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A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE LONDON BOOK TRADE 1614-1618
by David L. Gants [*]
AS STUDENTS OF THE BOOK have borrowed tools of the historian in their attempts to gain insights into the world of early printing and publishing, they have also faced the limits inherent in such instruments.[1] In particular, the methods of quantitative history, often called cliometrics, offer many analytical advantages, derived in part from the broad perspective that large population samples afford and in part from the numerous descriptive and inferential tools available. For the unwary these tools are also accompanied by the potential traps of unreliable data, anachronistic modeling, and statistical misapplication. Nonetheless, a number of admirable studies in the area of the early modern English book trade have demonstrated what can be gained through a thoughtful application of quantitative approaches.[2]
The following essay attempts to navigate the shoals of cliometrics and offer a contextual frame within which we might begin asking questions about the relationships among stationers in mid-Jacobean London. Focusing on the book trade from 1614 through 1618, a period when the city enjoyed relative peace and prosperity, it will analyze the interplay of production capacity and bookseller preference with the genre and format of the books published. It will, insofar as possible, try to tease out from title pages and secondary
Two matters need to be addressed briefly before I discuss the results of my analysis. First, I have employed the edition sheet as the base unit for measuring printing-house output. Bibliographers have employed this term for different concepts, but I take it to mean the number of sheets in an exemplar volume used as a measure of the relative amount of work required to produce the complete run of that volume. For example, a 32-page quarto that collates A-D4 contains four edition sheets, while a 32-page octavo that collates A-B8 contains two edition sheets. Although both volumes have the same number of pages, the quarto contains twice as many sheets and would require roughly twice as much work to machine as the octavo. The second issue revolves around the generic classifications I have used to evaluate printing and publishing activity. The utility of ongoing research increases when pursued with an awareness of its predecessors in the field, and so I have broken down the books published during the target period into categories used in recent studies. A more detailed discussion of these issues can be found at the Early English Booktrade Database Web site.
1. Book Production in Mid-Jacobean London[5]
During the five-year period 1614-1618, London stationers produced an average of 7616 edition sheets and 356 distinct editions each year,[6] and the
Year | Edition sheets | Editions[a] | Edition sheets/Edition |
1614 | 7932 | 326 | 24.3 |
1615 | 8156 | 412 | 19.8 |
1616 | 7095 | 379 | 18.7 |
1617 | 7240 | 320 | 22.6 |
1618 | 7653 | 341 | 22.4 |
Average | 7616 | 356 | 21.4 |
While the overall book trade increased, internal Company restrictions and periodic Star Chamber decrees meant the number of master printers active in London during the first forty years of the seventeenth century hovered around twenty, and with a few exceptions those licensed printers were limited to only one or two presses. Many London printers owned more than two presses but used them for proofing and other purposes, interpreting the decrees to mean one or two production presses. Compare this situation with that of Christophe Plantin of Antwerp, who in the early 1570s had up to sixteen active presses and employed in the neighborhood of fifty workers,[10] an order issued by the Provost of Paris in 1618 decreeing that each master printer have at least two working presses,[11] or with a 1644 Parisian inventory indicating that one printing house had seven presses, five had five presses, eight had four, eleven had three, thirty-five had two, and sixteen had one press.[12] The reasons for this apparent imbalance are various—the lack of a significant domestic supply of paper (the English wore mainly wool and thus lacked a ready source of the linen rags from which paper was made), the minuscule continental market for English-language books, the inability to achieve economies of scale that continental printers enjoyed, the dominance of French printing during the sixteenth century, and the obvious fact that Paris was nearly twice as large as London and the population of France three times as large as England—but the important point to bear in mind is that the London printing trade was a relatively small industry serving a subset of a larger market.
Although the domestic printing trade may have remained small relative to the continental industry, it is clear that the overall circulation and sales of books printed in England had been growing for some time. Veylit has compiled figures for British publishing from 1475-1800, based upon individual titles listed in the ESTC database. These indicate that the average number of titles annually printed in the forty-year period between the death of Elizabeth and the beginning of the English Civil War roughly doubled, from
As far as the five-year period of this study is concerned, a number of localized factors combined to make it an especially interesting one. Politically it marked the center of James I's rule and the last years of an era of relative calm that had begun with the Edict of Nantes in 1598 and peace with Spain in 1604; by 1619 Ralegh had been executed, James's popularity at home had evaporated, and turmoil in Bohemia had sparked the Thirty Years War. England was experiencing sustained economic prosperity, marked by stable prices, a series of good harvests, and a welcome lack of plague visitations.[16] In 1616 the Stationers' Company renewed and enlarged its exclusive right to print primers, Psalters, and almanacs, titles that formed the core of the profitable English Stock. In the same year, an apparent optimistic moment, the Company also struck a deal with Bonham Norton and formed the Latin Stock, which was primarily concerned with importing books from the continent. Two years later, in 1618, the Stationers formed the Irish Stock in a bid to control the book trade in Ireland. Overall the middle years of James's reign were marked by relative peace and prosperity, a business climate that would have encouraged printers and publishers to produce at a fairly high level.
The increasingly complex and active market is reflected in the varied subjects of the works published, bought, and consumed in England. Different genres of works brought with them assumptions about textual presentation,
Informational and literary publishing most closely mirrors the distribution of formats seen in the overall trade, with slightly more quartos than folios, and a significant percentage of octavo printing. Other genres show much more striking preferences. Books of history, as well as works of law and politics, are overwhelmingly printed in folio, a format perceived as carrying a certain amount of weight and prestige, while religious works dominate small-format publication. Ephemera were overwhelmingly published in the more portable quarto and octavo formats, with official documents either printed as full-sheet broadside proclamations or quarto pamphlets.
It is in the printing of religious materials that the greatest diversity of formats is employed. Almost half of the religious works are imposed in a quarto format, with a significant number of folio, octavo, and duodecimo titles and a smattering of small-format printing. Two sub-categories of religious publishing are worth touching on as well. Two-thirds of all sermons are published in quarto format, although sermon compilations tend to appear in octavo and duodecimo. The greatest range of format choices, however, is in the printing of Bibles; there appears to have been a market for Bibles, single-testament books and psalm translations in nearly every format (see table 3).
