Revision as of 10:18, 3 April 2010 editGun Powder Ma (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers16,796 edits add two pics and quote box← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 16:06, 27 December 2024 edit undoEem dik doun in toene (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users8,114 edits Undid revision 1265568590 by 108.51.56.162 (talk) unexplained editTags: Undo Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit | ||
(900 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Earliest major book printed in Europe}} | |||
], bought by ] in 1847. The first to come to the USA, national folklore has it that the officers at the New York Customs House removed their hats on seeing it.]] | |||
{{Use dmy dates |date=January 2024}} | |||
{{Use British English |date=January 2024}} | |||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Gutenberg Bible}} | |||
]; purchased by ] in 1847, it was the first Gutenberg Bible to be acquired by a United States citizen.]] | |||
]]] | |||
The '''Gutenberg Bible''', also known as the '''42-line Bible''', the '''Mazarin Bible''' or the '''B42''', was the earliest major ] printed in Europe using mass-produced metal ]. It marked the start of the "]" and the age of printed books in the West. The book is valued and revered for its high aesthetic and artistic qualities<ref name="Davies" /> and its historical significance. | |||
The Gutenberg Bible is an edition of the Latin ] printed in the 1450s by ] in ], in present-day ]. Out of either 158 or 180 copies that were originally printed, 49 survive in at least substantial portion, 21 of them in entirety. They are thought to be among the world's most valuable books, although no complete copy has been sold since 1978.<ref name="MSNBC" /><ref name="Luxist.com" /> In March 1455, the future ] wrote that he had seen pages from the Gutenberg Bible displayed in ] to promote the edition. | |||
The '''Gutenberg Bible''' (also known as the '''42-line Bible''', the '''Mazarin Bible''' or the '''B42''') was the first major book printed with a ] ], marking the start of the "]" and the age of the printed book. Widely hailed for its high aesthetic and artistic qualities,<ref name="Davies"/> the book has iconic status in the ]. It is an edition of the ], printed by ], in ], ] in the 1450s. There are still twenty-one complete volumes extant. | |||
The ] is also sometimes referred to as a Gutenberg Bible, but |
The ], said to be the second printed Bible, is also sometimes referred to as a Gutenberg Bible, but may be the work of another printer.<ref name="bl">British Library, </ref> | ||
==Text== | |||
==Relationship to earlier Bibles== | |||
] at ] in ]]] | |||
The Gutenberg Bible is an edition of the ], a Latin translation of the ] (]) and the Greek ] by St ]. The text contains emendations from the ] tradition, and further divergences.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/textbible.html |title=The text of the Bible |author=<!--staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=<!--no date apparent--> |website=bl.uk |publisher=] |access-date=6 November 2016 |archive-date=25 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161025175241/http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/textbible.html |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
== Printing history == | |||
In appearance the Gutenberg Bible closely resembles the large ] Bibles that were being produced at the time. The ], probably produced in Mainz in 1452-3, has been suggested as the particular model Gutenberg used.<ref name="Estes"> {{cite book | last = Estes | first = Richard | title = The 550th Anniversary Pictorial Census of the Gutenberg Bible | publisher = Gutenberg Research Center | date = 2005 | page=151 }} </ref> Around this time large Bibles, designed to be read from a lectern, were returning to popularity for the first time since the twelfth century. In the intervening period, small hand-held Bibles had been usual.<ref> {{cite book | last = de Hamel |first = Christopher | title = The Book: a History of the Bible | publisher = Phaidon Press | year = 2001 |page = 194 | isbn = 0714837741 }}</ref> | |||
While it is unlikely that any of Gutenberg's early publications would bear his name, the initial expense of press equipment and materials and of the work to be done before the Bible was ready for sale suggests that he may have started with more lucrative texts, including several religious documents, a German poem, and some editions of ]'s '']'', a popular Latin grammar school book.<ref name="Man">{{cite book |last=Man |first=John |title=Gutenberg: How One Man Remade the World with Words |publisher=John Wiley and Sons, Inc. |location=New York |isbn=0-471-21823-5 |year=2002 |url=https://archive.org/details/gutenberghowonem00john }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Klooster, John W.|title=Icons of invention : the makers of the modern world from Gutenberg to Gates|date=2009|publisher=Greenwood Press|isbn=978-0-313-34744-3|location=Santa Barbara, Calif.|oclc=647903993}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Gowan|first1=Al|last2=Meggs|first2=Philip B.|last3=Ashwin|first3=Clive|date=1984|title=A History of Graphic Design|journal=Design Issues|volume=1|issue=1|pages=87|doi=10.2307/1511549|jstor=1511549|issn=0747-9360}}</ref> | |||
Preparation of the Bible probably began soon after 1450, and the first finished copies were available in 1454 or 1455.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/permanent/gutenberg/html/4.html |title=The Gutenberg Bible |work=utexas.edu |access-date=2007-03-28 |archive-date=2013-01-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130128035330/http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/permanent/gutenberg/html/4.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> It is not known exactly how long the Bible took to print. The first precisely datable printing is Gutenberg's ] which certainly existed by 22 October 1454.<ref>{{cite book |page=11 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rXSAvawdIZIC&pg=PA11 |title=Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the IFLA Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009 |isbn=978-3-11-025530-0 |last1=Wagner |first1=Bettina |last2=Reed |first2=Marcia |date=2010-12-23| publisher=Walter de Gruyter }}</ref> | |||
The text of the Gutenberg Bible is traditional, falling within the Paris Vulgate group of texts.<ref>British Library, accessed 4 July 2009</ref> Manuscript Bibles all had texts that differed slightly, and the copy used by Gutenberg as the exemplar for his Bible has not been discovered.<ref name='Needham'>{{cite book |author=Needham, Paul |chapter=The Changing Shape of the Vulgate Bible in Fifteenth-Century Printing Shops | pages=53–70 |editor=Saenger, Paul and Van Kampen, Kimberly | title=The Bible as Book:the First Printed Editions |publisher=British Library | year=1999 |isbn=0712346015}}</ref> | |||
Gutenberg made three significant changes during the printing process.<ref name="3Phases">British Library, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111014033935/http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/threephases.html |date=2011-10-14 }} accessed 4 July 2009</ref> | |||
==Printing history== | |||
{{quote box | |||
|width = 260px | |||
|align = left | |||
|bgcolor = #c6dbf7 | |||
|title = | |||
|quote = "All that has been written to me about that marvelous man seen at Frankfurt is true. I have not seen complete Bibles but only a number of ] of various books of the Bible. The script was very neat and legible, not at all difficult to follow—your grace would be able to read it without effort, and indeed without glasses." | |||
|source = Future pope ] in a letter to Cardinal ], March 1455<ref>{{harvnb|Childress|2008|p=62}}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
The bible was not Gutenberg's first work.<ref name="Man">{{cite book | last=Man | first=John | title=Gutenberg: How One Man Remade the World with Words | origyear=2002 | publisher=John Wiley and Sons, Inc. | location=New York | isbn=0-471-21823-5}}</ref> | |||
Preparation of it probably began soon after 1450, and the first finished copies were available in 1454 or 1455.<ref></ref> However, it is not known exactly how long the Bible took to print. | |||
Gutenberg made three significant changes during the printing process.<ref>British Library, accessed 4 July 2009</ref> The first sheets were ] by being passed twice through the ], using black and then red ink. This was soon abandoned, with spaces being left for rubrication to be added by hand. | |||
] | ] | ||
Some time later, after more sheets had been printed, the number of lines per page was increased from 40 to 42, presumably to save paper. |
Some time later, after more sheets had been printed, the number of lines per page was increased from 40 to 42, presumably to save paper. Therefore, pages 1 to 9 and pages 256 to 265, presumably the first ones printed, have 40 lines each. Page 10 has 41, and from there on the 42 lines appear. The increase in line number was achieved by decreasing the ], rather than increasing the printed area of the page. Finally, the print run was increased, necessitating resetting those pages which had already been printed. The new sheets were all reset to 42 lines per page. Consequently, there are two distinct settings in ] 1–32 and 129–158 of volume I and folios 1–16 and 162 of volume II.<ref name="3Phases" /><ref>British Library, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090907042016/http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/flash4.html |date=2009-09-07 }}: pictures showing differences between the Keio copy (40 lines per page) and the British Library copy (42 lines per page) in Genesis 1. Accessed 10 July 2009</ref> | ||
Finally, the print run was increased, probably to 180 copies, necessitating resetting those pages which had already been printed. The new sheets were all reset to 42 lines per page. Consequently, there are two distinct settings in ]s 1-32 and 129-158 of volume I and folios 1-16 and 162 of volume II.<ref>British Library, accessed 4 July 2009.</ref><ref>British Library, : pictures showing differences between differences between the Keio copy (40 lines per page) and the British Library copy (42 lines per page) in Genesis 1. Accessed 10 July 2009</ref> | |||
Our most reliable information about the Bible's date comes from a letter. In March ], ] wrote that he had seen pages from the Gutenberg Bible, being displayed to promote the edition, in Frankfurt.<ref>British Library, accessed 10 July 2009</ref>. | |||
It is believed that in total 180 copies of the Bible were produced, 135 on paper and 45 on ].<ref>British Library, accessed 21 February 2010</ref> | |||
The most reliable information about the Bible's date comes from a letter. In March 1455, the future ] wrote that he had seen pages from the Gutenberg Bible, being displayed to promote the edition, in Frankfurt.<ref>British Library, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200918015731/http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/bibleyears.html |date=2020-09-18 }} accessed 10 July 2009</ref> It is not known how many copies were printed, with the 1455 letter citing sources for both 158 and 180 copies. Scholars today think that examination of surviving copies suggests that somewhere between 160 and 185 copies were printed, with about three-quarters on paper and the others on ].<ref name="Long lost">{{cite journal |author=White, Eric Marshall |year=2002 |title=Long Lost Leaves from Gutenberg's Mons-Trier II Bible |journal=Gutenberg Jahrbuch |volume=77 |pages=19–36}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Lane Ford, Margaret |chapter=Deconstruction and Reconstruction: Detecting and Interpreting Sophisticated Copies |pages=291–304 |editor1=Wagner, Bettina |editor2=Reed, Marcia |title=Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the Ifla Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009 |publisher=De Gruyter Sur |year=2010 |isbn=978-3-11-025324-5}}</ref> | |||
==The production process: 'Das Werk der Bücher'== | |||
] copy of the Gutenberg Bible owned by the U.S. ]]] | |||
==The production process: ''Das Werk der Bücher''== | |||
In a legal paper, written after completion of the Bible, Gutenberg refers to the process as 'Das Werk der Bücher' :The work of the books. He had invented the ] and was the first European to print with ]<ref>British Library, accessed 10 July 2009</ref>. But his greatest achievement was arguably demonstrating that the whole process of printing actually produced books. | |||
] copy of the Gutenberg Bible owned by the U.S. ], on display at the ] in ]]] | |||
In a legal paper, written after completion of the Bible, Johannes Gutenberg refers to the process as ''Das Werk der Bücher'' ("the work of the books"). He had introduced the ] to Europe and created the technology to make printing with ]s finally efficient enough to facilitate the mass production of entire books.<ref>British Library, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210224195907/https://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/background.html |date=2021-02-24 }} accessed 10 July 2009</ref> | |||
Many book-lovers have commented on the high standards achieved in the production of the Gutenberg Bible, some describing it as one of the most beautiful volumes ever printed. The quality of both the ink and other materials and the printing itself have been noted. <ref name="Davies"> {{cite book | last = Davies | first = Martin | title = The Gutenberg Bible | publisher = British Library | date = 1996 | isbn = 0712304924}} </ref> | |||
Many book-lovers have commented on the high standards achieved in the production of the Gutenberg Bible, some describing it as one of the most beautiful books ever printed. The quality of both the ink and other materials and the printing itself have been noted.<ref name="Davies">{{cite book |last=Davies |first=Martin |title=The Gutenberg Bible |publisher=British Library |year=1996 |isbn=0-7123-0492-4}}</ref> | |||
===Paper and vellum=== | |||
A single complete copy of the Gutenberg Bible has 1,272 pages; with 4 pages per folio-sheet, 318 sheets of paper are required per copy. The 45 copies printed on vellum required 11,130 sheets. The 135 copies on paper required 49,290 sheets of paper. The handmade paper used by Gutenberg was of fine quality and was imported from Italy. Each sheet contains a ], which may be seen when the paper is held up to the light, left by the papermold. | |||
===Pages=== | ===Pages=== | ||
] from the University of Texas copy. The page has 40 lines]] | ] from the ] copy. The page has 40 lines.]] | ||
The paper size is 'double folio', with two pages printed on each side (making a total of four pages per sheet). After printing the paper is folded once to the size of a single page. Typically, five of these folded sheets (carrying 10 leaves, or 20 printed pages) were combined to a single ], called a ], that could then be bound into a book. Some sections, however, carried as few as 4 leaves or as many as 12 leaves.<ref>British Library, accessed 10 July 2009</ref> It is possible that some sections were printed in a larger number, especially those printed later in the publishing process, and sold unbound. The pages were not numbered. This whole technique of course was not new, since it was used already to make white-paper books to be written afterwards. New was the necessity to determine ''beforehand'' the right place and orientation of each page on the five sheets, so as to end up in the right reading sequence. Also new was the technique of getting the printed area correctly located on each page. | |||
The paper size is 'double folio', with two pages printed on each side (four pages per sheet). After printing the paper was folded once to the size of a single page. Typically, five of these folded sheets (ten leaves, or twenty printed pages) were combined to a single ], called a ], that could then be bound into a book. Some sections, however, had as few as four leaves or as many as twelve leaves.<ref>British Library, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080607124942/http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/gatherings.html |date=2008-06-07 }} accessed 10 July 2009</ref> | |||
