The Gutenberg Bible (also known as the 42-line Bible or the Mazarin Bible) is a printed version of the Latin Vulgate translation of the Bible that was printed by Johannes Gutenberg, in Mainz, Germany in the fifteenth century. The Library of Congress is the De facto National library of the United States and the research arm of the United States Congress The Vulgate is an early Fifth Century version of the Bible in Latin, and largely the result of the labours of Jerome, who was commissioned by Etymology According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, the word bible is from Latin biblia, traced from the same word through Medieval Latin and Late Latin Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg ( 1398 &ndash February 3, 1468) was a German Goldsmith and printer who is credited Mainz (ˈmaɪ̯nʦ (Mayence is a City in Germany and the capital of the German federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate. Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany ( ˈbʊndəsʁepuˌbliːk ˈdɔʏtʃlant is a Country in Central Europe. Although it is not, as often thought, the first book to be printed by Gutenberg's new movable type system[1], it is his major work, and has iconic status as the start of the "Gutenberg Revolution" and the "Age of the Printed Book". Movable type is the system of Printing and Typography that uses movable components to reproduce the elements of a document (usually individual letters or punctuation
The detailed format of the printed bible is a possible imitation of a Mainz illuminated manuscript, the so called Giant Bible of Mainz (Biblia latina), whose 1300 pages were written between 1452 and 1453. Mainz (ˈmaɪ̯nʦ (Mayence is a City in Germany and the capital of the German federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate. An illuminated manuscript is a Manuscript in which the text is supplemented by the addition of decoration such as decorated Initials borders and
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The name 42-line Bible. shortened to B42, refers to the number of lines of print on each page, and is used to differentiate this edition of the Gutenberg Bible from the rarer 36-line Bible, which is also referred to as a Gutenberg Bible. [2] The term "Gutenberg Bible" is most commonly used to refer to the more familiar 42-line edition.
Preparation of the Bible began soon after 1450, and the first finished copies were available in 1454 or 1455, using a printing press and movable type. A printing press is a mechanical device for applying pressure to an inked surface resting upon a medium (such as paper or cloth thereby transferring an image Movable type is the system of Printing and Typography that uses movable components to reproduce the elements of a document (usually individual letters or punctuation [3] This Bible is the most famous incunabulum and its production marked the beginning of the mass production of books in the West. It is believed that about 180 copies of the Bible were produced, a number which marks a sharp contrast with the prior technology for societies which, from time immemorial, had to produce copies of written works laboriously by hand. Gutenberg produced these Bibles (which were printed, then rubricated and illuminated by hand, the work of specialized craftsmen) over a period of a year, the time it would have taken to produce one copy in a Scriptorium. Rubrication was one of several steps in the Medieval process of Manuscript making An illuminated manuscript is a Manuscript in which the text is supplemented by the addition of decoration such as decorated Initials borders and Scriptorium, literally "a place for writing" is commonly used to refer to a room in medieval European Monasteries devoted to the copying of manuscripts by monastic Because of the hand illumination, each copy is unique.
Of the 180 copies of the Bible that were produced, 45 were printed on vellum and 135 on paper. Vellum (from the Old French Vélin for "calfskin" is mammal skin prepared for writing or printing on single pages scrolls codices or books A complete copy comprises 1282 pages, and was bound in two volumes (one known copy is bound in three volumes). At this moment 48 copies are known to exist, not all complete. The locations of these copies are listed below. Gutenberg Bible (also known as the 42-line Bible or the Mazarin Bible) is a printed version of the Latin Vulgate translation of the Bible that
The paper size is 'double folio', with two pages printed on each side (making a total of four pages per single paper). After printing the paper is folded once to the size of a single page . Five of these folded papers (carrying 20 printed pages) were combined to a single physical section, called quinternion, that could then be bound into a book. In Bookbinding, section (sometimes gathering) refers to a group of bifolios or sheets of paper stacked together and folded in half It is possible that the some sections were printed in a larger number, especially those printed later in the publishing proces, and sold unbound. Pagenumbering was not used in the Gutenberg-bible. 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 te right place and orientation of each page on the five papers, so as to end up in the right reading sequence. Also the getting the location of the printed area right on the page is a printing technique, not in writing. The folio size, 307 x 445 mm, has the ratio of 1. 45. The printed area had the same ratio, and was shifted out of the middle to leave a 2:1 white margin, both horizontally and vertically. The scolar Man [4] writes that the ratio is chosen becouse of being close to the golden ratio of 1. In Mathematics and the Arts two quantities are in the Golden ratio if the Ratio between the sum of those quantities and the larger one is the 61. To reach this ratio more closely the vertical size should be 338 mm, but there is no reason why Guthenberg would leave this non-trivial difference of 8 mm go by in such a detailed work in other aspects.
