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Printer's devil

A printer's devil was a young apprentice in a printing establishment who performed a number of tasks, such as mixing tubs of ink and fetching type. Notable writers including Benjamin Franklin, Walt Whitman, Ambrose Bierce, Bret Harte, and Mark Twain served as printer's devils in their youth.

Printing press, circa 1568

Origins Edit

The term "printer's devil" has been ascribed to the apprentices' hands and skin getting stained black with ink when removing sheets of paper from the tympan.[1] In 1683, English printer Joseph Moxon wrote that "devil" was a humorous term for boys who were covered in ink: "whence the Workmen do Jocosely call them Devils; and sometimes Spirits, and sometimes Flies."[2][3] Once cast metal type was used, worn, or broken, it was thrown into a "hellbox", after which it was the printer's devil's job to either put it back in the job case, or take it to the furnace to be melted down and recast.[4]

Many explanations have been given for the religious or supernatural connotations of the term.[5] From the Middle Ages onward, particularly in Catholic countries, technological inventions such as the printing press were often regarded with suspicion, and associated with Satan and the "Dark Arts".[6][7] Some have suggested that the term was coined as an epithet by scribes who feared that the printing press would make the hand-copying of manuscripts obsolete.[8] Several theories of the term's origins are included below.

Titivillus Edit

One popular theory is linked to the fanciful belief among printers that a special demon, Titivillus (also referred to as "the original printer's devil"[9]), haunted every print shop, performing mischief such as inverting type, misspelling words, and removing entire lines of completed type.[citation needed] Titivillus was said to execute his pranks by influencing the young apprentices – or "printer's devils" – as they set up type, or by causing errors to occur during the actual casting of metal type.[10] High-profile printing errors "blamed" on Titivillus included the omission of the word not in the 1631 Authorised Version of the Bible, which resulted in Exodus 20:14 appearing as "Thou shalt commit adultery."[10] Often depicted as a creature with claw-like feet and horns on his head, the origins of the Titivillus legend date back to the Middle Ages, when he was said to collect "fragments of words" that were dropped or misspoken by the clergy or laiety in a sack to deliver to Satan daily, and later, to record poorly recited prayers and gossip overheard in church with a pen on parchment, for use on Judgement Day.[10][11] Over the centuries, Titivillus was also blamed for causing monks to make mistakes while copying manuscripts by hand; meddling with block and plate printing; and eventually, playing pranks with movable type.[10]

Johann Fust Edit

Regarding the origins of the term "devil" to refer to "the errand boy or youngest apprentice in a printing office", Pasko's American Dictionary of Printing and Bookmaking (1894) states: "It is said that it is derived from the belief that John Fust was In league with the devil, and the urchin covered with ink certainly made a very good representation of his Satanic majesty."[2] Johann Fust (c.1400–1466), also known as Faust, loaned money to Johannes Gutenberg to perfect his printing process using movable type, and sued Gutenberg for repayment, with interest, in 1455.[12] Fust, together with Gutenberg's son-in-law Peter Schoeffer, then set up their own printing business and published the Mainz Psalter, a Bible which introduced colour printing, in 1457.[12] Over the centuries, biographical accounts of Fust, the printer, have often become confused or intertwined with the legend of Johann Georg Faust (c.1480–1540), the alchemist and necromancer who became the subject of numerous "Faust books" published in Germany starting in 1587, which in turn inspired Christopher Marlowe's work, Doctor Faustus (c.1591–1593).[13] The legendary Faustus is said to have sold his soul to the demon Mephistopheles, in exchange for a book or encyclopedia of magical spells.[13] In 1570, even before publication of the first Faustbuch, English church historian John Foxe credited "a Germaine...named Joan. Faustus, a goldesmith" for the invention of the printing press, in the second edition of Actes and Monuments, although he had previously attributed its invention to "Jhon Guttenbergh".[13] Literary scholar Sarah Wall-Rendell argues that the association of the Doctor Faustus legend with books and printing technology reflected ongoing ambivalence among Reformation writers about the impact that books would have on an increasingly literate populace.[13]