The folio size, 307 x 445 mm, has the ratio of 1.45. The ] had the same ratio, and was shifted out of the middle to leave a 2:1 white margin, both horizontally and vertically. Historian John Man writes that the ratio was chosen because of being close to the ] of 1.61.<ref name="Man"/> To reach this ratio more closely the vertical size should be 338 mm, but there is no reason why Gutenberg would leave this non-trivial difference of 8 mm go by in such a detailed work in other aspects. | |||
at the U.S. Library of Congress]] | |||
The 42-line Bible was printed on the size of paper known as 'Royal'.<ref>Paul Needham, 'Format and Paper Size in Fifteenth-century Printing', In: ''Materielle Aspekte in der Inkunabelforschung'', Wiesbaden, 2017, pp. 59–108: p. 83.</ref> A full sheet of Royal paper measures {{cvt|42|x|60|cm}} and a single untrimmed folio leaf measures {{cvt|42|x|30|cm}}.<ref>George Gordon and William Noel, 'The Needham Calculator', 2017: http://www.needhamcalculator.net/needham_calculator1.pdf {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180826220049/http://www.needhamcalculator.net/needham_calculator1.pdf |date=2018-08-26 }}. Accessed 26 August 2018.</ref> There have been attempts to claim that the book was printed on larger paper measuring {{cvt|44.5|x|30.7|cm}},<ref>Man, John (2002). ''Gutenberg: How One Man Remade the World with Words'', New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc. {{ISBN|0-471-21823-5}}.</ref> but this assertion is contradicted by the dimensions of existing copies. For example, the leaves of the copy in the ], measure {{cvt|40|×|28.6|cm}}.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://incunables.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/record/B-237. |title=Accessed 26 August 2018. |access-date=26 August 2018 |archive-date=15 September 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200915015337/http://incunables.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/record/B-237. |url-status=live }}</ref> This is typical of other folio Bibles printed on Royal paper in the fifteenth century.<ref>Paul Needham, 'Format and Paper Size in Fifteenth-century Printing', In: ''Materielle Aspekte in der Inkunabelforschung'', Wiesbaden, 2017, p. 83.</ref> Most fifteenth-century printing papers have a width-to-height ratio of 1:1.4 (e.g. 30:42 cm) which, mathematically, is a ratio of ] or, simply, <math display="inline">\sqrt{2}</math>. Many suggest that this ratio was chosen to match the so-called ], <math display="inline">\tfrac{1+\sqrt{5}}{2}</math>, of 1:1.6; in fact the ratios are, plainly, not at all similar (equating to a difference of about 12 per cent). The ratio of 1:1.4 was a long established one for medieval paper sizes.<ref>Neil Harris, 'The Shape of Paper', subsection 'Sheet-size and the Bologna Stone', in: ''Paper and Watermarks as Bibliographical Evidence'', Lyon, Institut d'histoire du livre, 2017, http://ihl.enssib.fr/en/paper-and-watermarks-as-bibliographical-evidence {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180826183015/http://ihl.enssib.fr/en/paper-and-watermarks-as-bibliographical-evidence |date=2018-08-26 }}.</ref> A single complete copy of the Gutenberg Bible has 1,288 pages (4×322 = 1288) (usually bound in two volumes); with four pages per folio-sheet, 322 sheets of paper are required per copy.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/permanent/gutenbergbible/facts/#top |title=Fast Facts: The Gutenberg Bible |work=utexas.edu |access-date=2014-03-26 |archive-date=2019-04-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190416211257/https://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/permanent/gutenbergbible/facts/#top |url-status=dead }}</ref> The Bible's paper consists of ] fibers and is thought to have been imported from ] in ] based on the ]s present throughout the volume.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/paper.html|title=Gutenberg Bible: Making the Bible – the Paper|last=Wight|first=C.|website=www.bl.uk|access-date=2020-04-08|archive-date=2020-08-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200810083459/https://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/paper.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
===Ink=== | ===Ink=== | ||
In Gutenberg's time, inks used by ]s to produce manuscripts were water-based. Gutenberg developed an oil-based ink that would better adhere to his metal type. His ink was primarily carbon, but also had a high metallic content, with copper, lead, and titanium predominating.<ref>British Library, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070911124232/http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/ink.html |date=2007-09-11 }} accessed 18 October 2009.</ref> Head of collections at the ], Kristian Jensen, described it thus: "if you look closely you will see this is a very shiny surface. When you write you use a water-based ink, you put your pen into it and it runs off. Now if you print that's exactly what you don't want. One of Gutenberg's inventions was an ink which wasn't ink, it's a ]. So what we call printer's ink is actually a varnish, and that means it sticks to its surface."<ref>BBC Radio 4 programme "Gutenberg: In the Beginning Was the Printer", first broadcast 21-10-2014</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://bav.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/kristian-jensen-on-the-gutenberg-bible |title=Kristian Jensen on the Gutenberg Bible | Polonsky Foundation Digitization Project |access-date=2022-11-26 |archive-date=2022-11-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221126162244/http://bav.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/kristian-jensen-on-the-gutenberg-bible |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Gutenberg had to develop a new kind of ink, an oil-based one (as compared with the traditional water-based ink used in manuscripts), so that it would stick better to the metal types. His ink was based on carbon, with high metallic content, including copper, lead, and titanium.<ref>British Library, accessed 18 October 2009.</ref> | |||
===Type=== | ===Type=== | ||
Each unique character requires a piece of master type in order to be replicated. Given that each ] has uppercase and lowercase forms, and the number of various punctuation marks and ] (e.g., "{{not a typo|]}}" for the letter sequence "fi", commonly used in writing), the Gutenberg Bible needed a set of 290 master characters. It seems probable that six pages, containing 15,600 characters altogether, would be set at any one moment.<ref name="Man" /> | |||
The first part of the Gutenberg idea was using a single, hand-carved character to create identical copies of itself. Cutting a single letter could take a craftsman a day of work. A single page taking 2500 letters, crafting per page was unattainable. A less labour intensive method of reproduction was needed. Copies were produced by stamping the original into an iron plate, called a matrix. A rectangular tube was then connected to the matrix, creating a container in which molten ] could be poured. Once cooled, the solid metal form was released from the tube. The end result was a rectangular block of metal with the form of the desired character protruding from the end. This piece of type could be put in a line, facing up, with other pieces of type. These lines were arranged to form blocks of text, which could be inked and pressed against paper, transferring the desired text to the paper. | |||
Each unique character requires a master piece of type in order to be replicated. Given that each letter has uppercase and lowercase forms, and the number of various punctuation marks and ] (e.g. the sequence 'fi' combined in one character, commonly used in writing) the Gutenberg Bible needed a set of 290 master characters. | |||
The scholar John Man has calculated the number of pieces of types required.<ref name="Man"/> A single page has about 2600 characters. It seems probable that six pages, containing 15600 characters altogether, would be set at any one moment. Since it would take a craftsman a whole day to hand-cut type for one character, such a large number was probably produced through the mass-production of copies of one master-type. | |||
===Type style=== | ===Type style=== | ||
The Gutenberg Bible is printed in the ] type styles that would become known as ] and ]. The name |
The Gutenberg Bible is printed in the ] type styles that would become known as ] and ]. The name ''Textura'' refers to the texture of the printed page: straight vertical strokes combined with horizontal lines, giving the impression of a woven structure. Gutenberg already used the technique of ], that is, creating a vertical, not indented, alignment at the left and right-hand sides of the column. To do this, he used various methods, including using characters of narrower widths, adding extra spaces around punctuation, and varying the widths of spaces around words.<ref>Television presentation, "The Machine that Made Us", presenter: Stephen Fry</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.typografi.org/justering/gut_hz/gutenberg_hz_english.html |title=InDesign, the hz-program and Gutenberg's secret |access-date=2009-10-07 |archive-date=2012-12-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121224004954/http://www.typografi.org/justering/gut_hz/gutenberg_hz_english.html |url-status=live }}</ref> | ||
===Rubrication, illumination and binding=== | ===Rubrication, illumination and binding=== | ||
] | ] and ]]] | ||
Copies left the Gutenberg workshop unbound, without decoration, and for the most part without rubrication. | |||
Initially the |
Initially the rubrics—the headings before each book of the Bible—were printed, but this practice was quickly abandoned at an unknown date, and gaps were left for ] to be added by hand. A guide of the text to be added to each page, printed for use by rubricators, survives.<ref name="Kapr">{{cite book |last=Kapr |first=Albert |title=Johann Gutenberg: The Man and His Invention |publisher=Scolar Press |year=1996 |isbn=1-85928-114-1}}</ref> | ||
The spacious margin allowed |
The spacious margin allowed ] decoration to be added by hand. The amount of decoration presumably depended on how much each buyer could or would pay. Some copies were never decorated.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/paperdecoration.html |title=Gutenberg Bible: The Copy on Paper – the Decoration |work=bl.uk |access-date=2008-10-19 |archive-date=2009-03-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090301104118/http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/paperdecoration.html |url-status=live }}</ref> The place of decoration can be known or inferred for about 30 of the surviving copies. It is possible that 13 of these copies received their decoration in Mainz, but others were worked on as far away as London.<ref name="Estes">{{cite book |last=Estes |first=Richard |title=The 550th Anniversary Pictorial Census of the Gutenberg Bible |publisher=Gutenberg Research Center |year=2005 |page=151}}</ref> The ] Bibles were more expensive, and perhaps for this reason tend to be more highly decorated, although the vellum copy in the British Library is completely undecorated.<ref name="Jensen">{{cite book |author=Jensen, Kristian |chapter=Printing the Bible in the fifteenth century: devotion, philology and commerce |pages=115–38 |editor=Jensen, Kristian |title=Incunabula and their readers: printing, selling and using books in the fifteenth century |publisher=British Library |year=2003 |isbn=0-7123-4769-0}}</ref> | ||
There has been speculation that the "]", an unidentified engraver who has been called "the first personality in the history of engraving,"<ref>{{cite book |title=Fifteenth Century Engravings of Northern Europe |last=Shestack |first=Alan |year=1967 |location=National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC |lccn=67029080 }}</ref> was partly responsible for the illumination of the copy held by the ] library. However, all that can be said for certain is that the same model book was used for some of the illustrations in this copy and for some of the Master's illustrated playing cards.<ref name="vb">{{cite journal |last1=van Buren |first1=Anne H. |last2=Edmunds |first2=Sheila |date=March 1974 |title=Playing Cards and Manuscripts: Some Widely Disseminated Fifteenth Century Model Sheets |journal=The Art Bulletin |volume=56 |issue=1 |pages=12–30 |doi=10.1080/00043079.1974.10789835 |issn=0004-3079 |jstor=3049193}}</ref> | |||
Although many Gutenberg Bibles have been rebound over the years, 9 copies retain fifteenth-century bindings. Most of these copies were bound in either Mainz or Erfurt.<ref name="Estes"/> | |||
Most copies were divided into two volumes, the first volume ending with The Book of |
Although many Gutenberg Bibles have been rebound over the years, nine copies retain fifteenth-century ]. Most of these copies were bound in either ] or ].<ref name="Estes" /> Most copies were divided into two volumes, the first volume ending with ]. Copies on vellum were heavier and for this reason were sometimes bound in three or four volumes.<ref name="Davies" /> | ||
==Early owners== | ==Early owners== | ||
] | |||
The Bible seems to have sold out immediately, with initial sales to owners as far away as England.<ref name="Davies"/> | |||
The Bible seems to have sold out immediately, with some initial purchases as far away as England and possibly Sweden and Hungary.<ref name="Davies" /><ref name="waste">{{cite book |author=White, Eric Marshall |chapter=The Gutenberg Bibles that Survive as Binder's Waste |pages=21–35 |editor=Wagner, Bettina |editor2=Reed, Marcia |title=Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the Ifla Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009 |publisher=De Gruyter Sur |year=2010 |isbn=978-3-11-025324-5}}</ref> At least some copies are known to have sold for 30 ]s (equivalent to about {{convert|100|g|disp=or}} of ]), which was about three years' wages for a ].<ref>{{cite book |title=In the Beginning: The Story of the King James Bible and How It Changed a Nation, a Language, and a Culture |publisher=Anchor Books |author=McGrath, Alister |year=2001 |pages=15 |isbn=0-385-72216-8}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=A History of Science in Society: From Philosophy to Utility |publisher=Broadview Press |author1=Cormack, Lesley B.|author1-link= Lesley Cormack |author2=Ede, Andrew |year=2004 |pages= |isbn=1-55111-332-5 |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofscience0000edea/page/95 }}</ref> Although this made them significantly cheaper than manuscript Bibles, most students, priests or other people of moderate income would not have been able to afford them. It is assumed that most were sold to monasteries, universities and particularly wealthy individuals.<ref name="Kapr" /> At present only one copy is known to have been privately owned in the fifteenth century. Some are known to have been used for communal readings in monastery refectories; others may have been for display rather than use, and a few were certainly used for study.<ref name="Davies" /> Kristian Jensen suggests that many copies were bought by wealthy and pious laymen for donation to religious institutions.<ref name="Jensen" /> | |||
==Influence on later Bibles== | |||
At least some copies are known to have sold for 30 florins<ref>{{cite book|author= Cormack, Lesley B.; Ede, Andrew|title=A History of Science in Society: From Philosophy to Utility|publisher=Broadview Press|year=2004|isbn=1-55111-332-5}}</ref>. Although this made them significantly cheaper than manuscript Bibles, most students, priests or other people of ordinary income would have been unable to afford them. It is assumed that most were sold to monasteries, universities and particularly wealthy individuals.<ref name="Kapr"/> At present only one copy is known to have been privately owned in the fifteenth century. Some are known to have been used for communal readings in monastery refectories, others may have been for display rather than use, and a few were certainly used for study.<ref name="Davies"/> Kristian Jensen suggests that many copies were bought by wealthy and pious laypeople for donation to religious institutions.<ref name="Jensen"/> | |||