Similar studies against which we might compare these data are hard tocome by and often detail the activities of a single house rather than the industry as a whole. For example, Jan Materné's survey of the Officina Plantiniana's practices during the Counter-Reformation shows that this Antwerp enterprise favored smaller formats than did the London trade. The most common format as measured by titles printed was octavo, followed by duodecimo, quarto, 24mo, 32mo, and finally folio.[18] Counting titles, McKenzie examined a trio of five-year periods in the sixteenth-century London trade and revealed that religious works made up about half the total output and that the most popular format was octavo (accounting for between fifty and seventy percent of the total output in the late 1540s).[19] Yamada's study of Creede's establishment 1593-1617 analyzed his output by genre and size but not format, while Blayney's examination of Okes's house contains an appen-
Genre | 1° | 2° | 4° | 8° | 12° | 16° | 24° | 32° | 64° | Total | Proportion |
Religion | 4 | 5125 | 9475 | 3212 | 1799 | 125 | 85 | 28 | 5 | 19858 | 52% |
Literature | 12 | 2101 | 2360 | 1113 | 146 | 60 | — | 2 | 4 | 5798 | 15% |
Information | 7 | 1370 | 2073 | 813 | 126 | — | — | — | — | 4389 | 12% |
Law/Politics | 2 | 3095 | 710 | 470 | 32 | — | — | — | — | 4309 | 11% |
History | — | 2118 | 496 | 155 | — | — | — | — | — | 2769 | 7% |
Ephemera | 38 | 1 | 280 | 178 | — | 4 | — | — | — | 501 | 1% |
Official Documents | 232 | 59 | 148 | 8 | 5 | — | — | — | — | 452 | 1% |
Total | 295 | 13869 | 15542 | 5949 | 2108 | 189 | 85 | 30 | 9 | 38076 | |
Proportion | 1% | 36% | 41% | 15% | 6% | 1% | — | — | — |
Sub-Genre | 1° | 2° | 4° | 8° | 12° | 16° | 24° | 32° | 64° | Total | Proportion |
Commentary | — | 2367 | 2165 | 298 | 26 | — | — | — | — | 4856 | 24% |
Instructional | 3 | 373 | 1678 | 810 | 529 | — | — | — | — | 3393 | 17% |
Sermons | — | — | 1930 | 732 | 66 | 3 | — | — | — | 2731 | 14% |
Complete Bibles | — | 934 | 1092 | 392 | 125 | 12 | 10 | — | — | 2565 | 13% |
Controversial | — | 765 | 1431 | 165 | 16 | — | — | — | — | 2377 | 12% |
Devotional | 1 | — | 436 | 320 | 997 | 32 | — | 2 | — | 1788 | 9% |
Psalms | — | 172 | 383 | 183 | 24 | 38 | 28 | 26 | — | 854 | 4% |
Book of Common Prayer | — | 268 | 360 | 41 | 16 | — | 15 | — | 3 | 703 | 4% |
New Testament | — | 246 | — | 271 | — | 40 | 32 | — | 2 | 591 | 3% |
Total | 4 | 5125 | 9475 | 3212 | 1799 | 125 | 85 | 28 | 5 | 19858 | |
Proportion | — | 26% | 48% | 16% | 9% | 1% | — | — | — |
The information upon which this study relies comes from the STC, the ESTC,ProQuest's Early English Books Online ({http://eebo.chadwyck.com}), the UMI Early English Books microfilm series, numerous public and private On-line Public Access Catalogues (OPACs), and a physical examination of roughly half the items in question. In some cases I was forced to estimate the edition-sheet total of a particular title based upon data derived from similar editions of the same work (for example when dealing with the Ames collection of title pages in the British Library), and in one case I was not able to acquire or estimate edition sheet totals because it was unavailable: Bartholomew Robertson, Sapienta Secundum Pietatem (London: John Beale, 1618; STC 21098.2). The base quantitative unit in this study is the edition; in those cases where the editors of the STC have split a single edition into multiple entries to reflect the presence of variants, issues, or impressions, I have only counted the single edition entry in my totals. The STC defines an edition as "An item having a majority of sheets (usually all) from reset type," while a variant has a "major change in title, imprint or colophon," an issue has had the "addition, deletion, and/or substitution of leaves or sheets constituting up to half of a book's original sheets," and an impression "indicates standing type which has been reimposed" and additional sheets printed from it (1.xli). In those cases where the STC editors were able to identify the quantity of reset material in an issue, or when Ior when I was able to generate such figures from my physical inspection, I have included those numbers in my data.
Compare this with Mark Bland's estimate of 5400 edition sheets and 262 editions in 1600 London (457-458).
These figures differ significantly from those generated by Maureen Bell and John Barnard, "Provisional Count of STC Titles 1475-1648," Publishing History 31 (1992), 48-66. The scope of their study forced Bell and Barnard to count all STC items, while as noted above, I was able to eliminate variants, issues, and impressions from my totals and focus my analysis on composition and production numbers.
See Julian Roberts, "The Latin Trade," The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, Vol. 4, 1557-1695, ed. John Barnard and D. F. McKenzie, with the assistance of Maureen Bell (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 2002), 141-173.
Alain A. Wijffels, "Sir Edward Stanhope's Bequest of Books to Trinity College, Cambridge, 1608," Private Libraries in Renaissance England, ed. R. J. Fehrnbach (Binghamton:Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 1992), 1.41-78.
R. J. Fehrenbach, "An Inventory of Books in the Possession of Sir Roger Townshend, ca. 1625," Private Libraries in Renaissance England, ed. R. J. Fehrnbach (Binghamton:Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 1992), 1.79-136.
Philip Gaskell, A New Introduction to Bibliography (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1972), 164-165.
Henri-Jean Martin, Print, Power, and People in 17th-Century France, trans. David Gerard (Metuchen and London: Scarecrow Press, 1993), 39-40.
Whether the trade's growth indicates an associated prosperity is less clear, and the progressive model presented here is only a simple overview. For a discussion of the issues concerning the economics of the London book trade see John Barnard's Introduction to The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, Vol. 4, especially pp. 14-21.
Of course, one's experience of prosperity varied with station. The relentless flood of immigration into London also caused a growing disparity between wages and prices. Figures cited by C. G. A. Clay indicate that the relative purchasing power of a craftsman's wages in the building trade between 1500 and 1720 reached its lowest point in the 1610s (Economic Expansion and Social Change: England 1500-1700 [Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1984], 216-218).
"The Officina Plantiana and the Dynamics of the Counter-Reformation, 1590-1650," Produzione e Commercio della Carta e del Libro Secc. XIII-XVIII (Prato: Le Monnier, 1992), 485.
"The Economics of Print, 1550-1750: Scales of Production and Conditions of Constraint," Produzione e Commercio della Carta e del Libro Secc. XIII-XVIII (Prato: LeMonnier, 1992), 417-418.
2. London Printing[20]
Because of regulations requiring the inclusion in imprints of the printer's name, we can identify most of the establishments responsible for producing extant works from mid-Jacobean London. Twenty-nine individuals or organizations appear in title pages during this period as having in some way been responsible for physically printing books (some of these businesses worked cooperatively and their data have been combined; see footnotes for individual printers in table 4). The most striking observation coming from the figures below is the wide discrepancy in the levels of business activity; the top six offices were responsible for over half of the total output and the bottom six responsible for only 8% (see table 4).
