2.2.7: 1585 - 1725 - Working conditions


More and more people were employed in the book trade due to the enormous expansion of printing, publishing and bookselling since the end of the sixteenth century. At the same time, specialisation increased: the type foundry became an independent business, the trade in paper separated from the book trade, some printers only worked to order and more and more publisher-booksellers focused on specific market segments. Little is known, however, of the conditions under which the work was undertaken in these various branches of the business.

Most companies were small businesses in which the whole family found employment. This applied primarily to the sons who usually pursued the same trade as their father and in that way became familiar with business operations. Wives and daughters also helped, especially in the bookshops where they assisted customers and saw to the administration. If they had any staff at all in these small family businesses, it did not amount to more than a servant and one or two apprentices.

More staff was, of course, employed in the larger companies. Under the supervision of the owner, the masterprinter or bookseller, the supervisor or foreman, various labourers and apprentices worked, all having different duties. Workers (day labourers) were employed when necessary. A clear difference in status existed in the printing house between the compositors, who were better educated, and the printers. Correctors were not usually among the permanent staff of a printing office.

A few facts are known about the working hours and wages of personnel from surviving employment contracts. Working days were long (except Sundays and holidays), from 5 am in the summer and 6 am in winter to 8 pm with a few short breaks. Wages were not higher than of those working in other crafts. A printer's assistant in a printing house in the west of the country earned 6 to 7 guilders (about € 3.-) a week, that is if he was not paid on a piecework basis; wages were lower elsewhere. The apprentices received considerably less, depending on their ages from six stivers (about € 0.14) a week in the first year to 2 to 3 guilders (about € 1.-) in the last year of their apprenticeship. An annual bonus from some employers was a pair of new shoes; at the end of the apprenticeship perhaps a new hat. It was not unusual, however, for apprentices, or rather their parents, to contribute money especially when they enjoyed board and lodgings with their employer. Their work consisted, in addition to composition, printing or bookbinding, of running errands, delivering orders and looking after the shop.

Due to the poor working conditions and low wages, arguments often developed between employer and employees or among the staff. As a result, personnel turnover was high. On the other hand, personnel was sometimes poached by competitors in spite of the provisions of the guild regulations. Such mobility seems to have been fairly localised; there are no indications of a migrating workforce as was usual in the early years of printing. Only an occasional trace has been found of the existence in the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic of a chapel, the kind of personnel association found in, for example, the Plantin-Moretus firm in Antwerp.


author: P.G. Hoftijzer
 
 


Working conditions



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.