1.4.4: 1460 - 1585 - Reading habits / traces of users


Printed objects as well as testimonies left by readers are the main source for the history of reading. Certain bibliographical categories, however, have been transmitted very poorly. Consequently, the reading public of important sections of early modern book production and also their reading habits are largely hidden from our view. For example, printed ephemera such as schoolbooks, calendars, almanacs, etc. which were produced in large quantities, are now very scarce. In addition to printed books, many manuscripts were still being produced and read during the sixteenth century. Legal texts, regional law books and costumals, often circulated in handwritten form. Furthermore, apart from books produced in the Low Countries, books imported from foreign countries were also read.

Much less is known about readers than about the texts available to them. Many people marked their ownership of books with an inscription of their name or their family coat of arms as a bookplate or as a stamp on the binding. Reconstruction of the history of collections and determination of the provenance of individual volumes is possible with information gathered from notes of acquisition and sale, ownership, auctions and gifts, bindings, and old library shelf-marks. Quite a few owners improved the arrangement of their collections by having several texts bound into one volume.

Margins and blank pages in numerous books are filled with readers' notes, underlinings, and reference marks. Page numbers, tables of contents, and indices were added to enhance the accessibility of the texts.

In medieval manuscripts, layout was an important mnemotechnical aid. Printers and editors further developed this instrument to guide readers. To this end, they added punctuation and paragraph marks, chapter titles and rubrics, tables and illustrations, tables of contents and indexes, headings and foliation. Of course, readers still took the liberty to add their own notes and markers. Occasionally, such markings may lead to the identification of their author, for example because the handwriting can be attributed to a well-known person or because the content of the remark unambiguously refers to a particular individual.

Comparison of different editions may show whether a particular form of reading was recommended for a specific text: whether it was meant to be read aloud or in silence, for study or amusement, or as an aid to spiritual meditation. For a long time, reading aloud remained customary, as is apparent from instructions for readers of prayer books.


author: G.C. Huisman
 
 


Reading habits / traces of users



university printers

Definition: a printer appointed by a university to publish scholarly texts produced in that university



letterpress printers

Definition: printer specialising in the printing of books.



printers

Definition: 1. person who practises the craft of printing. 2. person or organisation responsible - usually to the publisher - for the printing of a publication.



printers' manuals

Definition: practical book of instruction on the technical side of printing, in which aspects of composing and printing are discussed.



printers' devices

Definition: symbol or figure (emblem, monogram) sometimes with an emblematic representation and/or accompanied by a maxim, used by printers in their publications to identify their company.



map printers

Definition: printer, specialised in the printing of geographical and topographical maps.



art printers

Definition: printer specialised in the printing of plates and prints.



state printers

Definition: printer who is appointed by the government to print the publications of central government.



government printers

Definition: printer employed by a governmental institution taking care of the publication of the official documents that are produced by this institution.



copperplate printers

Definition: printers who, with the help of a copperplate press, make prints of engraved metal plates; for the reproduction of prints and maps.



provincial printers

Definition: printer appointed by a provincial government to publish publications of the provincial government.



town printers

Definition: printer appointed by a town council to print the publications of the local government.



printers to the Provincial States

Definition: printer appointed by the States of a Province in the Republic of the Seven United Provinces to print the publications of the provincial government.