These figures indicate that the most productive printing houses operating in London achieved a sustained high volume one of two ways: by acquiring a privilege to print protected materials, as is the case of the King's Printer, Adam Islip, and to a lesser degree John Legat (who through established connections with Cambridge had cornered a valuable share of a steady market); or by cultivating a network of active publishers who could be relied upon to provide work sufficient to keep an office busy, as with the printers William Stansby, Edward Griffin, Thomas Snodham, Felix Kingston, and Humphrey Lownes. McKerrow, in his examination of Edward Allde's career, distinguished between two types of printers, "according as they themselves published and sold the bulk of the work they printed—the so-called printer publisher, or printed mainly or entirely for others—the so-called trade printers."[21] He did not differentiate between those who mainly printed privileged material and those who primarily commissioned new titles, but his central distinction is still a useful one, especially if one compares output levels with the place a printer falls on the printer-publisher/trade printer continuum. Indeed, the data suggest a strong correlation between the ability of a printer to solicit commissions from other publishers and the production totals posted by that printer.[22] Excluding the King's Printer, Islip, and Legat from the population, the five most productive houses (which are responsible for half the output of this group) printed only 6% of their production for themselves, while the remaining dozen identified houses printed over one-
Edition sheets | Self published | Edition sheets/Edition | Proportion | |||||||||
Printing House | 1° | 2° | 4° | 8° | 12° | 16° | 24° | 32° | 64° | |||
King's Printing House[a] | 6069 | na | 20.9 | 3% | 41% | 36% | 15% | 3% | 1% | 1% | — | — |
Adam Islip | 3751 | na | 85.3 | — | 71% | 19% | 9% | 1% | — | — | — | — |
Edward Griffin[b] | 3706 | 6% | 28.5 | — | 25% | 57% | 13% | 4% | 1% | — | — | — |
William Stansby | 3581 | 3% | 35.5 | — | 63% | 28% | 7% | 2% | — | — | — | — |
Thomas Snodham | 2241 | 10% | 17.0 | — | 16% | 54% | 21% | 8% | 1% | — | — | — |
John Legat | 1982 | na | 42.2 | — | 58% | 29% | 10% | 3% | — | — | — | — |
Felix Kingston | 1829 | 4% | 19.5 | — | 25% | 49% | 17% | 9% | — | — | — | — |
Humphrey Lownell rend="right">29% | 10% | 3% | — | — | — | — | ||||||
Felix Kingston | 1829 | 4% | 19.5 | — | 25% | 49% | 17% | 9% | — | — | — | — |
Humphrey Lownes[c] | 1798 | 9% | 25.0 | — | 23% | 41% | 24% | 12% | — | — | — | — |
John Beale[d] | 1672 | 28% | 18.8 | — | 43% | 29% | 18% | 8% | 1% | — | — | 1% |
Nicholas Okes | 1585 | 30% | 14.2 | — | 23% | 34% | 31% | 12% | — | — | — | — |
Richard Field | 1551 | 23% | 28.7 | — | 24% | 51% | 17% | 6% | 2% | — | — | — |
Unattributed Printing[e] | 1374 | na | 7.5 | 2% | 10% | 33% | 29% | 19% | 3% | 2% | 2% | — |
Alsop/Creede[f] | 1258 | 39% | 15.0 | — | 1% | 75% | 22% | 2% | — | — | — | — |
William/Isaac Jaggard[g] | 1227 | 83% | 27.9 | — | 52% | 38% | 6% | 4% | — | — | — | — |
George Purslowe[h] | 1066 | 32% | 14.0 | — | — | 73% | 13% | 14% | — | — | — | — |
George Eld | 980 | 30% | 10.4 | 1% | 45% | 36% | 17% | 1% | — | — | — | — |
Thomas Purfoot | 636 | 30% | 18.2 | 1% | 28% | 39% | 25% | 7% | — | — | — | — |
Edward Allde | 622 | 19% | 10.9 | — | — | 78% | 20% | 2% | — | — | — | — |
Blower/Jones/Snowdon[i] | 465 | 51% | 8.5 | 3% | 12% | 64% | 16% | 5% | — | — | — | — |
Thomas Dawson[j] | 430 | 8% | 25.3 | — | 61% | 27% | 9% | 3% | — | — | — | — |
John/William White[k] | 253 | 17% | 5.6 | 5% | — | 77% | 18% | — | — | — | — | — |
FIGURE 1. London printing, 1614-1618: Printing house output vs. % self-published.
A recent monograph on printing house activities during this period can shed further light on some of the data listed in table 4. Yamada's 1994 study of Thomas Creede's establishment contains output and subject distribution analyses for the house's history up to Creede's death in 1617 (including the materials produced in partnership with Bernard Alsop in 1616). My examination
FIGURE 2. Yearly output for Creede and Alsop/Creede.
Before examining the much more diverse publishing segment of the London book trade, I'd like to discuss briefly the printing side of the book trade, beginning with one of the most important printers of his time. Born in Exeter, William Stansby's twenty-six-year career as a master printer (1610-1636) spans the core Jacobean-Caroline period, a time during which his output was both prolific and catholic. When Stansby apprenticed with John Windet in
Stansby was responsible for roughly 9% of the total London output during the period in question. That he could sustain production at this level without the benefit of exclusive patents meant that, among other things, he needed to develop relationships with the booksellers who served as publishers at this time. The title pages of the slightly more than one hundred books he printed from 1614 through 1618 bear the names of over thirty different booksellers, and only 3% of his output was printed without the evident involvement of another stationer. By contrast, Islip's title pages reveal only six names (other than the Company of Stationers who managed the law patent) on his handful of non-law publications, and only three of his title pages lack publisher information. The Star Chamber decrees of 1586 and 1615 that restricted the number of presses owned by individual printing houses in London to either one or two (save the King's Printer, who was not subject to these limits) were usually taken to apply only to the number of operatingpresses. Nonetheless these decrees along with periodic Company raids and crackdowns placed a tangible limit on the production capacity of each office. For an ambitious businessman like Stansby (in the 1615 decree he was allowed two presses), the only way to achieve his high levels of output was
At the end of Windet's mastership, when the house was averaging less than 300 edition sheets per annum and the generic mix tended toward small-format books of a religious nature, composition was roughly half black letter and half roman, and "Pica was twice as commonly used as english . . . [with]a significant use of long-primer, brevier and non pareil."[27] When Stansby hit his stride in 1614-1618 and was averaging 700 sheets per annum, less than 10% of the composition was black letter, with over 50% of the work done in english and only 42% in pica. He also tended toward publishing large-format books, with 62% of his output imposed as folio, 28% quarto, 7% octavo and only 3% duodecimo.
Stansby seems to have made full use of his ample stocks of english type for his extensive folio publication, supplementing it with pica only in two instances—in 1614 when he was printing the 244-sheet Purchas his Pilgrimage (STC 20506) and Walter Ralegh's 394-sheet History of the World (STC20637), and again in 1617 when he printed an enlarged Purchas (294 sheets, STC 20507) along with the second edition of the History (STC 20638).[28] In both cases he chose to set Purchas in pica (he set Ralegh's History in english), the only two times he employed that body for folio printing. When setting quarto, though, the balance shifts to the other extreme: 80% of his quarto output is in pica roman or black letter, with only 20% set in english. What little small-format printing Stansby did was a smattering of brevier and long and great primer. The rapid increase in production seems to have forced a number of changes from the earlier practices of Windet's mastership, including a focus on secular rather than religious publishing, "a shift to larger sizes of type and increased emphasis on composition over presswork."[29] Unlike that of most of his contemporaries, nearly all of Stansby's work was the result of commissions from other stationers (discussed further below), and he seems to have cultivated strong commercial relationships with publishers who fed a growing market for works of literature and history.
