 1963The library of Henry Sinclair, Bishop of Ross, 1560–1565’, Bibliotheck, 4, 1.Google Scholar
Chrisman, M. Usher 1982 Lay culture, learned culture: books and social change in Strasbourg, 1480–1559, New Haven CT.
Duff, E. G. 1905 A century of the English book trade. Short notices of all printers, stationers, bookbinders, and others connected with it from the issue of the first dated book in 1457 to the incorporation of the Company of Stationers in 1557, London (rpt 1948).
Durkan, J. 1953The beginnings of humanism in Scotland’, Innes Rev., 4.Google Scholar
Durkan, J. 1959The cultural background in sixteenth-century Scotland’, Innes Rev., 10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Durkan, J. and Ross, A. 1961 Early Scottish libraries, Glasgow. (Supplements: Durkan, J., Bibliothek, 4 (1963); 9 (1978); 10 (1981); 11 (1982); 12 (1985).)
Edwards, A. S. G., , Miller C. H. and , Rodgers K. G. (eds.), English poems, Four last things, Life of John Picus, earl of Mirandula, 1997; ii.
Emden, A. B., A biographical register of the University of Cambridge to 1500, Cambridge 1963.
Emden, A. B., A biographical register of the University of Oxford to 1500, 3 vols., Oxford 1957–9.
Foley, S. M. and Miller, C. H. (eds.), The Answer to a poisoned Book, 1985.
Guy, J. A., Keen, R., Miller, C. H. and McGugan, R. (eds.), The Debellation of Salem and Bizance, 1987.
Halyburton, A. 1867 The Ledger of Andrew Halyburton. Conservator of the privileges of the Scottish nation in the Netherlands, 1492–1503, Edinburgh.
Headley, J. M. (ed.), Responsio ad Lutherum, 1969.
Hellinga, L. 1991aImportation of books printed on the Continent into England and Scotland before c. 1520’, in Hindman, 1991.
Hume, A. 1973English Protestant books printed abroad, 1525–1535; an annotated bibliography’, The Yale edition of the works of St Thomas More, New Haven and London: I.
(Ker, ); Supplement to the second edn, Royal Historical Society, London 1987 (ed. Watson, ).
Ker, N. R. and Watson, A. G. 1964–87 Medieval libraries of Great Britain: a list of surviving books, 2nd edn, Royal Historical Society, London 1964
Kinney, D. (ed.), In defense of humanism: Letters to Dorp, Oxford, Lee and a Monk; Historia Richardi Tertii, 1986, VIII.
Kronenberg, M. E. 1929Notes on English printing in the Low Countries (early sixteenth century)’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 4th ser., 9.Google Scholar
Lawler, T. M. C., Marc’hadour, G. and Marius, R. C. (eds.), A Dialogue concerning heresies, 1981.
(Madan, ); and ‘Notes on the former edition’, Oxford Historical Society 16 (= Collectanea, 2nd ser.), 1890 (Bradshaw, ).Google Scholar
Madan, F. and Bradshaw, H. (eds.) 1885–90The Day-Book of John Dorne, bookseller in Oxford A. D. 1520’, Oxford Historical Society 5 (= Collectanea, 1st ser.), 1885, and ‘Corrections and additions ….Google Scholar
Manley, F. M., Marc’hadour, G., Marius, R. C. and Miller, C. H. (eds.), Letter to Bugenhagen, Supplication of souls, Letter against Frith, 1990.
Martin, H.-J. 1982Classements et conjectures’, in H.-J. MartinChartier, R. and Vivet, J. P. (eds.), 1982.
Meale, C.M. 1989Patrons, buyers and owners: book production and social status’, in Griffiths, J. and Pearsall, D. A., Book production and publishing in Britain 1375–1475, Cambridge 1989.Google Scholar
Miller, C. H., Bradner, L., Lynch, C. A. and Oliver, R. P. (eds.), Latin poems, 1984; v.
Mitchell, W. S. 1955 A history of Scottish bookbinding, Edinburgh and London.
Mitchell, W. S., Catalogue of the incunabula in Aberdeen University library, Edinburgh 1968, , W. S. 1961Some German bindings in Aberdeen University Library’, Festschrift Ernst Kyriss, Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Oates, J. C. T. 1954 A catalogue of the fifteenth-century printed books in the University Library Cambridge, Cambridge.
Plomer, H. R. 1923–4The importation of books into England in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries: an examination of some customs rolls’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 4th ser., 4.Google Scholar
Pollard, G. and Ehrman, A. 1965 The distribution of books by catalogue from the invention of printing to A. D. 1800, Roxburghe Club, London.
Rhodes, D. E. 1982 A catalogue of incunabula in all the libraries of Oxford outside the Bodleian, Oxford.
Roberts, R. J. 1997Importing books for Oxford, 1500–1640’, in Carley, J. P. and Tite, C. G. C. (eds.), Books and collectors 1200–1700, London.Google Scholar
Ross, A. 1969Libraries of the Scottish Blackfriars 1481–1560’, Innes Rev., 20.Google Scholar
Scholderer, V. 1966Printing at Venice to the end of 1481’, in Rhodes, D. E. (ed.), Fifty essays in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century bibliography, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Schuster, L. A., Marius, R. C., Lusardi, J. P. and Schoeck, R. J. (eds.), The Confutation of Tyndale≈s answer, 1973.
Stuart, J. 1872 Records of the monastery of Kinross, Edinburgh.
Sylvester, R. S. (ed.), The History of King Richard III, 1963; iii.i.
Thompson, C. R. (ed.), Translations of Lucian, 1974; iii.ii.
Trapp, J. B. (ed.), The Apology, 1979.
Trapp, J. B. 1991 Erasmus, Colet and More: the early Tudor Humanists and their books (Panizzi Lectures 1990), London.
Watson, R. 1984 The Playfair hours: a late fifteenth-century illuminated manuscript from Rouen, London.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×