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the spread of printing.
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publishers, and their competitors in Italy complained with reason of their piratical editions. They made liberal use of engravings on wood and copper-plate illustrations. They were also the first printers to sell cheap books in showy bindings.


IN SPAIN AND PORTUGAL.


Place. Printer. Date. Place. Printer. Date.
Barcelona N. Spindeler 1473 or 1478 Murcia Juan de Roca 1487
Valencia Cordova and Palomar 1474 Tarragona John Rosembach 1488
Saragossa Matthew Flandrus 1475 Lerida 1488
Seville A. Martinez, et al 1476 San Cucufute des Valles 1489
Segorbe 1479 Lisbon R. Samuel Zorba 1489
Tolosa Henry Mayer 1480 Pampeluna 1489
Burgos De Basilea 1485 Zamora 1490
Salamanca 1485 Leiria Abraham Dortas 1492
Soria Eliezar ben Alanta 1485 Grenada Meynard Ungut 1496
Xerica 1485 Madrid 1499
Toledo John Vasquez 1486 Montserrat John Luchner 1499


IN GREAT BRITAIN.


The first book printed in English, the Recuyell of the Historyes of Troye, a stout folio of 351 leaves, does not contain the date of printing, nor the name and place of the printer, but it appears from the introduction that it was translated from the French by William Caxton between the years 1469 and 1471. When and where it was printed is a vexed question.[1]

The monogram which was exhibited by Caxton in his later books——is interpreted by Madden as William Caxton, 1474, Sancta Colonia. It is an indication that a notable event in his life was represented by the year 1474 and the city of Cologne, and it seems to authorize the conjecture that at this time and place he published his first book. In 1475, Caxton printed, in the office of Mansion at

  1. Blades thinks that it was printed at Bruges by Colard Mansion and William Caxton, about 1472. Madden thinks it was printed at the monastery of Weidenbach by Mansion and Caxton, who went there about 1474 to learn practical typography. Other bibliographers say that it was printed by Zell at Cologne. The types of this Recuyell are thoroughly French, and are like the larger types used by Mansion. Bernard thinks that these types were made and first used at Cologne, by the order of the Duke of Burgundy for the French edition of the same work.