Edward Griffin's career, while much shorter, resembles Stansby's in a number of important ways.[30] Like Stansby he was not from London but rather born in Denbigh, in northern Wales. After being freed in 1611 Griffin worked as a journeyman in the establishment of his former master Arnold Hatfield and succeeded to the business upon the latter's death the next year. The printing house Griffin acquired is often referred to as the Eliot's Court
Upon assuming the Eliot's Court Press, Griffin seems to have hit the ground running. He started off quite busy, averaging between 600 and 800 sheets a year during the first four years of his mastership, and he maintained that level of production until his death in 1621. He also seems to have been a fairly law-abiding colleague, was admitted to livery in 1616, and received a one-half yeoman's share in the English Stock in 1618 and a full share the next year. With the established printing business apparently came a long list of client publishers; Griffin dealt with thirty-five different booksellers during the year 1614-1618, especially Nathaniel Butter (1499 sheets), Ralph Mab (500 sheets), William Bladen (226 sheets), and William Aspley (225 sheets). He printed many more titles of smaller size and format, with an output totaling nearly 170 separate works of which three-quarters were quarto format or smaller. Most of the publishers he dealt with had a preference for divinity, and during this period they commissioned him to print nearly 2700 edition sheets of religious titles, especially commentaries, works of instruction, and collections of sermons. Both Stansby and Griffin relied upon outside financing from prosperous stationers: Stansby maintained relations with booksellers who favored secular works, and Griffin exploited his connections with publishers specializing in religious texts.
Large establishments such as the King's Printer, Islip, Stansby, and Griffin managed to attract the lion's share of the large-format and prestige printing, yet there was still enough business in the London market to support mid-sized outfits such as the one run by Thomas Snodham. Like Stansby and Griffin, after Snodham was freed in 1602 he remained with, and ultimately took over the business of, his former master Thomas East. He apparently had no valuable patents, although he occasionally printed music as an assignee of William Barley. During the last part of his career he served on a committee of stock-keepers who oversaw the management of the English Stock. In 1619 he also was asked by the Stationers' Company "to goe into Ireland to take the account" of the Irish Stock. As recompense the Company ordered that he "shall haue worke for 2 presses vntill his returne & that the Company shall pay to his wife eu'ye saterday 4[pounds] if the worke amount to so much."[31]
Snodham's output reflects the sorts of projects a mid-sized office could expect to attract. A little more than half of his production consisted of the religious material that was so popular at this time (about a quarter of this was sermon publication). His work came from a number of different sources, with the names of over thirty stationers appearing on the title pages of the books he printed during this period and approximately 10% of his output produced without an outside publisher. He may have worked for so many publishers because the commissions they gave him were so small. Over the five-year period of this study Snodham printed more than 130 separate titles with an average of a little less than seventeen edition sheets per title, 25% smaller than the average for the trade. As one might expect from such a collection of smaller works, a majority (57%) of his work was in quarto, with roughly 18% in folio, 18% octavo, and 7% duodecimo. He also managed to keep a fairly consistent rate of work in his house, with a solid schedule of smaller quarto and octavo jobs punctuated on occasion with large folio contracts.[32]
The remaining printers from this period reflect in one way or another the characteristics displayed by the largest establishments. Felix Kingston and Humphrey Lownes, both in the middle of successful careers, relied upon other booksellers for their financing and produced a slate of titles resembling that of Griffin (Kingston succeeded to the business of his father the printer John Kingston, a former apprentice of Richard Grafton; Lownes also collaborated frequently with his brother Matthew and married the daughter of the wealthy bookseller Thomas Man). Among the mid-sized houses that published for themselves as well as printed for others, the typical annual output consisted of much smaller volumes than that of printers who worked primarily for others. Younger stationers such as John Beale, Nicholas Okes, and George Purslowe printed small format works of divinity and literature for numerous booksellers: Beale's title pages include thirty-three different publishers, Okes's forty-three, and Purslowe's twenty-nine. These printers also received various Company subsidies to help them, with Beale commissioned to print Thomas Ashe's 486-sheet common law reference Le Primier Volume del Promptuarie (STC 840.5) and both Okes and Purslowe receiving sums from the Company Loan Book.[33] The older printers dominate the bottom of table 4, indicating that either they had reached the point where their own more profitable publishing and bookselling ventures replaced printing, were nearing the end of their careers and withdrawing from the trade, or were flirting with failure (William White, for example, received £4 in 1611 from the Company Poor Book[34] ).
Biographical information in this and the next section is derived primarily from Vol. 3 of the STC and from R. B. McKerrow's A Dictionary of Printers and Booksellers in England, Scotland and Ireland 1557-1640 (London: Bibliographical Society, 1910).
The two variables are linked of course, and there is no way to infer causality from these data alone. An ambitious printer with a small house would be limited by the amount of available equipment; likewise, a lazy printer with a large house would only produce as much work as the owner required, no matter how many presses or cases of type.
The King's Printing House of this period descends directly from Christopher Barker (1577-1587) and his deputies (George Bishop and Ralph Newberry, 1587-1599) to Barker's son Robert (1600-1634). However, sometime in 1616 Bonham Norton and John Bill assumed control of the press, precipitating a contracted battle over the position (for an account of the disputes see Henry R. Plomer, "The King's Printing House under the Stuarts," Library2nd ser. 2 [1901], 353-375). For the purposes of this study I have combined the production attributed to Robert Barker, John Bill, and Bonham Norton under the general heading of the King's Printing House.
These totals include material identified with Griffin as well as the establishment known as the Eliot's Court Press. Note that the name Eliot's Court Press never appeared in an imprint, which makes attribution of responsibility highly speculative. The STC used the label as a holding category for items produced by one of the partners but without a name in the imprint, and it occasionally includes some that do have a partner's name in the imprint. The editors acknowledge that "such attributions during the course of revising STC were not made on any systematic basis" (3.58).
Lownes frequently entered into publishing ventures with his brother Matthew, and both were active in Company affairs.
One 486-sheet law book accounts for a quarter of Beale's output during this period. Without this large title, the proportion of his religious publishing rises to 50%, his literary publishing to 31%, and educational material to 11%.
