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An incunable or incunabulum (pl.: incunables or incunabula, respectively) is a book, pamphlet, or broadside that was printed in the earliest stages of printing in Europe, up to the year 1500. [1] Incunabula were produced before the printing press became widespread on the continent and are distinct from manuscripts , which are documents written by hand.
Therefore materials printed in Paris between April 19, 1500 and April 10, 1501 were indicated as "printed in 1500." Printed materials are treated as incunabula if their exact date of printing is not known. If their year of printing based on the calendar that greeted the New Year on January 1 is 1501, they are treated as post-incunabula.
Incunabula, books printed during the earliest period of typography—i.e., from the invention of the art of typographic printing in Europe in the 1450s to the end of the 15th century (i.e., January 1501). Such works were completed at a time when books—some of which were still being hand-copied—were
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
"Incunabula" is a generic term coined by English book collectors in the seventeenth century to describe the first printed books of the fifteenth century. It is a more elegant replacement for what had previously been called "fifteeners", and is formed of two Latin words meaning literally "in the cradle" or "in swaddling clothes".
a book printed before 1501; a work of art or of industry of an early period… See the full definition ... specifically those printed before the year 1501, a date ...
3 days ago · After 1501, printed books were no longer considered incunabula. (The aforementioned physician and humanist Hadrianus Junius set an end date of 1500 to his era of incunabula as it was a clean cut-off date.) Their legacy is more than just the tangible remnants of the earliest days of the printing revolution; they are the precursors to the mass ...
Incunabula (incunabulum, plural incunable or incunabula) are books, pamphlets, or broadsides that were printed in Europe before the year 1501. The word itself is derived from the Latin word incunabula, which means cradle, or swaddling clothes, referring to the very beginning of the art of publishing. This term first appeared in a Latin pamphlet ...
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