8. JOHANN GUTENBERG 1400 - 1468.
Johann Gutenberg is often called the
inventor of printing. What he actually did was to develop the first method of
utilizing movable type and the printing press in such a way that a large
variety of written material could be printed with speed and
accuracy.
No invention springs full-blown from the mind of a single man, and certainly printing did not. Seals and signet rings, which work on the same principle as block printing, had been used since ancient times. Block printing had been known in China many centuries before Gutenberg, and, in fact, a printed book dating from about 868 has been discovered there. The process was also known in the West before Gutenberg. Block printing makes possible the production of many copies of a given book. However, the process has one major drawback: since a completely new set of woodcuts or plates must be made for each new book, it is impractical for
producing a large variety of books.
It is sometimes said that Gutenberg's main contribution was the invention of movable type. However, movable type was invented in China, some time in the middle of the eleventh century, by a man named Pi Sheng. His original type was made of earthenware, which is not very durable; however, other Chinese and Koreans made a series of improvements, and well before Gutenberg, Koreans were using metal type. In fact, the Korean government was supporting a foundry for the production of printing type in the early fifteenth century. Despite all this, it would be a mistake to think of Pi Sheng as a particularly influential person. In the first place, Europe did not learn of movable type from China, but developed it independently. In the second place, printing by means of movable type never came into general use in China itself until comparatively recent times, when modern printing procedures were learned from the West.
There are four essential components of modern printing methods. The first is movable type, along with some procedure for setting it and fixing it in position. The second is the printing press itself. The third is a suitable type of ink, and the last is a suitable material, such as paper, on which to print. Paper had been invented in China many years earlier (by Ts'ai Lun), and its use had spread to the West before Gutenberg's day. That was the only element of the printing process that Gutenberg found ready-made. Although some work had been done before him on
each of the other three elements, Gutenberg made a variety of important improvements. For example, he developed a metal alloy suitable for type; a mold for casting blocks of type precisely and accurately; an oil-based printing ink; and a press suitable for printing.
But Gutenberg's overall contribution was far greater than any of his individual inventions or improvements. He is important principally because he combined all the elements of printing into an effective system of production. For printing, unlike all prior inventions, is essentially a process of mass production. A
so called Gutenberg Bible, was
printed at Mainz, around 1454. (Curiously,
Gutenberg's name does not actually appear on any of his books, not even
on the Gutenberg Bible, although it was clearly printed with his equipment.) He
does not appear to have been a particularly good businessman; certainly he
never managed to make much money on his invention. He was involved in several
lawsuits, one of which seems to have resulted in his forfeiting his equipment
to his partner, Johann Fust. Gutenberg died in 1468, in Mainz.
Some idea of Gutenberg's impact on
world history can be gained by comparing the subsequent development of China
and Europe. At the time Gutenberg was born, the two regions were about equally
advanced technologically. But after Gutenberg's invention of modern printing,
Europe progressed very rapidly, while in China-where the use of block printing
was continued until much later-progress was comparatively slow. It is probably an overstatement to say that the development of printing was the only factor
causing this divergence; certainly, however, it was an important factor.
It is also worth noting that only
three persons on this list lived during the five centuries preceding Gutenberg,
whereas sixty-seven lived during the five centuries following his death. This
suggests that Gutenberg's invention was a major factor-possibly even the
crucial factorin triggering the revolutionary developments of modern times.
It seems fairly
certain that even had Alexander Graham Bell never lived, the telephone would still have been
invented, and at about the same point in history. The same can be said
of many other inventions. Without Gutenberg, though, the invention of modern printing might have been delayed for
generations, and in view of the overwhelming impact of printing on
subsequent history, Gutenberg assuredly deserves a high place on our list.
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