Roughly 5% of the printing output during this period has no printer listed on the title page, and over half of this work falls into generic categories that indicate it was controlled by the Stationers' Company, i.e. religion (psalm books and collections of biblical texts) and ephemera (almanacs and prognostications). The law and politics category is likely inflated by four 67-sheet quarto editions of a single work published in 1618, John Selden's controversial History of Tithes (STC 22172 ff.). This book was originally produced in Stansby's house, but sometime during Christmas 1617 the Bishop of London raided the establishment, confiscated the paper and type being used to print it, and shut down the business for a time. The text had circulated in manuscript prior to publication, and some in the government felt certain passages attempted "to proue that Tithes are not due by the Law of God . . . that the Laitie may detaine them . . . that Lay hands may still enjoy Appropriations"and that the work was "against the maintenance of the Clergie" (a3v). When the work appeared the next year (with a long preface refuting the objections raised by others and some modifications to the text itself), the only identifying features on the title page were its author and the publication date. The printer even went so far as to explicitly distance himself from the text with a short "Printer to the Reader" coda: "As I found the Copie partly Printed partly Writen, so is this done off; sauing only where those faults, and perhaps some other (which your courtesie, Reader, may amend) are committed. Neither thought I it fit to alter any thing without the Autors presence, whence euen the syllables of those passages in which mention was as if it were yet but in part only printed (as my Copie was) are also retained" (2f4v). Stansby's unfortunate experience, along with the fear that further trouble might attend this book, apparently prompted the printer of these volumes to stay as far away as possible from this debate. Selden described the raid on Stansby's house in a letter to Nicholas Fabri de Peiresc dated 6 February 1618. Bland includes a translation of the letter in his unpublished dissertation Jonson, Stansby and English Typography 1579-1623, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1995), 1.49. There is also reason to believe that at least one of the four editions was printed after 1618, although confirmation of this supposition awaits further investigation.
In 1616, the year before Thomas Creede died, he took as a partner the fledgling printer Bernard Alsop, who assumed the mastership upon Creede's passing. For the purposes of this study, the Creede/Creede-Alsop/Alsop sequence is treated as one continuous enterprise.
One title constitutes almost a quarter of William Jaggard's output, the 1615 anatomy and medical text Mikrokosmographia by Helkiah Crooke (STC 6062). Without this large project, Jaggard's religious printing jumps to almost 90%. His son Isaac was freed in 1613 and worked in his office.
Note that Purslowe is just beginning his career at this point, and might also be working for Griffin and the Eliot's Court Press.
Lionel Snowdon worked in the house of Ralph Blower, perhaps as a partner, until the former's death in 1616. Around that same time Blower (who died in 1619) sold his establishment to William Jones (whom the STC identifies as "William Jones 3"). I have combined the efforts of these related individuals into one entry.
In the mid-1610s Dawson was at the end of a long and successful career (he died in 1620), having risen to Master of the Stationers' Company in 1609 and 1615-16.
John's first imprint is dated 1614; he succeeded to his father William's printing material upon the latter's death in 1617.
Bland includes a detailed analysis of the Windet-Stansby house to 1616 in his unpublished dissertation.
18.5 formes from Jonson's Workes is between 350 and 400 pounds of type. When setting a text (especially drama with its heavy consumption of capitals for speech prefixes) a compositor will start to run short after using about 10% of the available types. The implication here is that Stansby had at least 2000 pounds of one font of english type with a second font in use on another project. In 1683 Moxon recommended that a printing house have between 800-1000 pounds of commonly used fonts like english and pica (p. 25). For evidence of the standing formes, see Johan Gerritsen, "Stansby and Jonson Produce a Folio:A Preliminary Account," English Studies 40 (1959), 52-65.
Bland, "William Stansby and the Production of The Workes of Benjamin Jonson,1615-1616," Library 6th ser. 20 (1998), 5-6.
Stansby's resources were further strained in the second instance because he was just completing the 257-sheet Workes of Ben Jonson and another edition of Richard Hooker's 129-sheet Lawes of Ecclesiastical Politie, both in english type.
Stationer records include two Edward Griffins. One was from Flintshire in Northeastern Wales, apprenticed to Henry Conneway in 1589, freed in 1596, and likely dead by 1606. The narrative that follows describes the second, younger, Edward Griffin.
Records of the Court of the Stationers' Company 1602 to 1640, ed. William A. Jackson (London: Bibliographical Society, 1957), 110.
W. Craig Ferguson, The Loan Book of the Stationers' Company With a List of Transactions 1592-1692, Occasional Papers of the Bibliographical Society Number 4 (London: Bibliographical Society, 1989), 27, 28.
W. Craig Ferguson, "The Stationers' Company Poor Book, 1608-1700," Library 5th ser. 31 (1976), 50.
3. London Publishing
McKenzie has observed that "There is still no satisfactory model of the economics of the London trade which usefully structures the dense and complex relationship between writers, printers, booksellers and readers during the hand-press period."[35] As I have shown, by blending title-page and Stationers' Register data with evidence derived from a physical examination of surviving books, we can begin to sketch patterns of large-scale printing-house activities. However, little financial documentation has survived the ravages of time and fire, and thus mapping the terrain of publishing activity in mid-Jacobean London is much more difficult. A title page might provide an imperfect glimpse at the business deals behind the book, but at best we can only use the collected data in broad strokes. During the five-year period in question, nearly 200 different names or organizations appear on title pages, over half of whom, according to title-page evidence, averaged less than 10 edition sheets per year. At the other end of the scale, the four establishments who controlled protected printing published 44% of the output during the same period. Table 5 details the twenty-two stationers who published or controlled the publication of at least 80 sheets a year, with the data broken down by total output, percent of output that is reprinted material, and subject classification.
As was the case with most commerce in early modern England, monopolies played a large role in determining who printed what texts, and the four most productive entities dealt primarily with protected printing. Henry VIII awarded patents for printing on royal privilege, while Edward gave limited-period patents for individual titles. Elizabeth, however, greatly expanded the concept of patents by awarding lifetime rights to print whole classes of books. It was during her reign that individuals began acquiring sole rights to biblical publication, prayer books, law books, Latin and Greek printing, almanacs, and the like. Poorer stationers infringed on the growing number of restricted texts, resulting in a stream of small squabbles within the Company. At the request of the Stationers' Company, the Star Chamber in 1586 reorganized the jumbled patent situation and most of the discord died away. In 1603 the materials that became known as the English Stock were awarded to the Company in perpetuity, including primers, Psalters, psalms, almanacs, and prognostications. This collection of protected works earned a significant income, and when the Stationers bought Abergavenny House in 1611 for their new hall they did so "from the stocke of the [par]tners in the Privilege."[36] A few years later in 1616 the English Stock was expanded and the Latin Stock formed; the latter was mainly concerned with the importation of Latin works from the continent and did very little domestic publishing.