The Gutenberg Bible had a profound effect on the history of the printed book. Textually, it also had an influence on future editions of the Bible. It provided the model for several later editions, including the ], ] Latin Bible, and the first and third ] Bibles. The third Eggestein Bible was set from the copy of the Gutenberg Bible now in ]. The Gutenberg Bible also had an influence on the ] edition of the Vulgate commissioned by the Papacy in the late sixteenth century.<ref name="Needham">{{cite book |author=Needham, Paul |chapter=The Changing Shape of the Vulgate Bible in Fifteenth-Century Printing Shops |pages= |editor=Saenger, Paul |editor2=Van Kampen, Kimberly |title=The Bible as Book:the First Printed Editions |publisher=British Library |year=1999 |isbn=0-7123-4601-5 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/bibleasbook00saen/page/53 }}</ref><ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite book |author=Needham, Paul |chapter=Copy Specifics in the Printing Shop |pages=9–20 |editor=Wagner, Bettina |editor2=Reed, Marcia |title=Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the Ifla Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009 |publisher=De Gruyter Sur |year=2010 |isbn=978-3-11-025324-5}}</ref> | |||
==Forgeries== | |||
==Influence on later Bibles== | |||
], now held by the ].]] | |||
The Gutenberg Bible had an incalculable effect on the history of the printed book. Textually, it also had an influence on future editions of the Bible. It provided the model for the ], while a Strasbourg edition of the Bible from 1470 is known to have been set from the copy of now in Cambridge University Library. The Gutenberg Bible also had an influence on the ] edition of the Vulgate commissioned by the Papacy in the late sixteenth century.<ref name="Needham"/> | |||
Joseph Martini, a New York book dealer, found that the Gutenberg Bible held by the library of the ] in New York had a forged leaf, carrying part of Chapter 14, all of Chapter 15, and part of Chapter 16 of the ]. It was impossible to tell when the leaf had been inserted into the volume. It was replaced in the fall of 1953, when a patron donated the corresponding leaf from a defective Gutenberg second volume which was being broken up and sold in parts.<ref name="GeneralTheologicalSeminary">St. Mark's Library (General Theological Seminary). The Gutenberg Bible of the General Theological Seminary. New York: St. Mark's Library, the General Theological Seminary, 1963.</ref> This made it "the first imperfect Gutenberg Bible ever restored to completeness."<ref name="GeneralTheologicalSeminary" /> In 1978, this copy was sold for US$2.2 million to the {{lang|de|]|italic=no}} in ], Germany.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.clausenbooks.com/gutenbergcensus.htm |title=Gutenberg Bible Census |access-date=2007-06-01 |archive-date=2011-07-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708163336/http://www.clausenbooks.com/gutenbergcensus.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
==Surviving copies== | ==Surviving copies== | ||
] | ] | ||
{{As of |2009}}, 49 Gutenberg Bibles are known to exist, but of these only 21 are complete. Others have pages or even whole volumes missing. In addition, there are a substantial number of fragments, some as small as individual leaves, which are likely to represent about another 16 copies. Many of these fragments have survived because ].<ref name="waste" /> | |||
===Substantially complete copies=== | |||
As of 2009, 47 or 48 42-line Bibles are known to exist, but of these only 21 are complete. Others have leaves or even whole volumes missing. The figure of 48 copies counts separately the volumes in Trier and Indiana, which seem to be the two parts of one copy. In addition, there is a substantial number of fragments, some as small as individual leaves. | |||
{{collapse top|List of substantially complete copies}} | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="margin: 1em auto 1em auto" | |||
There are twelve copies on vellum, although only four of these are complete and one is of the ] only. | |||
! Country | |||
! Holding institution | |||
The country with the most copies is Germany, which has twelve, while the United States has eleven and the United Kingdom eight. New York has four copies, Paris and London have three each, and Mainz, the Vatican City and Moscow have two each. | |||
! data-sort-type="number" | ] no.<ref name="Doheny">{{cite book |author=Estelle Betzold Doheny |title=The Estelle Doheny Collection: Fifteenth-century books, including the Gutenberg Bible |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XaVMAAAAYAAJ |volume=1 |year=1987 |publisher=Christie, Manson & Woods International |pages=23–}}</ref><ref name="CERL">{{cite web |publisher=] |title=ISTC (Incunabula Shorttitle Catalogue) |website=AMPLE |date=June 5, 2018 |url=https://data.cerl.org/istc/ib00526000 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180605210118/https://data.cerl.org/istc/ib00526000 |archive-date=June 5, 2018 |url-status=live |access-date=June 5, 2018}}</ref> | |||
! Length | |||
Institutions which have copies on permanent display include the Gutenberg Museum in Mainz, the British Library and the Library of Congress. | |||
! Material | |||
! Notes and external links | |||
Copy numbers listed below are as found in the ], taken from a 1985 survey of existing copies by ]; the two copies in Russia were not known to exist in 1985, and so were not catalogued. | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="margin: 1em auto 1em auto" | |||
|+ '''Substantially complete copies of the 42-line Bible''' | |||
! Country || Holding institution || ]-nr || Notes | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Austria (1) | |||
| Austria (1) || ], Vienna || 27 || Complete, paper | |||
| ], ] | |||
| 27 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| One of only two copies to contain the "tabula rubricarum" (index of rubrics) on four leaves at the end. Obtained from ] in 1793.<ref>{{cite book |title=Das Antiquariat ... |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wOziAAAAMAAJ |volume=7 |year=1951 |publisher=W. Krieg |language=de |pages=122– |quote=Das Exemplar enthält das älteste festgestellte Da*tum, das im Zusammenhang mit der Gutenberg*Bibel steht. ... Mit der „tabula rubricarum", auf 4 Blättern am Schluß des Werkes gedruckt. ... Das Exemplar gehörte früher Friedrich Karl Joseph von Erthal, dem Kurfürsten von Mainz, dessen Bibliothek 1793 aufgeteilt wurde.}}</ref><ref name="WagnerReed2010">{{cite book |author1=Bettina Wagner |author2=Marcia Reed |title=Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the IFLA Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rXSAvawdIZIC&pg=PA15 |year= 2010 |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |isbn=978-3-11-025530-0 |pages=15– |quote=As has been known for decades, the Gutenberg Bible shop printed not just the Bible itself, but also a separate rubric guide ... Gutenberg Bible at the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich, and at the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna.}}</ref><ref name="The AB Bookman's Yearbook">{{cite book |title=The AB Bookman's Yearbook |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Wh4bAAAAMAAJ |year=1956 |publisher=Bookman's weekly |page=392 |quote=This copy contains the earliest recorded date associated with the Gutenberg Bible. At the end of both volumes are notes ... With the "tabula rubricarum" (index of rubrics) printed on 4 leaves at the end. These additional leaves occur in only one ...}}</ref><br /> {{in lang|de}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Belgium (1) | |||
| Belgium (1) || Bibliothèque universitaire, Mons || 1 || Incomplete, paper | |||
| Library of the ], ] | |||
| 1 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Vol. I, 104 leaves missing,<ref>{{cite book |title=Antiquarian Bookman |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=avwYAQAAIAAJ |series=14–26 |volume=18 |year=1956 |publisher=R.R. Bowker |pages=1410– |quote=The example of the Gutenberg Bible in Mons is quite incomplete, containing only 220 leaves of Volume I. Folio 1 is ... end of the Book of Ruth (folio 128 verso) and chapter 5 of Kings II (folio 149 recto) These comprise the 104 missing leaves.}}</ref> bequeathed by Edmond Puissant to the city of Mons in 1934, but not identified until 1950.<ref name="Stummvoll1971">{{cite book |author=Josef Stummvoll |title=Die Gutenberg-Bibel |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fvYaAAAAMAAJ |year=1971 |publisher=Österreichisches Institut für Bibliotheksforschung |language=de |pages=26– |quote=...Kanonikus Edmond Puissant in Mons. 1934 beim Tode Puissants an die Stadt Mons gekommen. Wurde erst 1950 vom Bibliothekar Dr. M. A. Arnould identifiziert. Nur bei Norman (20) und Stöwesand (14) verzeichnet. Aufbewahrt in der ...}}</ref> Part of the same copy as the volume in Indiana (see below).<ref name="Long lost" /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Denmark (1) | |||
| Denmark (1) || ], Copenhagen || 12 || Vol. II, incomplete, paper | |||
| ], ] | |||
| 13 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Vol. II, first leaf missing. Acquired in 1749.<ref name="(Denmark)Ilsøe1993">{{cite book |author1=Kongelige Bibliotek (Denmark) |author2=Harald Ilsøe |title=On parchment, paper and palm leaves – treasures of the Royal Library, Denmark : a presentation in pictures and words on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of the opening of the library to the public |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h_RLAQAAIAAJ |date=1993 |publisher=Royal Library |isbn=978-87-7023-621-8 |pages=30– |quote=Then, in 1713, Gottorp was captured during the war with Danmark and the library made the property of the Danish king. At that ... was volume 2 of the famous 42-line Bible, Johan Gutenberg's first great work of the art of printing done at Mainz c. ...}}</ref><ref name="Ilsøe1999">{{cite book |author=Harald Ilsøe |title=Det kongelige Bibliotek i støbeskeen: studier og samlinger til bestandens historie indtil ca. 1780 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b5QIaOgQZfwC&pg=PA65 |year=1999 |publisher=Museum Tusculanum Press |language=da |isbn=978-87-7289-550-5 |pages=65– |quote=Med et eksemplar af bind 2 af Gutenberg-biblen trykt i Mainz ca. ... af bøger til forsendelse trak ud, blev biblioteket først endeligt modtaget i København 1749.}}</ref> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="4" | France |
| rowspan="4" | France (4) | ||
| rowspan="2" | ], ] | |||
| 15 | |||
| complete | |||
| vellum | |||
| Sold to the library in 1788 by Cardinal ],<ref>{{cite book |title=Veröffentlichung der Gutenberg-gesellschaft |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5wLjAAAAMAAJ |volume=5–9 |year=1908 |language=fr |pages=58– |quote=Cédé en 1767 par les Bénédictins de Mayence à Dom Maugérard, pour Dupré de Geneste, Administrateur des Domaines à Meç, dont la bibliothèque fut vendue en 1788 par le cardinal Loménie de Brienne à la Bibliothèque ...}}</ref> and rebound in four volumes.<ref>{{cite book |title=AB Bookman's Yearbook |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ieZWAAAAIAAJ |year=1956 |publisher=Bookman's weekly |pages=391– |quote=It is hoped these emendations will bring this revision of the Gutenberg Bible list totally up to date. The compiler ... In 1788 or shortly afterwards, it was rebound in red morocco, with the arms of Louis XVI stamped in gilt on the covers, in 4 vols.}}</ref><br />Online images of | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 17 | |||
| 17 || Incomplete, paper. Contains note by binder dating it to August 1456 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Is distinguished by being inscribed with the earliest date that appears on any copy — 24 August 1456 on the first volume and 15 August 1456 on the second volume, the dates on which the rubricator and binder (Henricus Cremer) completed his work.<ref>{{cite book |title=Das Antiquariat ... |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wOziAAAAMAAJ |volume=7 |year=1951 |publisher=W. Krieg |language=de |pages=122– |quote=Am Schlüsse der beiden Bände sind Vermerke des Rubrikators und Buchbinders Henricus Cremer über die Voll*endung seiner Arbeit eingetragen: (Bd. I ... 24. August 1456; Bd. II . . . 15. August 1456).}}</ref><ref name="Howard2005">{{cite book |last=Howard |first=Nicole |title=The Book: The Life Story Of A Technology |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4WwdMJKXzhEC&pg=PA31 |access-date=23 August 2012 |date=2005 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-313-33028-5 |page=31}}</ref><br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], Paris |
| ], Paris | ||
| 16 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| The first copy to be discovered around 1760 in the Bibliothèque Mazarine (hence the name Mazarin Bible) by ] and described in the first volume of his ''Bibliographie instructive: ou Traite de la connoissance des livres rares et singuliers'' devoted to theology, which was published in Paris in 1763.<ref name="Goff1971">{{cite book |author=Frederick Richmond Goff |title=The permanence of Johann Gutenberg |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W_fgAAAAMAAJ |date= 1971 |publisher=Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin; distributed by University of Texas Press |pages=18–|isbn=9780292700598 }}</ref><ref name="RabinowitzKaplan2007">{{cite book |author1=Harold Rabinowitz |author2=Rob Kaplan |title=A Passion for Books: A Book Lover's Treasury of Stories, Essays, Humor, Lore, and Lists on Collecting, Reading, Borrowing, Lending, Caring for, and Appreciating Books |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xzjkYlfHXL4C&pg=PA229 |date= 2007 |publisher=Crown/Archetype |isbn=978-0-307-41966-8 |pages=229– |quote=The story of the resurrection of the Gutenberg Bible, after Francois Guillaume de Bure recognized its importance when he came upon a copy in 1763 in the Mazarin library, is however not a part of the history of the Bible in English and must ...}}</ref><ref name="ChambersFoster1890">{{cite book |author1=Talbot Wilson Chambers |author2=Frank Hugh Foster |title=Concise Dictionary of Religious Knowledge: Biblical, Doctrinal, Historical, and Practical |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bOxBAAAAYAAJ |year=1890 |publisher=Christian Literature Company |pages=553– |quote=Mazarin Bible, The, or Gutenberg Bible, Mentz, 1450–55, the first book printed with movable types. It was discovered by De Burc in the Mazarin Library at Paris about 1760. Six copies on vellum are known and 81 on paper. One of the latter is in ...}}</ref><br />Online images of and {{in lang|fr}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Bibliothèque Municipale, ] |
| Bibliothèque Municipale, ] | ||
| 18 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Vol. I, one missing leaf. Acquired from the ].<ref name="Saint-Léger1984">{{cite book |author=Alexandre Saint-Léger |title=Revue du Nord |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RelnAAAAMAAJ |series=261–263 |volume=66 |year=1984 |language=fr |pages=637– |quote=Nous ne saurions bien évidemment passer sous silence un volume de la Bible à 42 lignes de Gutenberg, conservé à Saint-Omer et venant de l'abbaye de Saint-Bertin '3, mais le catalogue relève également les éditions de Pierre Schoeffer à ...}}</ref><br /> {{in lang|fr}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="13" | Germany (13) | |||