Although this bible is famously named B42 because having the 42-lines to the page, not all pages have 42 lines by design. Pages 1 to 9 and pages 256 to 265, probably the first printed, count 40 lines. Page 10 has 41, and from there the 42 lines appear. The actual printed area does not change regardless of whether it has 40, 41 or 42 lines, only the interline spacing changes.
B42 is printed in the blackletter type styles that would become known as Textuaris (Texture) and Schwabacher. Blackletter, also known as Gothic script or Gothic minuscule, was a script used throughout Western Europe from approximately 1150 Blackletter, also known as Gothic script or Gothic minuscule, was a script used throughout Western Europe from approximately 1150 Blackletter, also known as Gothic script or Gothic minuscule, was a script used throughout Western Europe from approximately 1150 The name texture 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 right-justifying by using bits of extra white space between word, creating a vertical, not indented righthand side of the column. In Typesetting, justification (can also be referred to as 'full justification' is the Typographic alignment setting of text or Images within On top of this, he consequently let punctuation marks go beyond that vertical line, thereby using the massive black characters to make this justifying stronger to the eye.
In some copies of the Bible, the headings on a few of the sheets at the top are printed in red; the initial pages were re-composed, and the later copies for those pages are in black only, with the red headers lettered by hand. On all later pages the red headings are added by hand, and a printed list of the text to be added to each page survives. This presumably represents a failed experiment. [5] All the main capitals, called rubrication, were handwritten and illustrated on the places that were intentionally left white. Rubrication was one of several steps in the Medieval process of Manuscript making The spacious margin allowed handmade illustrations.
The idea of using reproducable and reusable types was in itself a valuable invention. But the true achievement of Gutenberg is that he proved that the whole proces of printing actually produced books. The proces comprised multiple problems to be solved, each problem being a possible showstopper in itself. In a legal paper, written after the production, Gutenberg refers to the printing as 'Das werk de bucher' (The work of the books).
A single complete copy has 1272 pages. Four pages per folio-sheet requires 318 sheets per copy. The 35 copies on vellum requires 11130 sheets. 155 copies on paper required 49290 sheets of paper. The watermarks show that the paper was produced in Italy.
The first part of the Guteberg idea was using a single carved character say "A" and reproduce this to get a multitude of types of "A". Cutting a single letter could take a craftman a day of work. The copies were produced by stamping the original into a iron plate, called matrix, put this matrix on the lower end of a rectangular tube and pour lead into it. Then release the lead form from the tube. The lead than has taken the form of the tube, and the character is on top of it. This type could be put in a line, facing up, with other types. A blok of lines were inked, and paper pressed on it to take the ink.
Per character one master was needed. The alpphabet so takes 26 in lower case, and 26 in uppercase. Also needed are punctuation marks, and ligatures (e. g. the sequence 'fi' combined in one character, as was used very often in writing). Altogether the Bible needed a set of 290 characters.
A single page has about 500 words, and 2600 characters.
In the past, there was no consensus on the order of editions. Some specialists like Richard Schwab and Thomas Cahill argued that the rarer 36-line Bible is actually the older, cruder version, and that the 42-line Bible was a second, more numerous and perfected edition of Gutenberg's Bible. [6]. Others, like Richard W. Clement, argued that the 36-line Bible was printed in 1458, 3 years after the 42-line Bible, but with an older typefont. [7] The dispute, however, has been settled; the line endings on the pages of the 36 line Bible make it evident that the text is based on a copy of the 42-line Bible. (Kapr, "Johannes Gutenberg. " Scolar, 1996)
As of 2007, there are 48 Gutenberg 42-line Bibles known to exist. This includes eleven complete copies (four of which are perfect) on vellum, and one copy of the New Testament only on vellum. In addition, there are a substantial number of fragments, some as small as individual leaves—at least one copy is known to have been partially broken up to be sold in parts.