Aldus Manutius Edit

Yet another possible origin is ascribed to Aldus Manutius, a well-known Venetian printer of the Renaissance and founder of the Aldine Press, who was denounced by detractors for practicing the black arts (early printing was long associated with devilry).[citation needed] The assistant to Manutius was a young boy of African descent who was accused of being the embodiment of Satan and dubbed the printer's devil.[citation needed]

William Caxton Edit

English tradition links the origin of printer's devil to the assistant of the first English printer and book publisher, William Caxton.[citation needed] Caxton's assistant was named "Deville", which evolved to "devil" over time, as that name was used to describe other printers' apprentices.[citation needed]

Malayalam root Edit

While the term "printer's devil" in India may stem from the European legend of Titivillus, another theory is that it might stem from the Malayalam term for "printing error" (achadi pisaku), which is only one change of a Malayalam letter away from "printing devil" (achadi pisachu).[14]

Famous devils Edit

A number of notable men served as printer's devils in their youth, including Ambrose Bierce, William Dean Howells, James Printer, Benjamin Franklin, Raymond C. Hoiles, Samuel Fuller, Thomas Jefferson, Walt Whitman, Mark Twain, Joel Chandler Harris, Warren Harding, Harry Burleigh, Lawrence Tibbett, John Kellogg, Lyndon Johnson, Hoodoo Brown, James Hogg, Geoff Lloyd, Harry Pace, Joseph Lyons, Albert Parsons and Lázaro Cárdenas. Cole Younger worked as a printer's devils on a prison newspaper while he was incarcerated.[15]

Usage Edit

United States Edit

In North America during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, young boys were indentured to printers by their parents, or in the case of orphans, by the municipal or church authorities.[16] More than apprentices in other trades, printer's devils were boys who had expressed an interest in printing.[16] By 1894, American Dictionary of Printing and Bookmaking noted that with the decline of the apprenticeship system in the United States, the term "printer's devil" was going out of use.[2]

India Edit

The printer's devil is also known in other languages such as Bengali, where it is called Chhapakhanar Bhoot.[14]

References Edit

  1. ^ The Oxford Companion to the Book. Oxford University Press. 2010. ISBN 9780198606536.
  2. ^ a b c Pasko, Wesley Washington (1894). American Dictionary of Printing and Bookmaking. New York: H. Lockwood & Co. p. 136.
  3. ^ Moxon, Joseph (1683). Mechanick Exercises: Or, the Doctrine of Handiworks, Applied to the Art of Printing.
  4. ^ Cisco, Michael (2013). Glossator: Practice and Theory of the Commentary. Vol. 8. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. p. 304. ISBN 9781493673933.
  5. ^ Davis, Robin (2010). "Chapels, Devils, Monks, & Friars: The Irreverent Language of Printing History". Essays by Robin Camille Davis. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
  6. ^ Rudwin, Maximilian (1931). The Devil in Legend and Literature. Open Court Publishing Company. pp. 249–250.
  7. ^ Perry, Timothy P. J. (July 2015). "Early Depictions of the Printing Press". Printing History (18): 27–53.
  8. ^ Romeo, Nick (6 July 2015). "This Geek Will Put Reporters Out of Business". Daily Beast. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  9. ^ Pratchett, Terry (2004). Perry, Sheila M. (ed.). Once More with Footnotes: Terry Pratchett. Framingham, Massachusetts: NESFA Press. p. 286. ISBN 9781886778573.
  10. ^ a b c d Presley, Paula L. (1998). "The Revenge of Titivillus". Books Have Their Own Destiny: Essays in Honor of Robert V. Schnucker. Kirksville, Missouri: Thomas Jefferson University Press. pp. 112, 114–117. ISBN 0-940474-59-X.
  11. ^ Ellison, Suzanne (17 January 2015). "My old nemesis Titivillus". Lost Art Press. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  12. ^ a b "Johann Fust". Encyclopedia Britannica. 26 October 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
  13. ^ a b c d Wall-Randell, Sarah (Spring 2008). ""Doctor Faustus" and the Printer's Devil". SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900. 48 (2): 259–260. doi:10.1353/sel.0.0001. JSTOR 40071334. S2CID 149465440.
  14. ^ a b Bhairav, J. Furcifer; Khanna, Rakesh (2020). Ghosts, Monsters, and Demons of India. Blaft Publications Pvt. Ltd. pp. 320–321. ISBN 9789380636474.
  15. ^ Baird, Russell N (1967). The Penal Press. Northwestern University Press. p. 28.
  16. ^ a b Lause, Mark A. (1991). Some Degree of Power: From hired hand to union craftsman in the preindustrial American printing trades, 1778–1815. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. p. 16. ISBN 9781557281852.