| rowspan="12" | Germany (12) || rowspan="2" | ], Mainz || 8 || rowspan="2" | One copy is vol. I, incomplete, paper; the other both vols., incomplete, paper. It is unclear which is which. {{de icon}} | |||
| rowspan="2" | ], ] | |||
| 8 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| The ] copy, two volumes but imperfect, sold by ] for $1.8 million in March 1978.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Living Church |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=11zkAAAAMAAJ |volume=176 |date=January 1978 |publisher=Morehouse-Gorham Company |pages=75– |quote=A Gutenberg Bible has been sold by New York book dealer Hans P. Kraus for $1.8 million, the same price for which he bought it in 1970. ... Known as the Shuckburgh Bible, the Kraus copy was named after Sir George Shuckburgh, its 18th century owner, who ...}}</ref><ref name="Kirshenbaum">{{cite book |author=Sandra Kirshenbaum |title=Fine Print |year=1978 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RqHgAAAAMAAJ |publisher=S. Kirshenbaum |pages=102– |quote=Early in March Mr. Kraus sold his Bible, known as the Shuckburgh copy, to the Gutenberg Museum of Mainz for $1,800,000, the highest price ever paid ..}}</ref><br /> {{in lang|de}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| 9 | ||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Vol. II, the ] copy acquired in 1925.<ref name="Gutenberg-Gesellschaft1979">{{cite book |author=Gutenberg-Gesellschaft |title=Aloys Ruppel, 1882–1977: Würdigung bei der Gedächtnisfeier des Fachbereichs 16 Geschichtswissenschaft der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz und der Gutenberg-Gesellschaft am 21. Juni 1978 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BqUOAQAAMAAJ |year=1979 |publisher=Verlag der Gutenberg-Gesellschaft |language=de |pages=26– |quote=Als wir 1925 das silberne Jubiläum des Gutenberg-Museums vorbereiteten, rief mich Ministerialrat Hassinger vom ... von Solms-Laubach wolle sein Exemplar verkaufen und habe bereits ein Angebot von einem Leipziger Antiquar erhalten.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.berliner-zeitung.de/vor-ungefaehr-600-jahren-wurde-gutenberg-geboren--mainz-ehrt-ihn-auf-verschiedene-weisen-heute-fuer-stielaugen-16774418 |title=Vor ungefähr 600 Jahren wurde Gutenberg geboren. Mainz ehrt ihn auf verschiedene Weisen: Heute für Stielaugen |work=Berliner Zeitung |date=18 April 2000 |access-date=5 March 2016 }}{{Dead link|date=June 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| {{Interlanguage link multi|Hochschul- und Landesbibliothek Fulda|de}}, ] | |||
| Landesbibliothek, Fulda || 4 || Vol. I, incomplete, vellum | |||
| 4 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| vellum | |||
| Vol. I. Two individual leaves from Vol. II survive in other libraries.<ref name="waste" /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| Universitätsbibliothek, Leipzig || 14 || Incomplete, vellum | |||
| 14 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| vellum | |||
| Vol. I through IV. | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], Göttingen |
| ], ] | ||
| 2 | |||
| complete | |||
| vellum | |||
| Registered in Unesco's ] since 2001.<ref>{{cite web |title=42-line Gutenberg Bible, printed on vellum, and its contemporary documentary background |url=https://en.unesco.org/memoryoftheworld/registry/432 |website=UNESCO |access-date=30 November 2022 |archive-date=30 November 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221130090630/https://en.unesco.org/memoryoftheworld/registry/432 |url-status=live }}</ref><br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| ], Berlin || 3 || Incomplete, vellum | |||
| 3 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| vellum | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| ], Munich || 5 || Complete, paper {{de icon}} | |||
| 5 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| One of only two copies to contain the "tabula rubricarum" (index of rubrics) on four leaves at the end. Also one of three existing copies in its original binding.<ref name="WagnerReed2010" /><ref name="The AB Bookman's Yearbook" /><br />Online images of and {{in lang|de}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| ], ] | ||
| 6 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Hofbibliothek, Aschaffenburg |
| Hofbibliothek, ] | ||
| 7 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], Stuttgart |
| {{lang|de|]|italic=no}}, ] | ||
| 10 | |||
| incomplete{{refn|While this Gutenberg Bible copy is technically complete, the leaf carrying part of Chapter 14, all of Chapter 15, and part of Chapter 16 of the Book of Ezekiel is not original to this copy. It was inserted in 1953 from another Gutenberg Bible to replace a forged leaf.}} | |||
| paper | |||
| Purchased in April 1978 for US$2.2 million from the General Theological Seminary.<br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Stadtbibliothek, Trier |
| Stadtbibliothek, ] | ||
| 11 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Vol. I | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Landesbibliothek, Kassel |
| Landesbibliothek, ] | ||
| 12 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Vol. I | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| Japan (1) || ], Tokyo || 45 || Vol. I, incomplete, paper. Purchased in October 1987 for either 4.9 or 5.4 million US dollars (sources disagree) | |||
| 47 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| The Rendsburg Fragment<ref name="Long lost" /><ref name="WhiteRosenstein2003">{{cite journal |last1=White |first1=Eric Marshall |last2=Rosenstein |first2=Natalee |last3=Travis |first3=Trysh |last4=Adams |first4=Peter W. |last5=Baensch |first5=Robert E. |title=Book reviews |journal=Publishing Research Quarterly |volume=19 |issue=2 |year=2003 |pages=65–72 |issn=1053-8801 |doi=10.1007/s12109-003-0009-3|s2cid=189906589 }}</ref> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Japan (1) | |||
| Poland (1) || Biblioteka Seminarium Duchownego, ] || 28 || Incomplete, paper {{pl icon}} | |||
| ] Library, ] | |||
| 45<ref>{{Cite book|last=Davis|first=Margaret Leslie|title=The Lost Gutenberg: The Astounding Story of One Book's Five-Hundred-Year Odyssey|publisher=TarcherPerigee|year=2019|isbn=9781592408672|location=New York}}</ref> | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Originally part of the ] bequest to ] in ]. Vol. I, sold in October 1987 to Maruzen booksellers for US$4.9 million (plus an auction house commission of $490,000) for a total of $5.4 million.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=CoxUAAAAIBAJ&pg=2197,2580330&dq=gutenberg+bible&hl=en |title=Ellensburg Daily Record – Google News Archive Search |work=google.com |access-date=2020-04-30 |archive-date=2021-04-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210415005515/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=CoxUAAAAIBAJ&pg=2197,2580330&dq=gutenberg+bible&hl=en |url-status=live }}</ref> Purchased by ] in 1996.<ref name="Gutenberg Bible: The HUMI Project">{{cite web |title=Gutenberg Bible: The HUMI Project |url=http://www.themorgan.org/collections/works/gutenberg/humi |website=The Morgan Library and Museum |date=4 November 2013 |access-date=13 May 2016 |archive-date=4 June 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160604005403/http://www.themorgan.org/collections/works/gutenberg/humi |url-status=live }}</ref><br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Poland (1) | |||
| Portugal (1) || ], Lisbon || 29 || Complete, paper | |||
| ] | |||
| 28 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| It has a blot on page 46 and it lacks a page 217 in Volume Two. | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Portugal (1) | |||
| rowspan="2" | Russia (2) || Russian National Library || - || Incomplete, vellum | |||
| ], ] | |||
| 29 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| Formerly owned by Cardinal ]. <br />. | |||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="2" | Russia (2) | |||
| Lomonosov University Library, ] || - || Complete, paper | |||
| ], ] | |||
| 49 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| ] in 1945 from the library of the ].<ref name="tst93">{{cite news |title=Rare Gutenberg Bible Found In Russia 50 Years After War |date=1993-12-10 |work=The Seattle Times |url=https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/?date=19931210&slug=1736310 |quote=A rare 15th-century Gutenberg Bible that was among the treasures the Red army brought back as trophies from World War II was hidden so well in Russia's State Library that even the curator didn't know it was there. The Bible belonged to a museum in Germany, and was brought to Moscow in 1945 with other manuscripts and rare books, the newspaper Izvestia quoted the library director, Igor Filippov, as saying. Russian authorities have agreed to negotiate their return.}}</ref><ref name="pop21">{{cite web |title=8 major cultural trophies the USSR took home after WWII |date=2021-04-22 |first=Anna |last=Popova |website=Russia Beyond |url=https://www.rbth.com/arts/333704-cultural-trophies-ussr-took-wwii |access-date=2024-01-18 |quote=Two Bibles printed by Johannes Gutenberg from the German Museum of Books and Writing in Leipzig also ended up in Moscow. Of 180 copies, only 47 have survived to our time, so one can imagine how rare these editions are. One of the Bibles is currently kept at Moscow Lomonosov University (MGU) and the other, as it emerged only in the 1990s, is at the 'Leninka' (the Russian State Library, formerly the Lenin Library) in Moscow. }}</ref> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], Moscow | |||
| rowspan="2" | Spain (2) || Biblioteca Universitaria y Provincial, Seville || 32 || New Testament only, paper {{es icon}} | |||
| 48 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| vellum | |||
| Acquired in 1886 by the ], Leipzig, as part of the book collection of {{illm|Heinrich Klemm|de|Heinrich Klemm (Verleger)}}.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://mediengeschichte.dnb.de/DBSMZBN/Content/EN/Printing/04-ein-verlorener-schatz-en.html |title=German Museum of Books and Writing "Signs – Books – Networks" |access-date=10 April 2016 |archive-date=21 April 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160421011338/http://mediengeschichte.dnb.de/DBSMZBN/Content/EN/Printing/04-ein-verlorener-schatz-en.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Jäger2010">{{cite book |author=Georg Jäger |title=Geschichte des deutschen Buchhandels im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert. Band 1: Das Kaiserreich 1871–1918 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5zRBThkBXtoC&pg=PA218 |date=2010 |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |language=de |isbn=978-3-11-023238-7 |pages=218–}}</ref> At the end of ], it was taken as war booty and transferred to the ] in Moscow, where it remains today.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.tagesspiegel.de/kultur/buch-und-schriftkultur-das-geisterhaus/6356990.html |title=Buch- und Schriftkultur: Das Geisterhaus – Kultur – Tagesspiegel |newspaper=Der Tagesspiegel Online |date=22 March 2012 |access-date=10 April 2016 |language=de |last1=Becker |first1=Peter von |archive-date=22 April 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160422113757/http://www.tagesspiegel.de/kultur/buch-und-schriftkultur-das-geisterhaus/6356990.html |url-status=live |quote=Doch die beiden Pergamentbände verwahrt bis heute die Russische Staatsbibliothek in Moskau, als Kriegsbeute.}}</ref> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="2" | Spain (2) | |||
| Biblioteca Pública Provincial, Burgos || 31 || Complete, paper | |||
| Biblioteca Universitaria y Provincial, ] | |||
| 32 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| New Testament only<br /> {{in lang|es}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Biblioteca Pública Provincial, ] | |||
| Switzerland (1) || ], Cologny || 30 || Incomplete, paper | |||
| 31 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| Switzerland (1) | |||
| rowspan="8" | United Kingdom (8) || rowspan="2" | ], London || ? || Complete, vellum | |||
| ], ] | |||
| 30 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="8" | United Kingdom (8) | |||
| ? || Complete, paper | |||
| rowspan="2" | ], ] | |||
| 19 | |||
| complete | |||
| vellum | |||
| The Grenville copy.<ref name="WetterGutenberg1836">{{cite book |author1=Johann Wetter |title=Kritische Geschichte der Erfindung der Buchdruckerkunst durch Johann Gutenberg zu Mainz, begleitet mit einer, vorhin noch nie angestellten, genauen Prüfung und gänzlichen Beseitigung der von Schöpfiin und seinen Anhängern verfochtenen Ansprüche der Stadt Strassburg, und einer neuen Untersuchung der Ansprüche der Stadt Harlem und vollständigen Widerlegung ihrei Verfechter Junius, Meerman, Koning, Dibdin, Otley und Ebert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fr4yAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA520 |year=1836 |publisher=J. Wirth |language=de |pages=520–}}</ref><ref name="Humphreys1867">{{cite book |author=Henry Noel Humphreys |title=A History of the Art of Printing: From Its Invention to Its Wide-spread Development in the Middle of the 16th Century : Preceded by a Short Account of the Origin of the Alphabet and the Successive Methods of Recording Events and Multiplying Ms. Books Before the Invention of Printing |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GIlWAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA62 |year=1867 |publisher=B. Quaritch |pages=62–}}</ref> Bought for 6260 francs in 1817 by ], who bequeathed his collection to the ] in 1846.<ref name="Kerr2006">{{cite book |author=Donald Kerr |title=Amassing Treasures for All Times: Sir George Grey, Colonial Bookman and Collector |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uhPhAAAAMAAJ |date= 2006 |publisher=Oak Knoll Press |isbn=978-1-58456-196-5 |pages=95–}}</ref><br /> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161104094544/http://molcat1.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/search.asp |date=4 November 2016 }} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 21 | |||
| ], Edinburgh || 26 || Complete, paper | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161104094544/http://molcat1.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/search.asp |date=4 November 2016 }} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| ], London || 20 || New Testament only, vellum | |||
| 26 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ] Library, London | |||
| ], Eton || 23 || Complete, paper | |||
| 20 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| vellum | |||
| New Testament only | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| ], Manchester || 25 || Complete, paper | |||
| 23 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| Printed in Mainz with the original 15th Century Erfurt binding, stamped calfskin, signed by Johannes Vogel. Donated by John Fuller (1757–1834). Belonged in the 15th century to the Carthusians at Erfurt. Only copy to retain the original binding in both volumes and is complete. Also one of three existing copies in its original binding. Also the only copy with the original binding to be signed with the binders mark. Illuminated copy, probably in Erfurt.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://collections.etoncollege.com/B25545 |title=Eton Collections | B25545 |access-date=2020-04-25 |archive-date=2020-08-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200805012225/http://collections.etoncollege.com/B25545 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url = https://www.gutenbergsapprentice.com/library-old-bible-holds/|title = A library as old as the Bible it holds|date = 16 May 2017|access-date = 25 April 2020|archive-date = 15 September 2020|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200915022254/https://www.gutenbergsapprentice.com/library-old-bible-holds/|url-status = live}}</ref> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], |
| ], ] | ||