The country with the most copies is Germany, which has twelve, whilst the United States has eleven and the United Kingdom eight. Mainz, Russia and the Vatican City contain two copies, Paris and London have three copies, and New York has four copies. Three identified copies have been lost — two disappeared from Leipzig after the end of the Second World War, and one is known to have been destroyed along with the library of the Catholic University of Leuven in 1914. The Catholic University of Leuven, or Louvain, was the largest oldest and most prominent university in Belgium. However, the former two were rediscovered in recent years, both in Moscow, where they had been taken.
A full listing of known copies and brief details on their condition can be found in the British Library's Incunabula Short Title Catalogue, ISTC number ib00526000. The Incunabula Short Title Catalogue (ISTC is an electronic bibliographic Database maintained by the British Library which seeks to catalogue all known The 36-line bible is catalogued as ISTC number ib00527000. Copy numbers are as found in the ISTC, taken from a 1985 survey of existing copies by Ilona Hubay; the two copies in Russia were not known to exist in 1985, and so were not catalogued. Dr Ilona Hubay ( Pécs, Hungary, July 1, 1902 - Munich, Germany, June 20, 1982) was a specialist A more detailed census, with some notes on provenance, is online at Clausen Books. "Perfect" or "imperfect" refers to completeness—whether a volume still contains all its leaves.
| Country | Holding institution | Hubay-nr | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Austria (1) | Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna | 27 | Perfect, paper |
| Belgium (1) | Bibliothèque universitaire, Mons | 1 | Imperfect, paper |
| Denmark (1) | Kongelige Bibliotek, Copenhagen | 12 | Vol. Dr Ilona Hubay ( Pécs, Hungary, July 1, 1902 - Munich, Germany, June 20, 1982) was a specialist II, imperfect, paper |
| France (4) | Bibliothèque nationale, Paris | 15 | Perfect, vellum |
| 17 | Imperfect, paper. Contains note by binder dating it to August 1456 | ||
| Bibliothèque Mazarine, Paris | 16 | Perfect, paper | |
| Bibliothèque Municipale, Saint-Omer | 18 | Imperfect, paper | |
| Germany (12) | Gutenberg Museum, Mainz | 8 | One copy is vol. The Bibliothèque Mazarine is the oldest Public library in France. The Gutenberg Museum is one of the oldest museums of Printing in the world located opposite the cathedral in the old part of Mainz, Germany. I, imperfect, paper; the other both vols. , imperfect, paper. It is unclear which is which. |
| 9 | |||
| Landesbibliothek, Fulda | 4 | Vol. I, imperfect, vellum | |
| Universitätsbibliothek, Leipzig | 14 | Imperfect, vellum | |
| Niedersächsische Staats-und Universitätsbibliothek, Göttingen | 2 | Perfect, vellum | |
| Staatsbibliothek, Berlin | 3 | Imperfect, vellum | |
| Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich | 5 | Perfect, paper | |
| Stadt- und Universitätsbibliothek, Frankfurt-am-Main | 6 | Perfect, paper | |
| Hofbibliothek, Aschaffenburg | 7 | Imperfect, paper | |
| Württembergische Landesbibliothek, Stuttgart | 10 | Imperfect, paper. The Göttingen State and University Library (German Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen or SUB Göttingen English short form Goettingen SUB is the library The Berlin State Library (Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin is a library in Berlin, Germany and a property of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation. The Bavarian State Library ( German: Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, abbreviated BSB) located in Munich, is the central Library of the The Württembergische Landesbibliothek (WLB is a large Library in Stuttgart, Germany which traces its history back to the ducal public library of Württemberg Purchased in April 1978 for 2. 2 million US dollars. | |
| Stadtbibliothek, Trier | 11 | Vol. I?, imperfect, paper. Possibly sister volume to Hubay 46, in Indiana | |
| Landesbibliothek, Kassel | 12 | Vol. I, imperfect, paper | |