Genre | |||||||||
Establishment[a] | Total | Proportion reprinted[b] | Information | Ephemera | History | Law &Politics | Literature | Official Docs. | Religion |
King's Printing House | 6069 | 73% | 97 | 21 | 4 | 748 | 151 | 342 | 4706 |
Stationers' Company[c] | 4898 | 63% | 329 | 183 | 64 | 3071 | 259 | — | 992 |
Adam Islip | 3751 | 63% | 572 | — | 314 | 2550 | 56 | 1 | 258 |
John Legat | 1970 | 50% | 683 | — | 76 | — | 146 | 3 | 1062 |
Thomas Adams | 1285 | 65% | 619 | — | 390 | — | 96 | — | 180 |
Henry Featherstone | 1268 | 62% | — | 3 | 73 | — | 556 | — | 636 |
Thomas/Jonas Man | 1242 | 58% | 144 | — | — | — | 19 | — | 1079 |
Nathaniel Butter | 1046 | 42% | — | 40 | — | — | 185 | 2 | 819 |
Walter Burre | 1036 | 43% | 64 | — | 793 | 24 | 58 | — | 97 |
William/Isaac Jaggard | 1021 | 17% | 329 | 1 | — | 3 | 11 | 21 | 656 |
Officina Nortoniana[d] | 967 | 0% | — | 19 | 22 | 19 | 23 | — | 884 |
Matthew Lownes | 871 | 33% | 114 | 18 | 157 | — | 255 | — | 327 |
Mab/Edwards/Bloome[e] | 751 | 39% | — | — | — | — | — | — | 751 |
Arthur Johnson | 672 | 66% | 40 | — | 210 | — | 42 | — | 380 |
Roger Jackson | 576 | 44% | 268 | — | — | — | 57 | — | 251 |
Alsop/Creede | 530 | 79% | 39 | — | 40 | — | 385 | — | 66 |
William Barrett | 530 | 33% | — | 11 | 33 | — | 108 | — | 378 |
John Budge | 487 | 37% | 55 | — | — | — | 39 | 7 | 386 |
Nicholas Okes | 474 | 40% | 124 | — | 62 | 33 | 122 | 1 | 132 |
John Beale | 462 | 9% | — | 5 | — | 22 | 250 | 5 | 180 |
Simon Waterson | 462 | 63% | 5 | — | 180 | — | 31 | — | 246 |
Edward Blount | 429 | 72% | — | 1 | — | — | 134 | — | 294 |
By the middle of James I's reign, protected printing fell into four groups:the English Stock, the Latin Stock, the King's Printer material (see below), and the Ballad partners.[38] The English Stock is the most important of these classes of texts, for it served the dual purpose of providing a steady return to those who could afford to invest in the stock (shares ranged from £50-200) while at the same time generating a pool of funds to assist poor stationers (a printer obtained the right to produce one edition by paying sixpence in the pound for the poor). Overall, the effect of these patents was to channel certain classes of books to a select group of stationers, the impact of which will become evident in the examination of individual printing houses that follows.
The most important and potentially profitable printing establishment in Jacobean London was the King's Printer. For the first 100 years of printing in England, royal publishing was essentially on a contractual or commission basis, with the title "King's Printer" or "Queen's Printer" applied only to a particular work or set of works and their production undertaken by private printing houses. However, when Christopher Barker was awarded the post in 1577 it became recognized as a distinct office in which publication rights lay not with an individual house or title but with the office itself. Barker also purchased Bacon House in 1579 and established it as a separate printing
Despite the broad variety of patents under its control, the office of the King's Printer experienced frequent financial difficulties. For a number of years Bonham Norton had dealings with Robert Barker, and at some point Norton and John Bill apparently became partners with Barker in the King's Printing Office, perhaps as part of an investment arrangement to pay for the so-called `Authorized Version' of the Bible in 1611. Early in the partnership things went smoothly, so smoothly in fact that Barker's eldest son Christopher and Norton's eldest daughter Sarah were married in 1615. However, Norton's aggressive and often unscrupulous activities soon resulted in Barker filing a suit in Chancery in 1618 to recover the office, an action that marked the beginning of a series of legal squabbles that would ultimately result in Norton's imprisonment in 1630 and subsequent retirement to Shropshire. Given the tangled business dealings of Barker, Bill, and Norton during this period, I am treating their individual and corporate efforts under the general heading of the King's Printer.
The bulk of the patents acquired over the years and controlled by the King's Printer consisted of a monopoly on the printing of large- and small-format Bibles, some prayer-books, and certain classes of official documents, of which the printing of Bibles consumed a majority of the office's time and resources. The large folio Royal Bible (containing the text of what is commonly called the King James Bible of 1611) could be a massive undertaking, for it was printed lectern size to be read in churches. The 1616 Royal Bible ran in 273 edition sheets (STC 2244), while one printed the next year required 366 (STC 2247),[40] or a total of 639 edition sheets for two Bibles (by comparison, the total five-year output of Purfoot's house was 637 sheets). The slightly smaller Geneva Bibles, usually printed in quarto format for personal use, were nonetheless large undertakings in themselves, with the two editions of the work published in 1615 accounting for 138 edition sheets apiece (STC 2241, 2242). Barker rarely ventured beyond Bibles, proclamations, and prayers: on one occasion in 1614 he printed a sermon by Lancelot Andrewes, Bishop of Ely (STC 622); around the same time he printed a couple of broadsides (without his name on the title page), one outlining table manners (STC23634.7), the other extolling the virtues of rosemary (STC 24844.7); in 1616 he printed some anti-Catholic tracts with John Bill (STC 6996, 6998). Other than these minor diversions, however, Barker seems to have focused solely
Overall, the King's Printer accounted for 6069 edition sheets, or roughly 17% of all London printing from 1614-1618, with slightly over one-half of that total devoted to Bibles and the Book of Common Prayer, while almost three-quarters of the office's production consisted of reprints. The scope of this particular paper does not go beyond output and genre, but it is part of a larger study that includes a detailed examination of the year 1616 and from which we can catch a glimpse of how the business managed its work flow. During this year the printing house issued 740 edition sheets of biblical text: two 2° Bibles, one 4° Bible, an 8° New Testament, a 24° New Testament, and a 24° collection of five Old Testament books. The office used three different type bodies (nonpareil, brevier, pica) and two different faces (roman and black letter), giving it extraordinary flexibility when juggling the setting, proofing, and printing of the texts. For example, the two large folios (a Geneva and a Royal Bible) were both set in a pica body, although one employed a roman face while the other was black letter. In practical terms this meant that the books could be set simultaneously since they used separate typecases. The proofing and printing could also take place simultaneously, with a sheet of black letter text being proofed while the roman text was being machined and vice versa. Likewise the 8° and 24° New Testaments could be printed concurrently, for the former volume was set in brevier while the latter was set in nonpareil. Efficiency may have been of particular importance in 1616, for in addition to biblical texts, Barker and Bill teamed up to print King James's A Collection of His Majesties Workes (STC 14344), a 154-sheet folio that must have tied up the press's font of english body type for a stretch of time. For all works produced by the King's Printer in 1616, roughly two-thirds of the composition was in pica, one-third in brevier and english, with a small amount of nonpareil and great primer.
While the King's Printer held the patent on large- and small-format Bibles, prayer books and the like, Adam Islip had upon Thomas Wight's death in 1605 bought the rights to print law books belonging to the English Stock. As a result, for much of his career he was engaged in producing multiple editions of a relatively small collection of titles. For example, between 1605 and 1629 (when the law patent expired and the rights passed to the assignees of John More), he published over thirty-two editions of the highly profitable law reports of Sir Edward Coke (averaging from forty to eighty edition sheets each, STC 5493-5526.5) as well as Coke's massive 1614 Booke of Entries (368 edition sheets, STC 5488), and large law compilations such as the 1618 folio A Collection of Sundrie Statutes (382 edition sheets, STC
The Company also contributed financing to the production of these titles, especially during the first years after Islip's assumption of the printing rights. Between 10 November 1606 and 12 October 1607, Islip was awarded sums by the Company to help pay for the publication of an octavo edition of Christopher St. German's The Dialogue in English, Betweene a Doctor of Diuinities, and a Student in the Lawes of England (23 sheets, STC 21578), a folio edition of Coke's law digest La Size Part des Reports (46 sheets, STC5509), an octavo edition of William Lambard's Eirenarcha: or the Office of the Iustices of the Peace (44 sheets, STC 15171), and what is likely a lost edition of one or both parts of William Fulbecke's A Parallel or Conference of the Civil Law, the Canon Law, and the Common Law of England (approximately twenty-three sheets for Part 1 and thirty-one sheets for Part 2, STC 11415 and 11415a).[43] The records concerning the last two titles include the size of the edition and the price allowed for paper, from which we can estimate that Islip was paid roughly £29 for the Lambard volume[44] and perhaps £13 or £14 for Fulbecke's Parallel. [45] Ten years later Islip received nearly £300 for the Collection of Sundrie Statutes mentioned above,[46] while in 1622 he and John Haviland were awarded an undetermined sum for printing Richard Montagu's Analecta Ecclesiasticarum Exercitationum (106 sheets, STC 18029).