| 25 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| Acquired for £80 by ] some time before 1814,<ref>{{cite book |author=Thomas Frognall Dibdin |title=Bibliotheca Spenceriana; Or a Descriptive Catalogue of the Books Printed in the Fifteenth Century, and of Many Valuable First Editions in the Library of George John Earl Spencer |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z8Fwu-apy3AC&pg=PA6 |volume=1 |year=1814 |pages=6–}}</ref><ref name="Carter1940">{{cite book |author=Albert Charles Robinson Carter |title=Let Me Tell You |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=joMMAQAAIAAJ |year=1940 |publisher=Hutchinson & Company |pages=202–}}</ref> ] bought it in 1892 for the John Rylands Library.<br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| ], Cambridge || 22 || Complete, paper | |||
| 24<ref>{{cite web |url=http://incunables.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/record/B-237 |title=Bod-Inc online |access-date=5 March 2016 |archive-date=6 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160306062124/http://incunables.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/record/B-237 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| Bought in 1793 for £100 from Cardinal ].<br />Online images of and | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| rowspan="11" | United States (11) || rowspan="3" | ], New York || 37 || Incomplete, vellum | |||
| 22<ref>{{cite web |url=http://audiblewink.com/blog/?tag=cambridge-university-library |title=Cambridge University Library – Addendum |work=Addendum |date=9 September 2015 |access-date=5 March 2016 |archive-date=26 September 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180926125355/http://audiblewink.com/blog/?tag=cambridge-university-library |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| Acquired as part of a gift in 1933.<ref name="Fox1998">{{cite book |author=Peter Fox |title=Cambridge University Library: The Great Collections |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xxlgKP5thL8C&pg=PA65 |date= 1998 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-62647-7 |pages=65–}}</ref><br />Online images of and | |||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="11" | United States (11) | |||
| 38 || Complete, paper | |||
| rowspan="3" | ], ] | |||
| 37 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| vellum | |||
| PML 13 & PML 818. Acquired in 1815 by ].<ref name="MatsudaLinenthal2004">{{cite book |author1=Takami Matsuda |author2=Richard A. Linenthal |author3=John Scahill |title=The medieval book and a modern collector: essays in honour of Toshiyuki Takamiya |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-roPAQAAMAAJ |date= 2004 |publisher=D.S. Brewer |isbn=978-4-8419-0348-5 |pages=448–}}</ref> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 38 | |||
| 44 || Incomplete, paper | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| PML 19206–7 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 44 | |||
| ], Washington DC || 35 || Complete, vellum | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| PML 1. Old Testament only<br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| ] || 42 || Incomplete, paper | |||
| 35 | |||
| complete | |||
| vellum | |||
| Printed on vellum and bound in three alum-tawed pigskin-covered volumes. On permanent display. Purchased in 1930 with government funds for the Library of Congress. It is the centerpiece of a larger book collection acquired from Dr. Otto Vollbehr. | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ] | |||
| ], Harvard University || 40 || Complete, paper | |||
| 42 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], |
| ], ] | ||
| 40 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| |
| ], ] | ||
| 41 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| The ] copy, a gift from Mrs. ] in 1926.<ref name="KentLancour1982">{{cite book |author1=Allen Kent |author2=Harold Lancour |author3=Jay E. Daily |title=Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 33 – The Wellesley College Library to Zoological Literature: A Review |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XPY96DdVt2UC&pg=PA315 |date=1982 |publisher=CRC Press |isbn=978-0-8247-2033-9 |pages=315– |quote=Perhaps the most outstanding volume in the Beinecke collection is the Melk copy of the Gutenberg Bible, the gift of Mrs. Edward S. Harkness. The Gutenberg Bible is thought to have been the first book printed with movable type and was ...}}</ref><ref name="MorleyKalfus1990">{{cite book |author1=Christopher Morley |author2=Ken Kalfus |author3=Walter Jack Duncan |title=Christopher Morley's Philadelphia |url=https://archive.org/details/christophermorle1990morl |url-access=registration |date= 1990 |publisher=Fordham Univ Press |isbn=978-0-8232-1270-5 |pages=–}}</ref> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], |
| ], ] | ||
| 43 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| The Brinley-Cole-]-]-] copy,<ref name="Adams1939">{{cite book |author=Randolph G. Adams |title=The Americanists |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A9yvS17hLlkC |year=1939 |pages=49– |quote=This particular Bible came from Erfurt, in Germany.24 It was handled by a Berlin dealer, A. Asher, who also had a ... So Brinley got a Gutenberg Bible at ,£637-15-0, and, as Stevens said, "Cheap at the price." 25 But ... Brinley – Hamilton Cole – Brayton Ives – James W. Ellsworth – A. S. W. Rosenbach – John H. Scheide.}}</ref><ref name="Club1966">{{cite book |author=Grolier Club |title=Gazette of the Grolier Club |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5JUqAQAAMAAJ |year=1966 |pages=116– |quote=There were three main type groups represented in the exhibition: The type of the 42-line Bible. The type of the 36-line ... THE 4'2-LINE BIBLE This work is the masterpiece of Johann Gutenberg. Mr. Goff has ... now owned by Arthur A. Houghton Jr.; and the Brinley-Cole-Ives-Ellsworth copy, now owned by William H. Scheide.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=The Princeton University Library Chronicle |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IlM4AAAAIAAJ |volume=37–39 |year=1976 |publisher=Friends of the Princeton University Library |pages=77– |quote=sold the Bible a year later for $46,000 to the late John H. Scheide, the father of the present owner. The Brinley-Cole-Ives-Ellsworth- Scheide copy was brought to Princeton from Titusville, Pennsylvania, in 1959, where it had remained for 35 years. ... Hellmut Lehmann-Haupt in his Gutenberg and the Master of the Playing Cards (New Haven and London, 1966) has shown the relationship of a number of ...}}</ref> one of three existing copies in its original binding.<ref>{{cite book |title=Princeton Alumni Weekly |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8hJbAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA86 |volume=61 |year=1960 |publisher=princeton alumni weekly |pages=86– |id=PRNC:32101081976894}}</ref><br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| ], San Marino || 36 || Incomplete, vellum | |||
| 46<ref name="Leslie1960">{{cite book |author=Frank P. Leslie |title=The 46th Gutenberg |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wXw2AAAAIAAJ |year=1960 |publisher=Vagabond Press}}</ref> | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| New Testament only, 12 leaves missing.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Friends of the Lilly Library Newsletter |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=otrjAAAAMAAJ |volume=29–32 |year=1998 |publisher=Indiana University Foundation |pages=5– |quote=The second volume of the Gutenberg Bible from which the Lilly Library New Testament would eventually be extracted was discovered in 1828 in a farmhouse ... The copy had 116 leaves of the original 128 of a full Gutenberg New Testament.}}</ref> Part of the same copy as the volume in Mons, Belgium (see above).<ref name="HellingaDavies1999">{{cite book |author1=Lotte Hellinga |author2=Martin Davies |title=Incunabula: studies in fifteenth-century printed books presented to Lotte Hellinga |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ojDrAAAAMAAJ |year=1999 |publisher=British Library |pages=341–|isbn=9780712345071 }}</ref> <br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| ], ] || 39 || Complete, paper. Purchased in 1978 for 2.4 million US dollars. | |||
| 36 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| vellum | |||
| | |||
|- | |- | ||
| ], ] | |||
| rowspan="2" | Vatican City (2) || rowspan="2" | ] || 33 || Incomplete, vellum | |||
| 39 | |||
| complete | |||
| paper | |||
| Purchased in 1978 for US$2.4 million.<br /> | |||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="2" | ] (2) | |||
| 34 || Vol I, incomplete, paper | |||
| rowspan="2" | ] | |||
| 33 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| vellum | |||
| Online images of and | |||
|- | |||
| 34 | |||
| incomplete | |||
| paper | |||
| Vol. I. | |||
|} | |} | ||
{{Collapse bottom}} | |||
== |
=== Fragments === | ||
Some fragments of the Gutenberg Bible are housed at... | |||
] | |||
* The ], ], Ireland | |||
Today, few copies remain in religious institutions, with most now owned by university libraries and other major scholarly institutions. After centuries in which all copies seem to have remained in Europe, the first Gutenberg Bible reached North America in 1847. It is now in the New York Public Library.<ref name="Clausen">Clausen Books accessed 7 July 2009 </ref> | |||
* The ], ], Switzerland | |||
* ], Melbourne, Australia<ref>{{Cite web |title=A fragment of the Gutenberg Bible at the University of Melbourne {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/video/copies-Gutenberg-Bible-leaves/-204712 |access-date=2024-11-13 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> | |||
* The Schiede Library at ], ], New Jersey, USA<ref>{{Cite web |last=White |first=Eric |date=2017-04-18 |title=Princeton Acquires a Vellum Fragment of the Gutenberg Bible Preserved as a Book Cover |url=https://blogs.princeton.edu/notabilia/2017/04/18/princeton-acquires-a-vellum-fragment-of-the-gutenberg-bible-preserved-as-a-book-cover/ |access-date=2024-11-13 |website=Notabilia: A Blog about Rare Books |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
* The Rendsberg Fragment at ], Schleswig, Germany | |||
* The McCune Collection, California, USA | |||
* The ] at ], California, USA | |||
* The John Carter Brown Library of the Early Americas in ], Rhode Island, USA | |||
* Several fragments and single leaves sold at ] or ] in the 21st century<ref>{{Cite news |last=Flood |first=Alison |date=2015-06-11 |title=Fragment of Gutenberg Bible expected to top $500,000 at auction |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/jun/11/fragment-of-gutenberg-bible-expected-half-million-dollars-auction-new-york |access-date=2024-11-13 |work=The Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> | |||
==Recent history== | |||
] | |||
] celebrating the 500th anniversary of the first printing of the Bible with ].The stamp depicts an image of Gutenberg showing a proof of his Bible to ], Archbishop of Mainz. ]] | |||
Today, few copies remain in religious institutions, with most now owned by university libraries and other major scholarly institutions. After centuries in which all copies seem to have remained in Europe, the first Gutenberg Bible reached North America in 1847. It is now in the New York Public Library.<ref name="Clausen">Clausen Books {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708163336/http://www.clausenbooks.com/gutenbergcensus.htm |date=2011-07-08 }} accessed 7 July 2009</ref> In the last hundred years, several long-lost copies have come to light, considerably improving the understanding of how the Bible was produced and distributed.<ref name="waste" /> | |||
In 1921 a New York rare book dealer, ], bought a damaged paper copy, dismantled the book and sold sections and individual leaves to book collectors and libraries. The leaves were sold in a portfolio case with an essay written by ], and were referred to as "Noble Fragments".<ref name="mccune">{{cite web |url=http://www.mccunecollection.org/Incunabula%20Leaf%20Biblia%20Latina.html |title=Incunabula Leaf Biblia Latina (ca 1450) Gutenberg |work=The McCune Collection |date=31 August 2014 |access-date=1 October 2014 |archive-date=6 October 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006081738/http://www.mccunecollection.org/Incunabula%20Leaf%20Biblia%20Latina.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://lbis.kenyon.edu/sca/exhibits/incunabula/z241b58.phtml |title=Archived copy |access-date=2006-09-02 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060901123038/http://lbis.kenyon.edu/sca/exhibits/incunabula/z241b58.phtml |archive-date=2006-09-01 }}</ref> In 1953 ], also book dealers in New York, dismembered a damaged paper copy of volume II. The largest portion of this, the New Testament, is now owned by Indiana University. The leaf carrying part of Chapter 14, all of Chapter 15, and part of Chapter 16 of the ] was donated to the General Theological Seminary to repair their copy of the bible (now located at the Württembergische Landesbibliothek).<ref name="GeneralTheologicalSeminary" /> The matching first volume of this copy was subsequently discovered in Mons, Belgium, having been bequeathed by Edmond Puissant to the city in 1934.<ref name="Long lost" /> | |||
One copy was lost during the destruction of the library of the ] by German troops in 1914. | |||
The only copy held outside Europe and North America is the first volume of a Gutenberg Bible (Hubay 45) at ] in Tokyo. The Humanities Media Interface Project (HUMI) at Keio University is known for its high-quality digital images of Gutenberg Bibles and other rare books.<ref name="Gutenberg Bible: The HUMI Project" /> Under the direction of Professor ], the HUMI team has made digital reproductions of 11 sets of the bible in nine institutions, including both full-text facsimiles held in the collection of the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pearson |first1=David |editor1-last=Bowman |editor1-first=J |title=British Librarianship and Information Work 1991–2000: Rare book librarianship and historical bibliography |date=2006 |publisher=Ashgate Publishing Ltd. |location=Aldershot |isbn=978-0-7546-4779-9 |page=178}}</ref> | |||
In the 1920s a New York book dealer, Gabriel Wells, bought a damaged paper copy, dismantled the book and sold sections and individual leaves to book collectors and libraries. The leaves were sold in a portfolio case with an essay written by ].<ref>Kenyon College Library http://lbis.kenyon.edu/sca/exhibits/incunabula/z241b58.phtml | |||
</ref> (Also referred to as a "Noble Fragment") These leaves now sell for $20,000–$100,000 depending upon condition and the desirability of the page. | |||
The last sale of a complete Gutenberg Bible took place in 1978, which sold for $2.4 million. This copy is now in Austin, Texas.<ref name="Clausen" /> The price of a complete copy today is estimated at $25−35 million.<ref name="MSNBC">MSNBC: </ref><ref name="Luxist.com">Luxist.com: {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130410171301/http://www.luxist.com/2008/01/31/the-world-of-rare-books-the-gutenberg-bible-first-and-most-val |date=2013-04-10 }}</ref> | |||
During the Second World War the Red Army removed two copies from Leipzig. Their whereabouts were unknown for many years until it was revealed they were in Moscow.<ref name="Clausen"/> | |||
A two-volume paper edition of the Gutenberg Bible was stolen from ] in 2009 and subsequently recovered in an ] sting operation in 2013.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-27738164 |title=Russia sentences secret agents over theft of Gutenberg Bible |work=BBC News |date=6 June 2014 |access-date=21 June 2018 |archive-date=10 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180710194516/https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-27738164 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The last sale of a complete Gutenberg Bible took place in 1978. It fetched $2.2 million. This copy is now in Stuttgart.<ref name="Clausen"/> | |||
