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Early Typography

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

A historical survey traces the emergence and spread of letterpress printing from early Chinese methods to its European perfection, explaining its cultural significance and role in disseminating knowledge and liberty. The author examines competing origin claims, evaluates material evidence such as paper, types, and costume, and recounts biographies and legal disputes surrounding early printers. Technical topics include press invention, type-founding, composing tools, and bindings, while discussions of block-books, movable type, and bibliographic and paleotypographic issues support the narrative. Appendices collect contemporary testimonies and scholarly debates that illuminate contested traditions and early practices.


PREFACE.

The germ of the present work was a Lecture delivered by the writer before the Members of the Colombo Athenæum, on the 24th February 1853. That Lecture was fully reported at the time in the Colombo Observer, and a few copies were subsequently printed for private distribution. These having been disposed of, the writer’s attention was directed to the preparation of a more extended essay upon the subject. The result of his labours is now submitted to the public. The work makes no pretension to the character of an exhaustive treatise; it is, in fact, but little more than a broad outline of the subject which it ventures to describe; but it is hoped, that a fresh interest may have been imparted to some of the topics touched upon, and that they will be found placed in a light which, if not wholly new, is at any rate somewhat clearer than that in which they have hitherto been exhibited.

W. S.

Colombo, Ceylon,

April 29, 1871.