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A History of Cambridge University Press

A History of Cambridge University Press

A History of Cambridge University Press

Volume 1: Printing and the Book Trade in Cambridge, 1534–1698
David McKitterick, Trinity College, Cambridge
September 1992
1. Printing and the Book Trade in Cambridge, 1534–1698
Available
Hardback
9780521308014
$155.00
USD
Hardback

    This is the first volume in a new three-volume history of the University Press, which will eventually bring the story as far as modern times: the next volume (on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries) is in preparation. The history is not only about University printers and their work--especially scholarly, schoolbook, Bible, prayer book and almanac publishing (the University Printers were England's largest suppliers of almanacs in the late seventeenth century)--but also about the rest of the seventeenth century book trade in Cambridge, London, continental Europe and North America.

    Reviews & endorsements

    "...McKitterick's treatment is learned, lively, and authoritative."

    "McKitterick's tale is a rich and fascinating one, but it will take a particular and patient historical appetite to move comfortably through this feast of materials about the Tudor/Stewart book trade....He is fascinating on the commercial detail of publishing and the need for constant adaption to changing circumstances and markets. The central chapters on privileges and licensing, authors and printers, and the physical necessities of paper, type, and personnel constitute in themselves a major contribution to the relatively new genre of 'book history.' The volume is meticulously edited and produced...." David H. Stam, Albion

    "McKitterick's work is an extraordinarily rich and involving book which cuts across all sorts of historiographical categories. His sources range from university archives to auction catalogues, from literary criticism to economic history. He provides a model of institutional history as part of the wider history of culture and its production." Anita Guerrini, The Public Historian

    "...likely to provide the definitive history of the press for generations to come....a major reference source, and also a starting point for all future studies of Cambridge printing." David Stoker, Publishing Research Quarterly

    See more reviews

    Product details

    September 1992
    Hardback
    9780521308014
    524 pages
    316 × 197 × 48 mm
    1.472kg
    37 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Perspectives
    • 2. The charter of 1534
    • 3. University stationers, 1534–1583
    • 4. Prejudice and the printing privilege
    • 5. Thomas Thomas, 'the puritan printer'
    • 6. John Legate, printer by profession
    • 7. Cantrell Legge and the University's common cause
    • 8. A new beginning: Thomas Buck and Roger Daniel
    • 9. An uneasy partnership
    • 10. Privileged books
    • 11. Books for university teaching
    • 12. Authors and printers
    • 13. By due authority: licence and the title to print
    • 14. Running the printing house
    • 15. Type, paper and other necessities
    • 16. Civil war and the interregnum
    • 17. John Field and the opportunities of office
    • 18. John Hayes and the limits of independence
    • 19. Looking at a wider world
    • 20. Conclusion
    • Appendixes
    • Index.
      Author
    • David McKitterick , Trinity College, Cambridge