Possession of a Gutenberg Bible by a library has been equated to keeping a "trophy book".<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hetzer |first=Armin |date=1996 |others=Translated from German and Russian by Gregory Walker |title='The Return from the States of the Former Soviet Union of Cultural Property Removed in the 1940s' as a Bibliographical Undertaking |url=https://archive.org/details/solanusnewseries_0010 |journal=Solanus |volume=10 |issn=0038-0903 |quote=The 'trophy' books fulfilled a threefold function. A part of them consisted of trophies in the stricter sense, for example the Gutenberg Bible now held in the Russian State Library (formerly the Lenin Library). Such books are not put to use for practical purposes: they are simply objects of beauty. Another part was ... |via=Internet Archive}}</ref> | |||
The only copy held in a non-western country is the first volume of a Gutenberg Bible (Hubay 45) at ] - originally purchased 22 October 1987 by Eiichi Kobayashi, a director at the Maruzen Company, for $5.4 million.<ref></ref>. The ] team at Keio University is known for its digital imaging work.<ref></ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* ] | |||
{{commonscat}} | |||
* ] | |||
* For other works printed by Gutenberg or from the workshop he founded, ''See:'' ]. | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== General bibliography == | |||
==Notes== | |||
* ]. America's Oldest Episcopal Seminary Library and the Needs It Serves. New York?: ], 1953. | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
* St. Mark's Library (General Theological Seminary). The Gutenberg Bible of the General Theological Seminary. New York: St. Mark's Library, the General Theological Seminary, 1963. | |||
* ''The Gutenberg Bible of 1454'', Göttingen Library, Facsimile Edition, 2 vols + booklet, ed. Stephan Füssel, 1400 pp. Taschen: Cologne. In Latin | |||
==References== | |||
{{Full citations needed|reason=multiple references do not identify the page number or cite overly long page ranges|date=February 2022}} | |||
{{reflist|30em}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Commons category}} | |||
* Information about Gutenberg and the Bible as well as online images of the British Library's 2 copies | |||
* |
* Public access to digitised copy of the Gutenberg Bible held by the ] in Germany | ||
* |
* Digitised copy of the Gutenberg Bible at the ] in the United States | ||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131010145559/http://www.bl.uk/treasures/gutenberg/homepage.html |date=10 October 2013 }} Information about Gutenberg and the Bible as well as online images of the British Library's two copies | |||
* entry for Gutenberg Bible | |||
* Details of surviving copies, including some notes on ] |
* Details of surviving copies, including some notes on ] | ||
* on | |||
* {{de icon}} Image of rubricators' instructions from the Munich copy | |||
* {{in lang|de}} Image of rubricators' instructions from the Munich copy | |||
* a podcast from the Beinecke Library, Yale University | |||
* {{cite book | url = https://archive.org/details/1462TheGutenbergBibleLatinVulgate/page/n11 | title = 1462 The Gutenberg Bible Latin Vulgate| via = ] }} | |||
* | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200727195934/http://streaming.yale.edu/opa/podcasts/audio/schools/library/whobrey_071008.mp3 |date=2020-07-27 }} Podcast from the Beinecke Library, Yale University | |||
* Image and information about a single "Noble Fragment" held by the McCune Collection in Vallejo, California | |||
* History.com, February 23, 2015 | |||
* Fragment of the Gutenberg Bible, </nowiki>], at the Library of Trinity College Dublin | |||
* Fragment of the Gutenberg Bible, '''', at the Clark Library of the University of California, Los Angeles | |||
* at the John Carter Brown Library of the Early Americas | |||
{{Books}} | |||
{{Authority control|state=expanded}} | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 16:06, 27 December 2024
Earliest major book printed in Europe
The Gutenberg Bible, also known as the 42-line Bible, the Mazarin Bible or the B42, was the earliest major book printed in Europe using mass-produced metal movable type. It marked the start of the "Gutenberg Revolution" and the age of printed books in the West. The book is valued and revered for its high aesthetic and artistic qualities and its historical significance.
The Gutenberg Bible is an edition of the Latin Vulgate printed in the 1450s by Johannes Gutenberg in Mainz, in present-day Germany. Out of either 158 or 180 copies that were originally printed, 49 survive in at least substantial portion, 21 of them in entirety. They are thought to be among the world's most valuable books, although no complete copy has been sold since 1978. In March 1455, the future Pope Pius II wrote that he had seen pages from the Gutenberg Bible displayed in Frankfurt to promote the edition.
The 36-line Bible, said to be the second printed Bible, is also sometimes referred to as a Gutenberg Bible, but may be the work of another printer.
Text
The Gutenberg Bible is an edition of the Vulgate, a Latin translation of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) and the Greek New Testament by St Jerome. The text contains emendations from the Parisian Bible tradition, and further divergences.
Printing history
While it is unlikely that any of Gutenberg's early publications would bear his name, the initial expense of press equipment and materials and of the work to be done before the Bible was ready for sale suggests that he may have started with more lucrative texts, including several religious documents, a German poem, and some editions of Aelius Donatus's Ars Minor, a popular Latin grammar school book.
Preparation of the Bible probably began soon after 1450, and the first finished copies were available in 1454 or 1455. It is not known exactly how long the Bible took to print. The first precisely datable printing is Gutenberg's 31-line Indulgence which certainly existed by 22 October 1454.
Gutenberg made three significant changes during the printing process.
Some time later, after more sheets had been printed, the number of lines per page was increased from 40 to 42, presumably to save paper. Therefore, pages 1 to 9 and pages 256 to 265, presumably the first ones printed, have 40 lines each. Page 10 has 41, and from there on the 42 lines appear. The increase in line number was achieved by decreasing the interline spacing, rather than increasing the printed area of the page. Finally, the print run was increased, necessitating resetting those pages which had already been printed. The new sheets were all reset to 42 lines per page. Consequently, there are two distinct settings in folios 1–32 and 129–158 of volume I and folios 1–16 and 162 of volume II.
The most reliable information about the Bible's date comes from a letter. In March 1455, the future Pope Pius II wrote that he had seen pages from the Gutenberg Bible, being displayed to promote the edition, in Frankfurt. It is not known how many copies were printed, with the 1455 letter citing sources for both 158 and 180 copies. Scholars today think that examination of surviving copies suggests that somewhere between 160 and 185 copies were printed, with about three-quarters on paper and the others on vellum.
The production process: Das Werk der Bücher
In a legal paper, written after completion of the Bible, Johannes Gutenberg refers to the process as Das Werk der Bücher ("the work of the books"). He had introduced the printing press to Europe and created the technology to make printing with movable types finally efficient enough to facilitate the mass production of entire books.
Many book-lovers have commented on the high standards achieved in the production of the Gutenberg Bible, some describing it as one of the most beautiful books ever printed. The quality of both the ink and other materials and the printing itself have been noted.
Pages
The paper size is 'double folio', with two pages printed on each side (four pages per sheet). After printing the paper was folded once to the size of a single page. Typically, five of these folded sheets (ten leaves, or twenty printed pages) were combined to a single physical section, called a quinternion, that could then be bound into a book. Some sections, however, had as few as four leaves or as many as twelve leaves.
The 42-line Bible was printed on the size of paper known as 'Royal'. A full sheet of Royal paper measures 42 cm × 60 cm (17 in × 24 in) and a single untrimmed folio leaf measures 42 cm × 30 cm (17 in × 12 in). There have been attempts to claim that the book was printed on larger paper measuring 44.5 cm × 30.7 cm (17.5 in × 12.1 in), but this assertion is contradicted by the dimensions of existing copies. For example, the leaves of the copy in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, measure 40 cm × 28.6 cm (15.7 in × 11.3 in). This is typical of other folio Bibles printed on Royal paper in the fifteenth century. Most fifteenth-century printing papers have a width-to-height ratio of 1:1.4 (e.g. 30:42 cm) which, mathematically, is a ratio of 1 to the square root of 2 or, simply, . Many suggest that this ratio was chosen to match the so-called Golden Ratio, , of 1:1.6; in fact the ratios are, plainly, not at all similar (equating to a difference of about 12 per cent). The ratio of 1:1.4 was a long established one for medieval paper sizes. A single complete copy of the Gutenberg Bible has 1,288 pages (4×322 = 1288) (usually bound in two volumes); with four pages per folio-sheet, 322 sheets of paper are required per copy. The Bible's paper consists of linen fibers and is thought to have been imported from Caselle in Piedmont, Italy based on the watermarks present throughout the volume.
Ink
In Gutenberg's time, inks used by scribes to produce manuscripts were water-based. Gutenberg developed an oil-based ink that would better adhere to his metal type. His ink was primarily carbon, but also had a high metallic content, with copper, lead, and titanium predominating. Head of collections at the British Library, Kristian Jensen, described it thus: "if you look closely you will see this is a very shiny surface. When you write you use a water-based ink, you put your pen into it and it runs off. Now if you print that's exactly what you don't want. One of Gutenberg's inventions was an ink which wasn't ink, it's a varnish. So what we call printer's ink is actually a varnish, and that means it sticks to its surface."
Type
Each unique character requires a piece of master type in order to be replicated. Given that each letter has uppercase and lowercase forms, and the number of various punctuation marks and ligatures (e.g., "fi" for the letter sequence "fi", commonly used in writing), the Gutenberg Bible needed a set of 290 master characters. It seems probable that six pages, containing 15,600 characters altogether, would be set at any one moment.
Type style
The Gutenberg Bible is printed in the blackletter type styles that would become known as Textualis (Textura) and Schwabacher. The name Textura refers to the texture of the printed page: straight vertical strokes combined with horizontal lines, giving the impression of a woven structure. Gutenberg already used the technique of justification, that is, creating a vertical, not indented, alignment at the left and right-hand sides of the column. To do this, he used various methods, including using characters of narrower widths, adding extra spaces around punctuation, and varying the widths of spaces around words.
Rubrication, illumination and binding
Initially the rubrics—the headings before each book of the Bible—were printed, but this practice was quickly abandoned at an unknown date, and gaps were left for rubrication to be added by hand. A guide of the text to be added to each page, printed for use by rubricators, survives.
The spacious margin allowed illuminated decoration to be added by hand. The amount of decoration presumably depended on how much each buyer could or would pay. Some copies were never decorated. The place of decoration can be known or inferred for about 30 of the surviving copies. It is possible that 13 of these copies received their decoration in Mainz, but others were worked on as far away as London. The vellum Bibles were more expensive, and perhaps for this reason tend to be more highly decorated, although the vellum copy in the British Library is completely undecorated.
There has been speculation that the "Master of the Playing Cards", an unidentified engraver who has been called "the first personality in the history of engraving," was partly responsible for the illumination of the copy held by the Princeton University library. However, all that can be said for certain is that the same model book was used for some of the illustrations in this copy and for some of the Master's illustrated playing cards.
Although many Gutenberg Bibles have been rebound over the years, nine copies retain fifteenth-century bindings. Most of these copies were bound in either Mainz or Erfurt. Most copies were divided into two volumes, the first volume ending with The Book of Psalms. Copies on vellum were heavier and for this reason were sometimes bound in three or four volumes.
Early owners
The Bible seems to have sold out immediately, with some initial purchases as far away as England and possibly Sweden and Hungary. At least some copies are known to have sold for 30 florins (equivalent to about 100 grams or 3.5 ounces of gold), which was about three years' wages for a clerk. Although this made them significantly cheaper than manuscript Bibles, most students, priests or other people of moderate income would not have been able to afford them. It is assumed that most were sold to monasteries, universities and particularly wealthy individuals. At present only one copy is known to have been privately owned in the fifteenth century. Some are known to have been used for communal readings in monastery refectories; others may have been for display rather than use, and a few were certainly used for study. Kristian Jensen suggests that many copies were bought by wealthy and pious laymen for donation to religious institutions.
Influence on later Bibles
The Gutenberg Bible had a profound effect on the history of the printed book. Textually, it also had an influence on future editions of the Bible. It provided the model for several later editions, including the 36 Line Bible, Mentelin's Latin Bible, and the first and third Eggestein Bibles. The third Eggestein Bible was set from the copy of the Gutenberg Bible now in Cambridge University Library. The Gutenberg Bible also had an influence on the Clementine edition of the Vulgate commissioned by the Papacy in the late sixteenth century.
Forgeries
Joseph Martini, a New York book dealer, found that the Gutenberg Bible held by the library of the General Theological Seminary in New York had a forged leaf, carrying part of Chapter 14, all of Chapter 15, and part of Chapter 16 of the Book of Ezekiel. It was impossible to tell when the leaf had been inserted into the volume. It was replaced in the fall of 1953, when a patron donated the corresponding leaf from a defective Gutenberg second volume which was being broken up and sold in parts. This made it "the first imperfect Gutenberg Bible ever restored to completeness." In 1978, this copy was sold for US$2.2 million to the Württembergische Landesbibliothek in Stuttgart, Germany.
Surviving copies
As of 2009, 49 Gutenberg Bibles are known to exist, but of these only 21 are complete. Others have pages or even whole volumes missing. In addition, there are a substantial number of fragments, some as small as individual leaves, which are likely to represent about another 16 copies. Many of these fragments have survived because they were used as part of the binding of later books.
Substantially complete copies
List of substantially complete copies | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Fragments
Some fragments of the Gutenberg Bible are housed at...
