- For the invention and technology of movable type, see Movable type.
Extensive Definition
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. The systems
involved were first assembled in Germany by the
goldsmith Johann
Gutenberg in ca. 1439. Although both woodblock
printing and movable type
printing technologies were already developed in ancient China and
later Korea
in East
Asia a few hundred years prior, they did not use a press like
that of Gutenberg. Printing methods based on Gutenberg's printing
press spread rapidly throughout first Europe
and then the rest of the world. It eventually replaced most
versions of block printing, making it the most used format of
modern movable type
As a method of creating reproductions for mass consumption, the
printing press has been superseded by the advent of offset
printing.
History
Having previously worked as a professional goldsmith, Gutenberg made skillful use of the knowledge of metals he had learned as a craftsman. He was the first to make type from an alloy of lead, tin, and antimony, which was critical for producing durable type that produced high-quality printed books and proved to be more suitable for printing than the clay, wooden or bronze types invented in East Asia. To create these lead types, Gutenberg used what some considered his most ingenious invention, a special matrix enabling the quick and precise moulding of new type blocks from a uniform template.Gutenberg is also credited with the introduction
of an oil-based ink which
was more durable than the previously used water-based inks. As
printing material he used both vellum and paper, the latter having been
introduced in Europe a few
centuries earlier from China by way of the
Arabs.
In the Gutenberg
Bible, Gutenberg made a trial of coloured printing for a few of
the page headings, present only in some copies. A later work, the
Mainz
Psalter of 1453, presumably designed by Gutenberg but published
under the imprint of his successors Johann Fust
and Peter
Schöffer, had elaborate red and blue printed initials.
Life magazine called the Printing Press the
greatest invention in the last 1000 years. It is important to note
that it was the alphabet that made the success of the printing
press possible. See Online
Video: "The Code of da Vinci"for a discussion of the role of
the Alphabet in the emergence of printing. See the Online Video:
"The Renaissance Computer"for a discussion of the historic
consequences of printing.
Historical Impact
Printing as developed in East Asia did not make use of a printing press as in Gutenberg's case. Although the invention of movable type in China and Korea preceded Gutenberg's printing press, the impact of East Asian movable type printing presses was not as influential as it was in Western European society. This was likely due to the enormous amount of labour involved in manipulating the thousands of porcelain tablets, or in the case of Korea, metal tablets, required by the use of written Chinese characters. Nevertheless, hundreds of thousands of books, on subjects ranging from Confucian Classics to science and mathematics, were printed using the older technology of woodblock printing, creating the world's first print culture..In contrast, the impact of Gutenberg's printing
press in Europe was
comparable to the development of writing, the invention of the
alphabet or the
Internet,
as far as its effects on society. Just as writing did not replace
speaking, printing did not achieve a position of total dominance.
Handwritten manuscripts continued to be produced, and the different
graphic modes of communication continued to influence each
other.
The printing press was also a factor in the
establishment of a community of scientists who could easily
communicate their discoveries through the establishment of widely
disseminated scholarly journals, helping to bring on the scientific
revolution. Because of the printing press, authorship became more meaningful
and profitable. It was suddenly important who had said or written
what, and what the precise formulation and time of composition was.
This allowed the exact citing of references, producing the rule,
"One Author, one work (title), one piece of information" (Giesecke,
1989; 325). Before, the author was less important, since a copy of
Aristotle
made in Paris would not be exactly identical to one made in
Bologna. For many works prior to the printing press, the name of
the author was entirely lost.
Because the printing process ensured that the
same information fell on the same pages, page numbering, tables of
contents, and indices became common, though they previously had not
been unknown. The process of reading was also changed, gradually
changing over several centuries from oral readings to silent,
private reading. The wider availability of printed materials also
led to a drastic rise in the adult literacy rate throughout
Europe.
Within fifty or sixty years of the invention of
the printing press, the entire classical canon had been reprinted
and widely promulgated throughout Europe (Eisenstein, 1969; 52).
Now that more people had access to knowledge both new and old, more
people could discuss these works. Furthermore, now that book
production was a more commercial enterprise, the first copyright laws were passed to
protect what we now would call intellectual
property rights. A second outgrowth of this popularization of
knowledge was the decline of Latin as the language of most
published works, to be replaced by the vernacular language of each
area, increasing the variety of published works. Paradoxically, the
printing word also helped to unify and standardize the spelling and
syntax of these vernaculars, in effect 'decreasing' their
variability. This rise in importance of national languages as
opposed to pan-European Latin is cited as one of the causes of the
rise of nationalism
in Europe.