| Japan (1) | Keio University Library, Tokyo | 45 | Vol. is a university located in Minato, Tokyo, Japan. It is one of the most prestigious universities in Japan as well as the oldest university in Japan established I, imperfect, paper. Purchased in October 1987 for either 4. 9 or 5. 4 million US dollars (sources disagree) |
| Poland (1) | Biblioteka Seminarium Duchownego, Pelpin | 28 | Imperfect, paper |
| Portugal (1) | Portuguese National Library, Lisbon | 29 | Perfect, paper |
| Russia (2) | Russian National Library | - | Imperfect, vellum |
| Lomonosow University Library , Moscow | - | Perfect, paper | |
| Spain (2) | Biblioteca Universitaria y Provincial, Seville | 32 | Vol. Pelplin is a small town in Pomeranian Voivodship, Poland. Population 9993 (2007 II, imperfect, paper |
| Biblioteca Pública Provincial, Burgos | 31 | Perfect, paper | |
| Switzerland (1) | Bibliotheca Bodmeriana, Cologny | 30 | Imperfect, paper |
| United Kingdom (8) | British Library, London | ? | Perfect, vellum |
| ? | Perfect, paper | ||
| National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh | 26 | Perfect, paper | |
| Lambeth Palace Library, London | 20 | Vol. The Bibliotheca Bodmeriana (or Bodmer Library) is located in Cologny, Switzerland just outside Geneva. The British Library ( BL) is the National library of the United Kingdom. The National Library of Scotland is the Legal deposit Library of Scotland. Lambeth Palace is the official London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury. II (New Testament only), imperfect, vellum | |
| Eton College Library, Eton | 23 | Perfect, paper | |
| John Rylands Library, Manchester | 25 | Perfect, paper | |
| Bodleian Library, Oxford | 24 | Perfect, paper | |
| University Library, Cambridge | 22 | Perfect, paper | |
| United States (11) | Pierpont Morgan Library, New York | 37 | Imperfect, vellum |
| 38 | Perfect, paper | ||
| 44 | Imperfect, paper | ||
| Library of Congress, Washington DC | 35 | Perfect, vellum | |
| New York Public Library | 42 | Imperfect, paper | |
| Widener Library, Harvard University | 40 | Perfect, paper | |
| Beinecke Library, Yale University | 41 | Perfect, paper | |
| Scheide Library, Princeton University | 43 | Imperfect, paper | |
| Lilly Library, Indiana University | 46 | Imperfect, paper. The Eton College collections are a collection of items of significant cultural The John Rylands University Library (JRUL is the University of Manchester 's library and information service The Bodleian Library ( the main Research library of the University of Oxford, is one of the oldest libraries in Europe, and in England The Cambridge University Library is the centrally-administered library of the University of Cambridge in England. The Morgan Library & Museum (formerly The Pierpont Morgan Library) is a museum and research library in New York City. The Library of Congress is the De facto National library of the United States and the research arm of the United States Congress The New York Public Library ( NYPL) is one of the leading public libraries of the world and is one of America's most significant Research libraries. The Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library, commonly known as Widener Library, is the primary building of the Library system of Harvard University. Yale University 's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (BRBL was a 1963 gift of the Beinecke family Princeton University is a private Coeducational research university located in Princeton, New Jersey. Indiana University is the flagship campus of the Indiana University system. Possibly sister volume to Hubay 11, in Trier | |
| Henry E. Huntington Library, San Marino | 36 | Imperfect, vellum | |
| University of Texas at Austin | 39 | Perfect, paper. The Huntington Library Art Collections and Botanical Gardens (or The Huntington) is an educational and research institution established by Henry E The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center is a Library and Archive at the University of Texas at Austin, specializing in the collection of literary and Purchased in 1974 for 2. 4 million US dollars. | |
| Vatican City (2) | Bibliotheca Apostolica Vaticana | 33 | Imperfect, vellum |
| 34 | Vol I, imperfect, paper |
A complete link list of digitized copies can be found in the German wikipedia. [1]