- The Library of Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
- The Basel Univeristy Library, Basel, Switzerland
- The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia
- The Schiede Library at Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA
- The Rendsberg Fragment at Gottorf Castle, Schleswig, Germany
- The McCune Collection, California, USA
- The Clark Library at UCLA, California, USA
- The John Carter Brown Library of the Early Americas in Providence, Rhode Island, USA
- Several fragments and single leaves sold at Christie's Auction House or Sotheby's in the 21st century
Recent history
Today, few copies remain in religious institutions, with most now owned by university libraries and other major scholarly institutions. After centuries in which all copies seem to have remained in Europe, the first Gutenberg Bible reached North America in 1847. It is now in the New York Public Library. In the last hundred years, several long-lost copies have come to light, considerably improving the understanding of how the Bible was produced and distributed.
In 1921 a New York rare book dealer, Gabriel Wells, bought a damaged paper copy, dismantled the book and sold sections and individual leaves to book collectors and libraries. The leaves were sold in a portfolio case with an essay written by A. Edward Newton, and were referred to as "Noble Fragments". In 1953 Charles Scribner's Sons, also book dealers in New York, dismembered a damaged paper copy of volume II. The largest portion of this, the New Testament, is now owned by Indiana University. The leaf carrying part of Chapter 14, all of Chapter 15, and part of Chapter 16 of the Book of Ezekiel was donated to the General Theological Seminary to repair their copy of the bible (now located at the Württembergische Landesbibliothek). The matching first volume of this copy was subsequently discovered in Mons, Belgium, having been bequeathed by Edmond Puissant to the city in 1934.
The only copy held outside Europe and North America is the first volume of a Gutenberg Bible (Hubay 45) at Keio University in Tokyo. The Humanities Media Interface Project (HUMI) at Keio University is known for its high-quality digital images of Gutenberg Bibles and other rare books. Under the direction of Professor Toshiyuki Takamiya, the HUMI team has made digital reproductions of 11 sets of the bible in nine institutions, including both full-text facsimiles held in the collection of the British Library.
The last sale of a complete Gutenberg Bible took place in 1978, which sold for $2.4 million. This copy is now in Austin, Texas. The price of a complete copy today is estimated at $25−35 million.
A two-volume paper edition of the Gutenberg Bible was stolen from Moscow State University in 2009 and subsequently recovered in an FSB sting operation in 2013.
Possession of a Gutenberg Bible by a library has been equated to keeping a "trophy book".
See also
- Books in Germany
- Canons of page construction
- Incunable
- Jikji
- List of most expensive books and manuscripts
General bibliography
- Niels Henry Sonne. America's Oldest Episcopal Seminary Library and the Needs It Serves. New York?: General Theological Seminary, 1953.
- St. Mark's Library (General Theological Seminary). The Gutenberg Bible of the General Theological Seminary. New York: St. Mark's Library, the General Theological Seminary, 1963.
- The Gutenberg Bible of 1454, Göttingen Library, Facsimile Edition, 2 vols + booklet, ed. Stephan Füssel, 1400 pp. Taschen: Cologne. In Latin
References
This article needs more complete citations for verification. Please help add missing citation information so that sources are clearly identifiable. (February 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
- ^ Davies, Martin (1996). The Gutenberg Bible. British Library. ISBN 0-7123-0492-4.
- ^ MSNBC: In the book world, the rarest of the rare
- ^ Luxist.com: The World of Rare Books: The Gutenberg Bible, First and Most Valuable Archived 2013-04-10 at the Wayback Machine
- British Library, "Early Printed Bibles - In Latin 1454 onwards"
- "The text of the Bible". bl.uk. British Library. Archived from the original on 25 October 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
- ^ Man, John (2002). Gutenberg: How One Man Remade the World with Words. New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc. ISBN 0-471-21823-5.
- Klooster, John W. (2009). Icons of invention : the makers of the modern world from Gutenberg to Gates. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-34744-3. OCLC 647903993.
- Gowan, Al; Meggs, Philip B.; Ashwin, Clive (1984). "A History of Graphic Design". Design Issues. 1 (1): 87. doi:10.2307/1511549. ISSN 0747-9360. JSTOR 1511549.
- "The Gutenberg Bible". utexas.edu. Archived from the original on 28 January 2013. Retrieved 28 March 2007.
- Wagner, Bettina; Reed, Marcia (23 December 2010). Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the IFLA Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009. Walter de Gruyter. p. 11. ISBN 978-3-11-025530-0.
- ^ British Library, Three phases in the printing process Archived 2011-10-14 at the Wayback Machine accessed 4 July 2009
- British Library, The differences in line lengths per page Archived 2009-09-07 at the Wayback Machine: pictures showing differences between the Keio copy (40 lines per page) and the British Library copy (42 lines per page) in Genesis 1. Accessed 10 July 2009
- British Library, Gutenberg's life: the years of the Bible Archived 2020-09-18 at the Wayback Machine accessed 10 July 2009
- ^ White, Eric Marshall (2002). "Long Lost Leaves from Gutenberg's Mons-Trier II Bible". Gutenberg Jahrbuch. 77: 19–36.
- Lane Ford, Margaret (2010). "Deconstruction and Reconstruction: Detecting and Interpreting Sophisticated Copies". In Wagner, Bettina; Reed, Marcia (eds.). Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the Ifla Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009. De Gruyter Sur. pp. 291–304. ISBN 978-3-11-025324-5.
- British Library, Gutenberg Bible: background Archived 2021-02-24 at the Wayback Machine accessed 10 July 2009
- British Library, Making the Bible: the gatherings Archived 2008-06-07 at the Wayback Machine accessed 10 July 2009
- Paul Needham, 'Format and Paper Size in Fifteenth-century Printing', In: Materielle Aspekte in der Inkunabelforschung, Wiesbaden, 2017, pp. 59–108: p. 83.
- George Gordon and William Noel, 'The Needham Calculator', 2017: http://www.needhamcalculator.net/needham_calculator1.pdf Archived 2018-08-26 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 26 August 2018.
- Man, John (2002). Gutenberg: How One Man Remade the World with Words, New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc. ISBN 0-471-21823-5.
- "Accessed 26 August 2018". Archived from the original on 15 September 2020. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
- Paul Needham, 'Format and Paper Size in Fifteenth-century Printing', In: Materielle Aspekte in der Inkunabelforschung, Wiesbaden, 2017, p. 83.
- Neil Harris, 'The Shape of Paper', subsection 'Sheet-size and the Bologna Stone', in: Paper and Watermarks as Bibliographical Evidence, Lyon, Institut d'histoire du livre, 2017, http://ihl.enssib.fr/en/paper-and-watermarks-as-bibliographical-evidence Archived 2018-08-26 at the Wayback Machine.
- "Fast Facts: The Gutenberg Bible". utexas.edu. Archived from the original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
- Wight, C. "Gutenberg Bible: Making the Bible – the Paper". www.bl.uk. Archived from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
- British Library, Making the Bible: the ink Archived 2007-09-11 at the Wayback Machine accessed 18 October 2009.
- BBC Radio 4 programme "Gutenberg: In the Beginning Was the Printer", first broadcast 21-10-2014
- "Kristian Jensen on the Gutenberg Bible | Polonsky Foundation Digitization Project". Archived from the original on 26 November 2022. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
- Television presentation, "The Machine that Made Us", presenter: Stephen Fry
- "InDesign, the hz-program and Gutenberg's secret". Archived from the original on 24 December 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2009.
- ^ Kapr, Albert (1996). Johann Gutenberg: The Man and His Invention. Scolar Press. ISBN 1-85928-114-1.
- "Gutenberg Bible: The Copy on Paper – the Decoration". bl.uk. Archived from the original on 1 March 2009. Retrieved 19 October 2008.
- ^ Estes, Richard (2005). The 550th Anniversary Pictorial Census of the Gutenberg Bible. Gutenberg Research Center. p. 151.
- ^ Jensen, Kristian (2003). "Printing the Bible in the fifteenth century: devotion, philology and commerce". In Jensen, Kristian (ed.). Incunabula and their readers: printing, selling and using books in the fifteenth century. British Library. pp. 115–38. ISBN 0-7123-4769-0.
- Shestack, Alan (1967). Fifteenth Century Engravings of Northern Europe. National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. LCCN 67029080.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - van Buren, Anne H.; Edmunds, Sheila (March 1974). "Playing Cards and Manuscripts: Some Widely Disseminated Fifteenth Century Model Sheets". The Art Bulletin. 56 (1): 12–30. doi:10.1080/00043079.1974.10789835. ISSN 0004-3079. JSTOR 3049193.
- ^ White, Eric Marshall (2010). "The Gutenberg Bibles that Survive as Binder's Waste". In Wagner, Bettina; Reed, Marcia (eds.). Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the Ifla Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009. De Gruyter Sur. pp. 21–35. ISBN 978-3-11-025324-5.
- McGrath, Alister (2001). In the Beginning: The Story of the King James Bible and How It Changed a Nation, a Language, and a Culture. Anchor Books. p. 15. ISBN 0-385-72216-8.
- Cormack, Lesley B.; Ede, Andrew (2004). A History of Science in Society: From Philosophy to Utility. Broadview Press. pp. 95. ISBN 1-55111-332-5.
- Needham, Paul (1999). "The Changing Shape of the Vulgate Bible in Fifteenth-Century Printing Shops". In Saenger, Paul; Van Kampen, Kimberly (eds.). The Bible as Book:the First Printed Editions. British Library. pp. 53–70. ISBN 0-7123-4601-5.
- Needham, Paul (2010). "Copy Specifics in the Printing Shop". In Wagner, Bettina; Reed, Marcia (eds.). Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the Ifla Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009. De Gruyter Sur. pp. 9–20. ISBN 978-3-11-025324-5.
- ^ St. Mark's Library (General Theological Seminary). The Gutenberg Bible of the General Theological Seminary. New York: St. Mark's Library, the General Theological Seminary, 1963.
- "Gutenberg Bible Census". Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 1 June 2007.
- Estelle Betzold Doheny (1987). The Estelle Doheny Collection: Fifteenth-century books, including the Gutenberg Bible. Vol. 1. Christie, Manson & Woods International. pp. 23–.
- "ISTC (Incunabula Shorttitle Catalogue)". AMPLE. Consortium of European Research Libraries. 5 June 2018. Archived from the original on 5 June 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
- Das Antiquariat ... (in German). Vol. 7. W. Krieg. 1951. pp. 122–.
Das Exemplar enthält das älteste festgestellte Da*tum, das im Zusammenhang mit der Gutenberg*Bibel steht. ... Mit der „tabula rubricarum", auf 4 Blättern am Schluß des Werkes gedruckt. ... Das Exemplar gehörte früher Friedrich Karl Joseph von Erthal, dem Kurfürsten von Mainz, dessen Bibliothek 1793 aufgeteilt wurde.
- ^ Bettina Wagner; Marcia Reed (2010). Early Printed Books as Material Objects: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the IFLA Rare Books and Manuscripts Section Munich, 19–21 August 2009. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 15–. ISBN 978-3-11-025530-0.
As has been known for decades, the Gutenberg Bible shop printed not just the Bible itself, but also a separate rubric guide ... Gutenberg Bible at the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich, and at the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna.
- ^ The AB Bookman's Yearbook. Bookman's weekly. 1956. p. 392.
This copy contains the earliest recorded date associated with the Gutenberg Bible. At the end of both volumes are notes ... With the "tabula rubricarum" (index of rubrics) printed on 4 leaves at the end. These additional leaves occur in only one ...
- Antiquarian Bookman. 14–26. Vol. 18. R.R. Bowker. 1956. pp. 1410–.
The example of the Gutenberg Bible in Mons is quite incomplete, containing only 220 leaves of Volume I. Folio 1 is ... end of the Book of Ruth (folio 128 verso) and chapter 5 of Kings II (folio 149 recto) These comprise the 104 missing leaves.
- Josef Stummvoll (1971). Die Gutenberg-Bibel (in German). Österreichisches Institut für Bibliotheksforschung. pp. 26–.
...Kanonikus Edmond Puissant in Mons. 1934 beim Tode Puissants an die Stadt Mons gekommen. Wurde erst 1950 vom Bibliothekar Dr. M. A. Arnould identifiziert. Nur bei Norman (20) und Stöwesand (14) verzeichnet. Aufbewahrt in der ...
- Kongelige Bibliotek (Denmark); Harald Ilsøe (1993). On parchment, paper and palm leaves – treasures of the Royal Library, Denmark : a presentation in pictures and words on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of the opening of the library to the public. Royal Library. pp. 30–. ISBN 978-87-7023-621-8.
Then, in 1713, Gottorp was captured during the war with Danmark and the library made the property of the Danish king. At that ... was volume 2 of the famous 42-line Bible, Johan Gutenberg's first great work of the art of printing done at Mainz c. ...
- Harald Ilsøe (1999). Det kongelige Bibliotek i støbeskeen: studier og samlinger til bestandens historie indtil ca. 1780 (in Danish). Museum Tusculanum Press. pp. 65–. ISBN 978-87-7289-550-5.
Med et eksemplar af bind 2 af Gutenberg-biblen trykt i Mainz ca. ... af bøger til forsendelse trak ud, blev biblioteket først endeligt modtaget i København 1749.
- Veröffentlichung der Gutenberg-gesellschaft (in French). Vol. 5–9. 1908. pp. 58–.
Cédé en 1767 par les Bénédictins de Mayence à Dom Maugérard, pour Dupré de Geneste, Administrateur des Domaines à Meç, dont la bibliothèque fut vendue en 1788 par le cardinal Loménie de Brienne à la Bibliothèque ...
- AB Bookman's Yearbook. Bookman's weekly. 1956. pp. 391–.
It is hoped these emendations will bring this revision of the Gutenberg Bible list totally up to date. The compiler ... In 1788 or shortly afterwards, it was rebound in red morocco, with the arms of Louis XVI stamped in gilt on the covers, in 4 vols.
- Das Antiquariat ... (in German). Vol. 7. W. Krieg. 1951. pp. 122–.
