in'cu-nab'u-la (in'ku-nab'u-la), n. pl.; sing. -LUM (-lum). [L., pl. cradle, birthplace, origin. See In- in; CUNABULA.] 1. Cradle period or state; beginnings; infancy. 2. Bibliog. Works of art, or of human industry, of an early epoch; specifically books printed before 1501 A.D. Also in the singular form, in'cu-nab'u-lum (-lum); -- called also cradle book, fifteener.
n 1639, Bernard von Mallinckordt
of Munster Cathedral first associated the term "Incunabula" with books. The
study of books printed during the first fifty years of printing illuminates
the birth of the craft and the transition from the manuscript tradition to the
print tradition.
rinting spread rapidly from
Mainz, Germany throughout Europe during this time period. Printers established
shops in centers of commerce where the demand for books was high and supplies
were accessible. Italy quickly became a center for printing with prominent shops
operating in Rome and Venice in the early 1470s. By 1500, the proliferation
of printers had nearly saturated smaller commercial centers throughout the continent
and printing became an established profession.
mong the features to note
during the period of incunabula are the development of roman and gothic typefaces,
and the rise of title pages and colophons in books.
othic typefaces took hold
in Northern Europe and remained popular in Germany into the nineteenth century.
Southern Europe followed the humanist tradition more closely and preferred the
more open roman styles. These roman typefaces also represented an easier transition
from the manuscript era as they more closely resembled manuscript writing. The
business-minded Venetian printers also viewed the compact roman types as more
economical, allowing them to print more text per page.
ven though the printing press
provided for the reproduction of texts more quickly and easily than by hand,
a large amount of time was still taken to illuminate and sometimes hand illustrate
books of this period. Another popular method of illustrating texts was the use
of the woodblock print. Printers at this time also began to work with engraved
metal plates.
he transition to print was
not an easy one for all readers to make. Many aristocrats of the late fiftenth
century hired scribes to hand-copy printed books to manuscript form, so that
they might be kept in their original format.
s the 15th century came to
a close, Venice had established itself not only as a center for international
commerce and trade, but also as the capital of the printing world. Hundreds
of presses were operating in the 1480s and 1490s producing a wide variety of
materials. The majority of the incunabula in this exhibit come from Venice,
and represent a wide cross section of works printed here.
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Last edited on Thursday, March 25, 1999.