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Highlights of the Exhibition |
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The Bible Printed by the “R” Printer Biblia Latine. Strasbourg: [Adolf Rusch, c.1473] During the first two decades of printing, Bibles adhered closely to the model established by Gutenberg. Ideally suited for refectory reading at a lectern, subsequent Bibles in large Royal folio format presented a similar layout with two columns of text with spaces left for large book initials and other navigational elements to be added by hand. Continuing in this tradition, the earliest printed Bible in the Prothro collection was published at Strasbourg c. 1473, probably by Mentelin and/or his son-in-law Adolf Rusch. The main difference between this Bible and Gutenberg’s was the introduction of a smaller yet highly legible Roman type font instead of Gothic. With 56 lines per column, as opposed to Gutenberg’s 42 lines, this edition compressed the text into 425 printed leaves, reducing the use of paper by nearly one-third. Open to John 1. |
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Exhibit Curated by Elizabeth Haluska-Rausch, PhD with Eric White,
PhD Webdesign by Elizabeth Haluska-Rausch, PhD Photography by Jon Speck |
Images may not be
published without the permission of Bridwell Library. Copyright © Bridwell Library, 2006. All rights reserved. |