An Essay on Colophons, with Specimens and Translations

audiobook

An Essay on Colophons, with Specimens and Translations

by Alfred W. (Alfred William) Pollard

EN·~5 hours·13 chapters

Chapters

13 total

Transcriber’s Note:

1:07

CONTENTS AND LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

2:26

INTRODUCTION

19:24

AN ESSAY ON COLOPHONS

0:01

I THE COLOPHON’S REASON FOR EXISTENCE

6:55

II COLOPHONS AT MAINZ

33:23

III COLOPHONS AT VENICE

33:44

IV PRINTERS’ COLOPHONS IN OTHER TOWNS

51:17

V PUBLISHERS’ COLOPHONS

53:11

VI COLOPHONS OF AUTHORS AND EDITORS

1:01:47

Description

Delving into the humble yet telling colophon, this work uncovers the “finishing stroke” that once served as a book’s title page. Beginning with a clear explanation of the term’s classical roots and its early appearance in English, the author guides listeners through the evolution of these concise printer’s notes. The introduction sets the stage for a thoughtful exploration of why early publishers chose to crown their volumes with these brief statements.

The heart of the essay is a meticulously compiled catalogue of colophons from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, drawing from presses in Mainz, Venice, Bologna, and beyond. Each specimen is paired with careful translation and commentary, revealing the printers’ pride, the books’ provenance, and occasional quirks of early typographic practice. Listeners will appreciate the blend of scholarly detail and vivid historical snapshots that illuminate the hidden signatures of the dawn of printing.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (326K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2018-02-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Alfred W. (Alfred William) Pollard

Alfred W. (Alfred William) Pollard

1859–1944

A pioneering bibliographer and literary scholar, he helped bring sharper, more rigorous methods to the study of Shakespeare and early printed books. His work at the British Museum and in the Bibliographical Society made him an important figure in the history of textual scholarship.

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