Before
the invention of the printing press, the reproduction of the written word
was the responsibility of the monasteries. Each book had to be written
and illustrated by hand. Surviving books from this era are among today's
most valuable works of art.
Despite their beauty there
was a downside to this method of production, the books were so horrendously
expensive to make, that only the very rich could afford to own them. This
meant that few people ever had the opportunity or the need to learn to
read. The printing press changed all that, and in doing so was responsible
for the greatest socio-political changes in history.
Printing from wooden blocks
was probably invented in China in the years around the birth of Christ.
However each plate had to be hand carved with each ideogram in position
on the plate, which meant a completely new carved block for each new page.
In 1457 Gutenberg invented
the first printing press with moveable type. That is each letter was a
separate carving and could be used again and again in different pages on
different books. Gutenberg lived in Mainz in the heart of Germany's wine
growing region and his press was built on the same idea as the presses
that are used for pressing the juice from grapes to create wine.
From humble beginnings printing
presses spread over Europe, and with them a rapid increase in the number
of people who could read, and the number of people who could afford to
have their ideas reproduced in books. It is widely acknowledge that the
reformation would not have occurred without the catalyst of the printing
press. Printing presses across Europe rapidly produced copies of the thoughts
of religous figures such as Martin Luther, because more people could read
these ideas spread much more quickly than would have been possible with
expensive and time-consuming hand-drawn books.
The idea of having raised
type, applying ink to it and then squashing it onto paper to form an image,
later became known as letterpress printing and was to be the most successful
and most common form of printing until the 1950's.
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