Other sources Edit

  • Frank Granger (1997). . Retrieved December 25, 2005.
  • Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. (year unlisted). Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama. Retrieved December 25, 2005.
  • Pubs and Breweries of the Midlands: Past and Present (year unlisted) . Retrieved December 25, 2005.

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This article is about the profession For the Twilight Zone episode see Printer s Devil For the album see Printer s Devil album This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article September 2022 A printer s devil was a young apprentice in a printing establishment who performed a number of tasks such as mixing tubs of ink and fetching type Notable writers including Benjamin Franklin Walt Whitman Ambrose Bierce Bret Harte and Mark Twain served as printer s devils in their youth Printing press circa 1568 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Titivillus 1 2 Johann Fust 1 3 Aldus Manutius 1 4 William Caxton 1 5 Malayalam root 2 Famous devils 3 Usage 3 1 United States 3 2 India 4 References 4 1 Other sourcesOrigins EditThe term printer s devil has been ascribed to the apprentices hands and skin getting stained black with ink when removing sheets of paper from the tympan 1 In 1683 English printer Joseph Moxon wrote that devil was a humorous term for boys who were covered in ink whence the Workmen do Jocosely call them Devils and sometimes Spirits and sometimes Flies 2 3 Once cast metal type was used worn or broken it was thrown into a hellbox after which it was the printer s devil s job to either put it back in the job case or take it to the furnace to be melted down and recast 4 Many explanations have been given for the religious or supernatural connotations of the term 5 From the Middle Ages onward particularly in Catholic countries technological inventions such as the printing press were often regarded with suspicion and associated with Satan and the Dark Arts 6 7 Some have suggested that the term was coined as an epithet by scribes who feared that the printing press would make the hand copying of manuscripts obsolete 8 Several theories of the term s origins are included below Titivillus Edit One popular theory is linked to the fanciful belief among printers that a special demon Titivillus also referred to as the original printer s devil 9 haunted every print shop performing mischief such as inverting type misspelling words and removing entire lines of completed type citation needed Titivillus was said to execute his pranks by influencing the young apprentices or printer s devils as they set up type or by causing errors to occur during the actual casting of metal type 10 High profile printing errors blamed on Titivillus included the omission of the word not in the 1631 Authorised Version of the Bible which resulted in Exodus 20 14 appearing as Thou shalt commit adultery 10 Often depicted as a creature with claw like feet and horns on his head the origins of the Titivillus legend date back to the Middle Ages when he was said to collect fragments of words that were dropped or misspoken by the clergy or laiety in a sack to deliver to Satan daily and later to record poorly recited prayers and gossip overheard in church with a pen on parchment for use on Judgement Day 10 11 Over the centuries Titivillus was also blamed for causing monks to make mistakes while copying manuscripts by hand meddling with block and plate printing and eventually playing pranks with movable type 10 Johann Fust Edit Regarding the origins of the term devil to refer to the errand boy or youngest apprentice in a printing office Pasko s American Dictionary of Printing and Bookmaking 1894 states It is said that it is derived from the belief that John Fust was In league with the devil and the urchin covered with ink certainly made a very good representation of his Satanic majesty 2 Johann Fust c 1400 1466 also known as Faust loaned money to Johannes Gutenberg to perfect his printing process using movable type and sued Gutenberg for repayment with interest in 1455 12 Fust together with Gutenberg s son in law Peter Schoeffer then set up their own printing business and published the Mainz Psalter a Bible which introduced colour printing in 1457 12 Over the centuries biographical accounts of Fust the printer have often become confused or intertwined with the legend of Johann Georg Faust c 1480 1540 the alchemist and necromancer who became the subject of numerous Faust books published in Germany starting in 1587 which in turn inspired