N.Naples,104.Netley Abbey,57.New Testament,17,22.Nineveh,14.Nuremberg,104,106,117.O.O'Kearney, John,139,141–143.Old Testament,12,14,17.Omar, Caliph,33.Oxford,53,58,62,64,65,104,130.Oxyrhynchus,20.P.Paternoster Row,51,52.Palestine,21.Palimpsests,24.Pannartz (seeSweynheim).Papyrus,12.Paris,53,62,75,93,104,106,107,109,144.—— Council of,62.Philobiblon,15,47,48.Peterborough,61.Petrarch,23,68,113.Pfister, Albrecht,94,95.Poggio Bracciolini,23.Powell, Humfrey,138.Printed illustrations in MSS.,73.Printers as editors and publishers,104.—— as booksellers,105.—— as bookbinders,154.Printing,11,70–144.—— in colours,102.—— machines for,161,162,164.Psalter,Melissenda's,148–150.—— Mentz, 1457,102.—— Queen Mary's,46.Publication, mediæval,51.Publishers,51,104.Pye or Pica,105.Pynson, Richard,107.R.“R” Printer,107.Ramsey Abbey,61.Reichenau Abbey,60.Richard de Bury,23,47,50,64,65,68.Romans,11.Rome,12,14,15,17,18,19,28,103,104,106,108,109,111,112,131.Rood, Theodore,130.Rostock,117.Rouen,106,131.Royal Library of England,68,155.—— of France,67.S.Satchels or Polaires,145,146.Schoeffer, Peter,93,94,100,102,105.Scandinavians,11.Scotland,104,131,147.Seraglio library,34,35.Sopwell,131.Spain,23,104.Speculum Humanæ Salvationis,78–80,88,89,92.Spira, John de,109,112,130.—— Vindelinus de,110,113.Spires,104.—— John of (seeSpira).St Albans,104,130,131.St Andrews,138.St Boniface,37.St Columba,41,145.“St Christopher” Print,72.St Gall, Abbey of,23,60.St Paul's Cathedral,52.Stationers,51,154.—— Company of,51.Stereotype plates, printing from,162.Stirling,138.Story, John,135.Strasburg,89,90,92,93,103,105,107,110.Subiaco,103,111.Sweynheimand Pannartz,103,104,107,111,112.T.Tablets,11,12,145.The Hague,118.Theodore, Abp.,45,63.Therhoernen, Arnold,109,110.Tintern Abbey,57.Titchfield Abbey,58,59.Title-page,107–109.Tooling,150.Type or Types, Aldino,113,114.—— Caxton's,126.—— Early,107.—— Gaelic or Irish,139,141–143.—— Gothic,107,115.—— Greek,103.—— Italic,114.—— Moveable,81–89.—— Roman,107,115.—— Subiaco,112.—— Scottish printers',135,136.—— Wood and metal,106,107.U.Ulm,104.Usher, John,141.Utrecht,117,118.V.Veldener, John,117.Venice,68,104,107,109,110,112,113,130.Vienna,75.Virgil, Aldine,114,115,152.W.Waldfoghel, Procopius,85.Walsh, Nicholas,141,142.Westminster,104,117,121–123,128.Whitby,60.Wimborne Minster,70.Winchester,45,50,62,148.Woodcuts, early English,124.Worcester,57.Writers of Text Letter,51.Writing,10,11.Wynkyn de Worde,121,128,131.Z.Zel, Ulric,103.Zutphen,70.TURNBULL AND SPEARS, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.[1]The Codex Sinaiticus, now at St Petersburg.[2]The first printed musical notes appear in de Gerson'sCollectorium super Magnificat, printed at Esslingen in 1473 by Conrad Fyner.[3]The Pye, or Pica, directed how saints'-days falling in Lent, Easter, Whitsuntide, and the octave of Trinity, were to be observed with respect to the “commemorations” of these seasons.[4]It is hardly necessary to remind the reader that at this period Westminster was quite distinct from London.
TURNBULL AND SPEARS, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.
[1]The Codex Sinaiticus, now at St Petersburg.[2]The first printed musical notes appear in de Gerson'sCollectorium super Magnificat, printed at Esslingen in 1473 by Conrad Fyner.[3]The Pye, or Pica, directed how saints'-days falling in Lent, Easter, Whitsuntide, and the octave of Trinity, were to be observed with respect to the “commemorations” of these seasons.[4]It is hardly necessary to remind the reader that at this period Westminster was quite distinct from London.
[1]The Codex Sinaiticus, now at St Petersburg.
[1]The Codex Sinaiticus, now at St Petersburg.
[2]The first printed musical notes appear in de Gerson'sCollectorium super Magnificat, printed at Esslingen in 1473 by Conrad Fyner.
[2]The first printed musical notes appear in de Gerson'sCollectorium super Magnificat, printed at Esslingen in 1473 by Conrad Fyner.
[3]The Pye, or Pica, directed how saints'-days falling in Lent, Easter, Whitsuntide, and the octave of Trinity, were to be observed with respect to the “commemorations” of these seasons.
[3]The Pye, or Pica, directed how saints'-days falling in Lent, Easter, Whitsuntide, and the octave of Trinity, were to be observed with respect to the “commemorations” of these seasons.
[4]It is hardly necessary to remind the reader that at this period Westminster was quite distinct from London.
[4]It is hardly necessary to remind the reader that at this period Westminster was quite distinct from London.