Gutenberg
Johannes Gutenberg was initially a goldsmith and a businessman from Mainz, Germany (Bellis). In 1436, Gutenberg solicited investments for an invention that involved replaceable (movable or modular) letters for the purposes of printing. Gutenberg noticed the need for a more efficient type of typing, which did not involve producing a one-off woodcut or similar stamping device, or involving painstaking and time consuming calligraphy. Using Gutenberg's new invention, it was possible to have an actual printing press that could be used again and again to publish multiple copies of diverse texts. Gutenberg certainly did not invent the first method of printing. Printing has been around for thousands of years, and likely originated with the Chinese. Gutenberg did revolutionize the method, media, and procedure of printing. Gutenberg's invention is heralded more for its impact on society and the evolution of ideas, than for its scientific or innovative merits.
The exact date of Gutenberg's birth is not known; it was "some time in the last decade of the fourteenth century, presumably between 1394 and 1399," and is generally assumed to be 1400 (Wallau). Likewise, the exact date of Johannes Gutenberg's death is generally stipulated as 1468 but it may have been 1467 (Wallau). If the printing press had already been invented, it is likely the birth and death dates would have been more meticulously recorded in church records. Vander Hook and Romano note that Johannes was most likely born in the month of June.
Johannes was born to Friele (Friedrich) Gansfleisch and Else Wyrich. The surname Gutenberg was derived from the name of the house in which he was born: "Hof zum Gutenberg," which was itself the ancestral house "zu Laden, zu Gutenberg," of Johannes' father's family (Wallau). Johannes' father's family traced their heritage in the town of Mainz back to the thirteenth century. The Gansfleisch were a prominent patrician family (Wallau). By the fifteenth century, the Gansfleisch...
Charles Van Doren has concluded that the Copernican Revolution is actually the Galilean Revolution because of the scale of change introduced by Galileo's work. The technological innovation of the Renaissance era started with the invention of the printing press (the Renaissance). Even though the printing press, a mechanical device for printing multiple copies of a text on sheets of paper, was first invented in China, it was reinvented in the
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