Of course, the individual books themselves had value, and care was taken to prevent those who had the right to produce them from printing a few extra copies for private sale. In 1627 the Stationers' Court issued an edict calling for strict accounting of the paper supplied for each work so that the Company could check for surreptitious extra copies by comparing the amount of material consumed with the number of books printed. Islip himself testified in 1622 that he paid each workman 4d a title "in liewe of a Copie due to them by the Custome of the Companie,"[47] and was compensated for his expense. Islip was also a member of the ill-fated Irish Stock when it was created in 1618.
During the 1614-1618 period, Islip printed a little over 3750 edition
The overwhelming emphasis on large lawbooks is reflected in the size and format of Islip's output as well. While the average size of a work printed in London during this time was a little more than twenty-one sheets (see above), over the same period Islip averaged eighty-five sheets per title. He also printed mainly folio volumes, with 71% of his output printed in that format, 19% quarto, 9% octavo, and the remaining 1% contained in a pair of small duodecimos. After the lawbook patent expired, Islip remained an active and important member of the Stationers' Company, serving as warden and master. He died in the fall of 1638.
Beyond the London trade a smaller market for specialized books existed at the two universities. A charter in 1534 gave Cambridge University the right to erect a press for its own use, although it wasn't until 1583 that Thomas Thomas set up a house and began printing books for the local market. The London Stationers attempted to crush what they viewed as an infringement on their prerogative, and although a Star Chamber decree in 1586 recognized the right of the university to maintain one press, disagreements continued well into the seventeenth century. John Legat was well-connected within the Company, apprenticing with Christopher Barker and moving to Cambridge, first as the assistant and then in 1588 the successor to Thomas, who was also his father-in-law. Legat ran the Cambridge office for twenty-two years before moving his enterprise to London around 1610, where he operated until his death in 1620. Both Thomas and Legat were independent businessmen who ran a house licensed by the university but not owned by it. Thus when Legat moved to the larger London market he took all his equipment and materials with him, leaving his successor in rather bad straits.[48] With the exception of Nicholas Okes, Legat is the only master printer listed of the period not to be liveried. The Stationers had been a livery Company since 1560, and this gave them certain rights in city and parliamentary governance. Individual stationers called to livery could vote in Company and city elections as well as stand for office, and it also made one eligible to purchase shares in the English Stock. A stationer who was
As one might expect from a stationer associated with the Cambridge University (even after the move to London he continued to call himself "Printer to the University" and to use the Cambridge device),[50] a significant amount of Legat's output was aimed at the academic and intellectual market; roughly 32% of his output was informational, with the bulk of that total resulting from a single reprint of the 233-sheet folio Praxis Medicinae Universalis in 1617 (STC 25865). The remainder of his production was religious (58%), supplemented by a smattering of literature (6%) and history (4%). Almost all of Legat's religious output consisted of large-format volumes of commentary or instruction by divines like William Perkins, with 58% imposed in folio and 29% in quarto. Consequently the average size of his titles is twice that of the trade in general—over forty-one edition sheets per work. He died in 1620 and his son, also named John, took over the business.
Ranking publishers by total output clearly displays the primacy of protected printing. If we view publishing activity according to specific types of works being produced, however, certain other patterns begin to emerge. In some areas a handful of concerns dominated son, also named John, took over the business.
Ranking publishers by total output clearly displays the primacy of protected printing. If we view publishing activity according to specific types of works being produced, however, certain other patterns begin to emerge. In some areas a handful of concerns dominated the trade, for example in Law and Politics where the Stationers' Company (3071 sheets) and Islip (2550 sheets) were responsible for the bulk of the output. Likewise the King's Printing House controlled the printing of Official Documents while the Stationers, with the Almanac patent, determined who printed most extant Ephemera. In other areas the work is much more dispersed. Legat and Islip published a significant amount of works of Information, but eleven others published at least 100 edition sheets from 1614-1618 (see table 6). Even
Publisher | Edition sheets |
John Legat | 683 |
Thomas Adams | 619 |
Adam Islip | 572 |
Stationers | 329 |
William & Isaac Jaggard | 329 |
Roger Jackson | 268 |
Thomas & Jonas Man | 144 |
John Tapp | 136 |
John Browne | 133 |
Nicholas Okes | 124 |
Richard Field | 123 |
John Marriot | 117 |
Matthew Lownes | 114 |
Publisher | Edition sheets |
Henry Fetherstone | 556 |
Alsop/Creede | 385 |
Stationers | 259 |
Matthew Lownes | 255 |
John Beale | 250 |
Humble & Sudbury | 231 |
Laurence Lisle | 230 |
John Smethwick | 188 |
Nathaniel Butter | 185 |
King's Printing House | 151 |
John Legat | 146 |
Edward Blount | 134 |
George Norton | 133 |
Nicholas Okes | 122 |
Thomas Archer | 112 |
William Barrett | 108 |
Thomas Purfoot | 105 |
Finally, the more complex area of religious publication is a mixture of dominance and diversity. The King's Printing House controlled the printing of most Bibles and all Books of Common Prayer (although Islip and Adams did publish some New Testaments), while the Stationers determined Psalm printing; these works constituted about one-quarter of the total religious publishing during this time. A slightly larger group marketed devotional works, where five concerns issued half the output—John Budge (170), Nicholas Bourne (155), Sam & Joyce Macham (139), the Stationers' Company (115), and the joint venture of Ralph Mab, George Edwards and Jacob Bloome (114). Likewise, three-quarters of the controversial works were published by the King's Printing House (740), Officina Nortoniana (656), Matthew Lownes (283), William Barrett (196), Nathaniel Butter (124), and Henry Fetherstone (122). Eleven different establishments contributed to the publication of religious instruction (see table 8), while even more worked with commentary (see table 9).