Am Schlüsse der beiden Bände sind Vermerke des Rubrikators und Buchbinders Henricus Cremer über die Voll*endung seiner Arbeit eingetragen: (Bd. I ... 24. August 1456; Bd. II . . . 15. August 1456).
- Howard, Nicole (2005). The Book: The Life Story Of A Technology. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-313-33028-5. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
- Frederick Richmond Goff (1971). The permanence of Johann Gutenberg. Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin; distributed by University of Texas Press. pp. 18–. ISBN 9780292700598.
- Harold Rabinowitz; Rob Kaplan (2007). A Passion for Books: A Book Lover's Treasury of Stories, Essays, Humor, Lore, and Lists on Collecting, Reading, Borrowing, Lending, Caring for, and Appreciating Books. Crown/Archetype. pp. 229–. ISBN 978-0-307-41966-8.
The story of the resurrection of the Gutenberg Bible, after Francois Guillaume de Bure recognized its importance when he came upon a copy in 1763 in the Mazarin library, is however not a part of the history of the Bible in English and must ...
- Talbot Wilson Chambers; Frank Hugh Foster (1890). Concise Dictionary of Religious Knowledge: Biblical, Doctrinal, Historical, and Practical. Christian Literature Company. pp. 553–.
Mazarin Bible, The, or Gutenberg Bible, Mentz, 1450–55, the first book printed with movable types. It was discovered by De Burc in the Mazarin Library at Paris about 1760. Six copies on vellum are known and 81 on paper. One of the latter is in ...
- Alexandre Saint-Léger (1984). Revue du Nord. 261–263 (in French). Vol. 66. pp. 637–.
Nous ne saurions bien évidemment passer sous silence un volume de la Bible à 42 lignes de Gutenberg, conservé à Saint-Omer et venant de l'abbaye de Saint-Bertin '3, mais le catalogue relève également les éditions de Pierre Schoeffer à ...
- The Living Church. Vol. 176. Morehouse-Gorham Company. January 1978. pp. 75–.
A Gutenberg Bible has been sold by New York book dealer Hans P. Kraus for $1.8 million, the same price for which he bought it in 1970. ... Known as the Shuckburgh Bible, the Kraus copy was named after Sir George Shuckburgh, its 18th century owner, who ...
- Sandra Kirshenbaum (1978). Fine Print. S. Kirshenbaum. pp. 102–.
Early in March Mr. Kraus sold his Bible, known as the Shuckburgh copy, to the Gutenberg Museum of Mainz for $1,800,000, the highest price ever paid ..
- Gutenberg-Gesellschaft (1979). Aloys Ruppel, 1882–1977: Würdigung bei der Gedächtnisfeier des Fachbereichs 16 Geschichtswissenschaft der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz und der Gutenberg-Gesellschaft am 21. Juni 1978 (in German). Verlag der Gutenberg-Gesellschaft. pp. 26–.
Als wir 1925 das silberne Jubiläum des Gutenberg-Museums vorbereiteten, rief mich Ministerialrat Hassinger vom ... von Solms-Laubach wolle sein Exemplar verkaufen und habe bereits ein Angebot von einem Leipziger Antiquar erhalten.
- "Vor ungefähr 600 Jahren wurde Gutenberg geboren. Mainz ehrt ihn auf verschiedene Weisen: Heute für Stielaugen". Berliner Zeitung. 18 April 2000. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
- "42-line Gutenberg Bible, printed on vellum, and its contemporary documentary background". UNESCO. Archived from the original on 30 November 2022. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
- While this Gutenberg Bible copy is technically complete, the leaf carrying part of Chapter 14, all of Chapter 15, and part of Chapter 16 of the Book of Ezekiel is not original to this copy. It was inserted in 1953 from another Gutenberg Bible to replace a forged leaf.
- White, Eric Marshall; Rosenstein, Natalee; Travis, Trysh; Adams, Peter W.; Baensch, Robert E. (2003). "Book reviews". Publishing Research Quarterly. 19 (2): 65–72. doi:10.1007/s12109-003-0009-3. ISSN 1053-8801. S2CID 189906589.
- Davis, Margaret Leslie (2019). The Lost Gutenberg: The Astounding Story of One Book's Five-Hundred-Year Odyssey. New York: TarcherPerigee. ISBN 9781592408672.
- "Ellensburg Daily Record – Google News Archive Search". google.com. Archived from the original on 15 April 2021. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
- ^ "Gutenberg Bible: The HUMI Project". The Morgan Library and Museum. 4 November 2013. Archived from the original on 4 June 2016. Retrieved 13 May 2016.
- "Rare Gutenberg Bible Found In Russia 50 Years After War". The Seattle Times. 10 December 1993.
A rare 15th-century Gutenberg Bible that was among the treasures the Red army brought back as trophies from World War II was hidden so well in Russia's State Library that even the curator didn't know it was there. The Bible belonged to a museum in Germany, and was brought to Moscow in 1945 with other manuscripts and rare books, the newspaper Izvestia quoted the library director, Igor Filippov, as saying. Russian authorities have agreed to negotiate their return.
- Popova, Anna (22 April 2021). "8 major cultural trophies the USSR took home after WWII". Russia Beyond. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
Two Bibles printed by Johannes Gutenberg from the German Museum of Books and Writing in Leipzig also ended up in Moscow. Of 180 copies, only 47 have survived to our time, so one can imagine how rare these editions are. One of the Bibles is currently kept at Moscow Lomonosov University (MGU) and the other, as it emerged only in the 1990s, is at the 'Leninka' (the Russian State Library, formerly the Lenin Library) in Moscow.
- "German Museum of Books and Writing "Signs – Books – Networks"". Archived from the original on 21 April 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- Georg Jäger (2010). Geschichte des deutschen Buchhandels im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert. Band 1: Das Kaiserreich 1871–1918 (in German). Walter de Gruyter. pp. 218–. ISBN 978-3-11-023238-7.
- Becker, Peter von (22 March 2012). "Buch- und Schriftkultur: Das Geisterhaus – Kultur – Tagesspiegel". Der Tagesspiegel Online (in German). Archived from the original on 22 April 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
Doch die beiden Pergamentbände verwahrt bis heute die Russische Staatsbibliothek in Moskau, als Kriegsbeute.
- Johann Wetter (1836). Kritische Geschichte der Erfindung der Buchdruckerkunst durch Johann Gutenberg zu Mainz, begleitet mit einer, vorhin noch nie angestellten, genauen Prüfung und gänzlichen Beseitigung der von Schöpfiin und seinen Anhängern verfochtenen Ansprüche der Stadt Strassburg, und einer neuen Untersuchung der Ansprüche der Stadt Harlem und vollständigen Widerlegung ihrei Verfechter Junius, Meerman, Koning, Dibdin, Otley und Ebert (in German). J. Wirth. pp. 520–.
- Henry Noel Humphreys (1867). A History of the Art of Printing: From Its Invention to Its Wide-spread Development in the Middle of the 16th Century : Preceded by a Short Account of the Origin of the Alphabet and the Successive Methods of Recording Events and Multiplying Ms. Books Before the Invention of Printing. B. Quaritch. pp. 62–.
- Donald Kerr (2006). Amassing Treasures for All Times: Sir George Grey, Colonial Bookman and Collector. Oak Knoll Press. pp. 95–. ISBN 978-1-58456-196-5.
- "Eton Collections | B25545". Archived from the original on 5 August 2020. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
- "A library as old as the Bible it holds". 16 May 2017. Archived from the original on 15 September 2020. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
- Thomas Frognall Dibdin (1814). Bibliotheca Spenceriana; Or a Descriptive Catalogue of the Books Printed in the Fifteenth Century, and of Many Valuable First Editions in the Library of George John Earl Spencer. Vol. 1. pp. 6–.
- Albert Charles Robinson Carter (1940). Let Me Tell You. Hutchinson & Company. pp. 202–.
- "Bod-Inc online". Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
- "Cambridge University Library – Addendum". Addendum. 9 September 2015. Archived from the original on 26 September 2018. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
- Peter Fox (1998). Cambridge University Library: The Great Collections. Cambridge University Press. pp. 65–. ISBN 978-0-521-62647-7.
- Takami Matsuda; Richard A. Linenthal; John Scahill (2004). The medieval book and a modern collector: essays in honour of Toshiyuki Takamiya. D.S. Brewer. pp. 448–. ISBN 978-4-8419-0348-5.
- Allen Kent; Harold Lancour; Jay E. Daily (1982). Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 33 – The Wellesley College Library to Zoological Literature: A Review. CRC Press. pp. 315–. ISBN 978-0-8247-2033-9.
Perhaps the most outstanding volume in the Beinecke collection is the Melk copy of the Gutenberg Bible, the gift of Mrs. Edward S. Harkness. The Gutenberg Bible is thought to have been the first book printed with movable type and was ...
- Christopher Morley; Ken Kalfus; Walter Jack Duncan (1990). Christopher Morley's Philadelphia. Fordham Univ Press. pp. 76–. ISBN 978-0-8232-1270-5.
- Randolph G. Adams (1939). The Americanists. pp. 49–.
This particular Bible came from Erfurt, in Germany.24 It was handled by a Berlin dealer, A. Asher, who also had a ... So Brinley got a Gutenberg Bible at ,£637-15-0, and, as Stevens said, "Cheap at the price." 25 But ... Brinley – Hamilton Cole – Brayton Ives – James W. Ellsworth – A. S. W. Rosenbach – John H. Scheide.
- Grolier Club (1966). Gazette of the Grolier Club. pp. 116–.
There were three main type groups represented in the exhibition: The type of the 42-line Bible. The type of the 36-line ... THE 4'2-LINE BIBLE This work is the masterpiece of Johann Gutenberg. Mr. Goff has ... now owned by Arthur A. Houghton Jr.; and the Brinley-Cole-Ives-Ellsworth copy, now owned by William H. Scheide.
- The Princeton University Library Chronicle. Vol. 37–39. Friends of the Princeton University Library. 1976. pp. 77–.
sold the Bible a year later for $46,000 to the late John H. Scheide, the father of the present owner. The Brinley-Cole-Ives-Ellsworth- Scheide copy was brought to Princeton from Titusville, Pennsylvania, in 1959, where it had remained for 35 years. ... Hellmut Lehmann-Haupt in his Gutenberg and the Master of the Playing Cards (New Haven and London, 1966) has shown the relationship of a number of ...
- Princeton Alumni Weekly. Vol. 61. princeton alumni weekly. 1960. pp. 86–. PRNC:32101081976894.
- Frank P. Leslie (1960). The 46th Gutenberg. Vagabond Press.
- The Friends of the Lilly Library Newsletter. Vol. 29–32. Indiana University Foundation. 1998. pp. 5–.
The second volume of the Gutenberg Bible from which the Lilly Library New Testament would eventually be extracted was discovered in 1828 in a farmhouse ... The copy had 116 leaves of the original 128 of a full Gutenberg New Testament.
- Lotte Hellinga; Martin Davies (1999). Incunabula: studies in fifteenth-century printed books presented to Lotte Hellinga. British Library. pp. 341–. ISBN 9780712345071.
- "A fragment of the Gutenberg Bible at the University of Melbourne | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 13 November 2024.
- White, Eric (18 April 2017). "Princeton Acquires a Vellum Fragment of the Gutenberg Bible Preserved as a Book Cover". Notabilia: A Blog about Rare Books. Retrieved 13 November 2024.
- Flood, Alison (11 June 2015). "Fragment of Gutenberg Bible expected to top $500,000 at auction". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 13 November 2024.
- ^ Clausen Books Gutenberg Bible Census Archived 2011-07-08 at the Wayback Machine accessed 7 July 2009
- "Incunabula Leaf Biblia Latina (ca 1450) Gutenberg". The McCune Collection. 31 August 2014. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 1 September 2006. Retrieved 2 September 2006.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - Pearson, David (2006). Bowman, J (ed.). British Librarianship and Information Work 1991–2000: Rare book librarianship and historical bibliography. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing Ltd. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-7546-4779-9.
- "Russia sentences secret agents over theft of Gutenberg Bible". BBC News. 6 June 2014. Archived from the original on 10 July 2018. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
- Hetzer, Armin (1996). "'The Return from the States of the Former Soviet Union of Cultural Property Removed in the 1940s' as a Bibliographical Undertaking". Solanus. 10. Translated from German and Russian by Gregory Walker. ISSN 0038-0903 – via Internet Archive.
The 'trophy' books fulfilled a threefold function. A part of them consisted of trophies in the stricter sense, for example the Gutenberg Bible now held in the Russian State Library (formerly the Lenin Library). Such books are not put to use for practical purposes: they are simply objects of beauty. Another part was ...
External links
- Gutenberg Digital Public access to digitised copy of the Gutenberg Bible held by the Göttingen State and University Library in Germany
- Morgan Gutenberg Bible Online Digitised copy of the Gutenberg Bible at the Morgan Library & Museum in the United States
- Treasures in Full: Gutenberg Bible Archived 10 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Information about Gutenberg and the Bible as well as online images of the British Library's two copies
- Gutenberg Bible Census Details of surviving copies, including some notes on provenance
- The Munich copy of the Gutenberg Bible on bavarikon
- Tabula rubricarum (in German) Image of rubricators' instructions from the Munich copy
- 1462 The Gutenberg Bible Latin Vulgate – via archive.org.
- The Gutenberg Bible at the Beinecke Archived 2020-07-27 at the Wayback Machine Podcast from the Beinecke Library, Yale University
- The Gutenberg Leaf Image and information about a single "Noble Fragment" held by the McCune Collection in Vallejo, California
- History in the Headlines: 7 Things You May Not Know About the Gutenberg Bible History.com, February 23, 2015
- Fragment of the Gutenberg Bible, Biblia Latina , at the Library of Trinity College Dublin
- Fragment of the Gutenberg Bible, A Noble Fragment: Being a Leaf of the Gutenberg Bible (1450-55), at the Clark Library of the University of California, Los Angeles
- Fragment of the Gutenberg Bible at the John Carter Brown Library of the Early Americas
Books | |
---|---|
Production | |
Consumption | |
By country | |
Other |
|
Related | |