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A HISTORY OF WOOD-ENGRAVING.

edge Fig. 15.—The Creation. From the "Fascilus Temporum." Venice, 1484. and appreciation of art; it was to receive rather than bestow benefits; it was to be made a fine art before it could perform any real service. The printers, however, proved the utility of their art, and were soon busily employed in all the Italian cities in reproducing the precious manuscripts with which Italy was stored; and from the first they called wood-engraving to their aid. It is true that the earliest Italian woodcuts—which were, however, Germanic in design and execution—were as rude as those of the Northern workshops. They appeared for the first time in an edition of Cardinal Turrecremata's Meditations, published at Rome by Ulric Hahn, in 1467. In Venice, although withoutFig. 16.—Leviathan. From the "Ortus Sanitatus." Venice, 1511. much doubt the art had been practised there by the makers of cards and prints long before, woodcuts were first introduced by the German printers. The accompanying cuts are fair examples of their work (Figs. 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21), and at the same time interesting reflections of