The art of book printing
For years, book printing was considered a true art form. Typesetting, or the placement of the characters on the page, including the use of ligatures, was passed down from master to apprentice. In Germany, the art of typesetting was termed the "black art," in allusion to the ink-covered printers. The Black Art Press & Print in Baltimore, MD adopted their name for this reason. It has largely been replaced by computer typesetting programs, which make it easy to get similar results more quickly and with less physical labor. Some practitioners continue to print books the way Gutenberg did. For example, there is a yearly convention of traditional book printers in Mainz, Germany.Some theorists, such as McLuhan,
Eisenstein,
Kittler,
and Giesecke, see an
"alphabetic monopoly" as having developed from printing, removing
the role of the image from society. Other authors stress that
printed works themselves are a visual medium. Certainly, modern
developments in printing have revitalized the role of
illustrations.
The Industrial Revolution
The Gutenberg press was much more efficient than manual copying and still was largely unchanged in the eras of John Baskerville and Giambattista Bodoni—over 300 years later. By 1800, Lord Stanhope had constructed a press completely from cast iron, reducing the force required by 90% while doubling the size of the printed area. While Stanhope's "mechanical theory" had improved the efficiency of the press, it still was only capable of 250 sheets per hour. German printer Friedrich Koenig would be the first to design a non-manpowered machine—using steam. Having moved to London in 1804, Koenig soon met Thomas Bensley and secured financial support for his project in 1807. Patented in 1810, Koenig had designed a steam press "much like a hand press connected to a steam engine." The first production trial of this model occurred in April 1811. He produced his machine with assistance from German engineer Andreas Friedrich Bauer.Koenig and Bauer sold two of their first models
to The
Times in London in 1814, capable of 1,100
impressions per hour. The first edition so printed was on November 28
1814. They
went on to perfect the early model so that it could print on both
sides of a sheet at once. This began the long process of making
newspapers available
to a mass audience (which in turn helped spread literacy), and from
the 1820s changed the nature of book production, forcing a greater
standardization in titles and other metadata.
Their company Koenig
& Bauer AG is still one of the world's largest
manufacturers of printing presses today.
References
- Fontaine, Jean-Paul. L'aventure du livre: Du manuscrit medieval a nos jours. Paris: Bibliotheque de l'image, 1999.
Further reading
On the effects of Gutenberg's printing- Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, The Printing Press as an Agent of Change, Cambridge University Press, September 1980, Paperback, 832 pages, ISBN 0-521-29955-1
- More recent, abridged version: Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe, Cambridge University Press, 2Rev ed, 12 September 2005, Paperback, ISBN 0-521-60774-4
- Marshall McLuhan, The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man (1962) Univ. of Toronto Press (1st ed.); reissued by Routledge & Kegan Paul ISBN 0-7100-1818-5.
See also
- Augustus Applegath - inventor of the vertical print press
- Anilox
- Color printing
- David Bruce
- Flexography
- George E. Clymer
- Letterpress printing
- Muller Martini
- National Print Museum of Ireland
- Print culture
- Printing
- Printmaking
- Typography
- William Clowes (Printer)
External links
- Centre for the History of the Book
- Gutenberg printing Photos of Incunabula and the Gutenberg Bible (1455)
- BGDP Safety on printing presses
- Internet Archive: Printing (1947)—a film from the Prelinger Archives explaining the printing industry
- An Introduction to Letterpress Printing
printery in Bosnian: Štamparska mašina
printery in Catalan: Impremta
printery in Czech: Knihtisk
printery in German: Druckmaschine
printery in Spanish: Imprenta
printery in Esperanto: Presarto
printery in Finnish: Painokone
printery in French: Imprimerie
printery in Hebrew: מכונת דפוס
printery in Korean: 활자
printery in Indonesian: Mesin cetak
printery in Dutch: Drukpers
printery in Japanese: 活字
printery in Polish: Maszyna drukarska
printery in Portuguese: prensa móvel
printery in Serbian: Штампарска машина
printery in Swedish: Boktryckarkonst
printery in Chinese: 印刷机