Sermon publishing is a little more difficult to outline. While two groups of stationers stand out from the rest—Ralph Mab, George Edwards and
Publisher | Edition sheets |
John Legat | 428 |
Thomas & Jonas Man | 303 |
Arthur Johnson | 212 |
Mab/Edwards/Bloome | 208 |
William & Isaac Jaggard | 143 |
Thomas Pavier | 135 |
Richard Woodroffe | 121 |
William Barrett | 112 |
Edward Blount | 108 |
John Hodgets | 107 |
Nathaniel Butter | 102 |
Publisher | Edition sheets |
John Legat | 587 |
William & Isaac Jaggard | 485 |
Thomas & Jonas Man | 464 |
Nathaniel Butter | 458 |
Henry Fetherstone | 395 |
William Aspley | 286 |
William Bladen | 238 |
King's Printing House | 228 |
Officina Nortoniana | 228 |
Thomas Chard | 162 |
Sam & Joyce Macham | 127 |
Richard Field | 116 |
Mab/Edwards/Bloome | 103 |
Simon Waterson | 100 |
"Printing and Publishing 1557-1700: Constraints on the London Book Trades," The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, Vol. 4, 553.
Output figures for the Alsop/Creede house, John Beale, Nicholas Okes, and the Jaggards differ from those listed in table 4, where the amount of printing rather than publicationwas counted.
Overall roughly 55% of the volumes printed during this period were reprints of earlier editions. McKenzie's figures from seventy years earlier showed reprint rates between 31% and 50% ("Economies," 417).
There is significant overlap between the Stationers' Company and Adam Islip concerning the printing of law books. Over 2500 sheets of law publishing were controlled by the Stationers but printed by Islip. For the purposes of this study I have double counted these works, i.e. I have assigned the same titles to both parties (see discussion of Islip below).
The make-up and activities of the organization behind this imprint are unclear. The STC speculates that the establishment involved at least John Bill and Bonham Norton and may have had some connection with John Norton's patent in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew Printing (3.128).
Ralph Mab took his freedom in 1610 and began publishing almost immediately. In 1616 he transferred part of his business to George Edwards, who two years later passed it to his stepson Jacob Bloome (who was also a former apprentice of Mab). For analytical purposes this sequence of publishers is treated as one enterprise.
See Arnold Hunt, "Book Trade Patents, 1603-1640," The Book Trade & Its Customers, 1450-1900, ed. Arnold Hunt, Giles Mandelbrote and Alison Shell (Winchester: St. Paul's Bibliographies, 1997), 27-54.
A Company order in 1612 gave control of ballad printing to Edward Allde, Ralph Blower, George Eld, Simon Stafford (replaced in 1614 by George Purslowe), and William White. In 1620 the order was rescinded and the printing of ballads expanded a bit, but in 1624 the Company gave the exclusive rights to ballads to the partners Henry Gosson, John Grismand, Thomas Pavier, Cuthburt Wright, Edward Wright, and John Wright. See Jackson, xiii-xiv.
Each one of these volumes required in the neighborhood of 4.5 million ens of picatype. Using McKenzie's estimation that one worker could set around 72,000 ens per week ("Printers of the Mind: Some Notes on Bibliographical Theories and Printing-House Practices," Studies in Bibliography 22 [1969], 8) it would take one compositor over 62 weeks to set the type required for a Royal Bible.
Jackson, 82. This work was not part of the 1605 lawbook purchase and was actually printed by John Beale. See note d to table 4, above.
David McKitterick, A History of Cambridge University Press, 2 vols. (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1992). See especially 1.109-135.
4. Conclusions
The snapshot of mid-Jacobean printing and publishing revealed above is just that—a single frame extracted from the larger movie that is early modern London. Within the five-year period of this study certain general
The snapshot also prompts many questions. How does the Stansby house compare with other large printing offices from different periods? How did the King's Printing House change over time? What do the shifts in the kind and number of books being published tell us about the dynamics of early modern English culture? How do various stationers from different times negotiate the business continuum between trade-printing and self-publishing?How does the role of the printer within the trade change over the decades?In what ways do influential booksellers like Thomas Adams, Henry Fetherstone, and Thomas Man resemble or differ from earlier booksellers such as William Bonham, Richard Grafton, John Rastell, and Richard Tot tell?Such questions require further context; thus the next step in exploring the London book trade through quantitative analysis should involve expanding the chronological as well as evidentiary scope of the data collection. In practical terms this means adding typographical data (composition totals as well as face and body choices), design characteristics (headline structure, the presence of ruled compartments and marginal notes) and paratextual evidence (dedications, epistles, errata). As well some of the editorial features of the ETC (inherited by the ESC) need to be addressed, the most important being the decision by the original editors to blur the distinction between edition, state, issue, and variant. Some method of representing shared printing and publishing is needed, perhaps a standard authority table[51] through which we can cross-reference printer, publisher, and a numeric estimate of their proportional responsibility for each item. Finally this evidence must be compiled for the entire STC period.
One hundred years and more have passed since the British Museum published its General Catalogue of Printed Books, and in that time a number of union and short-title catalogues, biographical dictionaries, and documentary
A possible authority file is already underway at the University of Birmingham. The British Book Trade Index, directed by Maureen Bell, seeks to compile in database form "brief biographical and trade details of all those who worked in the English and Welsh book trades before 1852" ({http://www.bbti.bham.ac.uk}). The Library of Congress also maintains a set of authority files (〈http://authorities.loc.gov〉).
A preliminary version of this paper was presented before a Newberry Library Fellows' Seminar on 19 February 2001, and at a seminar on the Stationers' Company at the Annual Meeting of the Shakespeare Association of America on 12 April 2001. The suggestions of the participants at both events have been invaluable, as was the crucial support of my 2000-2001 Mellon Fellowship at the Newberry Library. I would also like to thank Peter W. M. Blayney for his insightful comments on an earlier version of this essay.
For a concise survey of recent developments in bibliographical resources and methods with respect to historical approaches, see Hugh Amory, "Pseudoxia Bibliographica, or When Is a Book Not a Book? When It's a Record," The Scholar & The Database, CERL Papers 11, ed. Lotte Hellinga (London: Consortium of European Research Libraries, 1999), 1-14.
See especially: D. F. McKenzie, The Cambridge University Press, 1696-1712 (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1966); Peter W. M. Blayney, The Texts of King Lear and their Origins (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1982); Akihiro Yamada, Thomas Creede: Printer to Shakespeare and his Contemporaries (Tokyo: Meisei Univ. Press, 1994); Alain Veylit, "A Statistical Survey and Evaluation of the Eighteenth-Century Short-Title Catalog" (Diss. Univ. of California Riverside, 1994); Mark Bland, "The London Book-Trade in 1600," A Companion to Shakespeare, ed. David Scott Kastan (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1999), 450-463; and Don-John Dugas, "The London Book Trade in 1709," PBSA 95 (2001), 32-58, 157-172.
The Early English Booktrade Database seeks to improve certain features of the ESTCwhile adding significant new data. The first stage of the project will create edition-sheet totals and collation formulæ for each record, standardize the spelling of imprint information, design and implement a subject classification scheme, and correct the confusion caused by the sometimes arbitrary practice adopted by the first STC editors in 1926 of assigning unique item numbers to variants, states, and issues. The second, longer-term goal of the project is to compile data about typography, composition, paper, paratext, page design, and the lives of the people involved in the trade. A fuller discussion of the project can be found at {http://purl.oclc.org/EEBD}.
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