Incunabulum: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Incunabulum - Blackletter bible page.jpg|thumb|Page from a rare Blackletter bible (1497) printed in Straßburg by J.R.Grueninger. The coloured chapter initials were handwritten after printing.]]
An '''incunabulum''' (plural ''incunabula''; from the [[Latin language|Latin]] for "in the cradle" or "swaddling clothes") is a [[Europe]]an [[Printing|printed]] item (such as a [[book]], a single sheet, or an image) produced before 1501.  The term is sometimes Anglicised as "'''incunable'''".
An '''incunabulum''' (plural ''incunabula''; from the [[Latin language|Latin]] for "in the cradle" or "swaddling clothes") is a [[Europe]]an [[Printing|printed]] item (such as a [[book]], a single sheet, or an image) produced before 1501.  The term is sometimes Anglicised as "'''incunable'''".



Revision as of 15:47, 23 March 2007

Page from a rare Blackletter bible (1497) printed in Straßburg by J.R.Grueninger. The coloured chapter initials were handwritten after printing.

An incunabulum (plural incunabula; from the Latin for "in the cradle" or "swaddling clothes") is a European printed item (such as a book, a single sheet, or an image) produced before 1501. The term is sometimes Anglicised as "incunable".

The term was coined in the seventeenth century by book collectors to refer to the earliest printed European books. The first known use of the term is in a 1639 pamphlet by Bernhard von Mallinckrodt, De ortu et progressu artis typographicae ("Of the Rise and Progress of the Typographic Art") (Cologne) in the phrase "prima typographicæ incunabula" ("the first infancy of printing"). Von Mallinckrodt defined this infancy as ending in 1500, and his definition is still used.

Sources and external links