Christopher Marlowe s work Doctor Faustus c 1591 1593 13 The legendary Faustus is said to have sold his soul to the demon Mephistopheles in exchange for a book or encyclopedia of magical spells 13 In 1570 even before publication of the first Faustbuch English church historian John Foxe credited a Germaine named Joan Faustus a goldesmith for the invention of the printing press in the second edition of Actes and Monuments although he had previously attributed its invention to Jhon Guttenbergh 13 Literary scholar Sarah Wall Rendell argues that the association of the Doctor Faustus legend with books and printing technology reflected ongoing ambivalence among Reformation writers about the impact that books would have on an increasingly literate populace 13 Aldus Manutius Edit Yet another possible origin is ascribed to Aldus Manutius a well known Venetian printer of the Renaissance and founder of the Aldine Press who was denounced by detractors for practicing the black arts early printing was long associated with devilry citation needed The assistant to Manutius was a young boy of African descent who was accused of being the embodiment of Satan and dubbed the printer s devil citation needed William Caxton Edit English tradition links the origin of printer s devil to the assistant of the first English printer and book publisher William Caxton citation needed Caxton s assistant was named Deville which evolved to devil over time as that name was used to describe other printers apprentices citation needed Malayalam root Edit While the term printer s devil in India may stem from the European legend of Titivillus another theory is that it might stem from the Malayalam term for printing error achadi pisaku which is only one change of a Malayalam letter away from printing devil achadi pisachu 14 Famous devils EditA number of notable men served as printer s devils in their youth including Ambrose Bierce William Dean Howells James Printer Benjamin Franklin Raymond C Hoiles Samuel Fuller Thomas Jefferson Walt Whitman Mark Twain Joel Chandler Harris Warren Harding Harry Burleigh Lawrence Tibbett John Kellogg Lyndon Johnson Hoodoo Brown James Hogg Geoff Lloyd Harry Pace Joseph Lyons Albert Parsons and Lazaro Cardenas Cole Younger worked as a printer s devils on a prison newspaper while he was incarcerated 15 Usage EditUnited States Edit In North America during the late 18th and early 19th centuries young boys were indentured to printers by their parents or in the case of orphans by the municipal or church authorities 16 More than apprentices in other trades printer s devils were boys who had expressed an interest in printing 16 By 1894 American Dictionary of Printing and Bookmaking noted that with the decline of the apprenticeship system in the United States the term printer s devil was going out of use 2 India Edit The printer s devil is also known in other languages such as Bengali where it is called Chhapakhanar Bhoot 14 References Edit The Oxford Companion to the Book Oxford University Press 2010 ISBN 9780198606536 a b c Pasko Wesley Washington 1894 American Dictionary of Printing and Bookmaking New York H Lockwood amp Co p 136 Moxon Joseph 1683 Mechanick Exercises Or the Doctrine of Handiworks Applied to the Art of Printing Cisco Michael 2013 Glossator Practice and Theory of the Commentary Vol 8 CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 304 ISBN 9781493673933 Davis Robin 2010 Chapels Devils Monks amp Friars The Irreverent Language of Printing History Essays by Robin Camille Davis Retrieved 14 May 2022 Rudwin Maximilian 1931 The Devil in Legend and Literature Open Court Publishing Company pp 249 250 Perry Timothy P J July 2015 Early Depictions of the Printing Press Printing History 18 27 53 Romeo Nick 6 July 2015 This Geek Will Put Reporters Out of Business Daily Beast Retrieved 13 May 2022 Pratchett Terry 2004 Perry Sheila M ed Once More with Footnotes Terry Pratchett Framingham Massachusetts NESFA Press p 286 ISBN 9781886778573 a b c d Presley Paula L 1998 The Revenge of Titivillus Books Have Their Own Destiny Essays in Honor of Robert V Schnucker Kirksville Missouri Thomas Jefferson University Press pp 112 114 117 ISBN 0 940474 59 X Ellison Suzanne 17 January 2015 My old nemesis Titivillus Lost Art Press Retrieved 13 May 2022 a b Johann Fust Encyclopedia Britannica 26 October 2021 Retrieved 15 May 2022 a b c d Wall Randell Sarah Spring 2008 Doctor Faustus and the Printer s Devil SEL Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 48 2 259 260 doi 10 1353 sel 0 0001 JSTOR 40071334 S2CID 149465440 a b Bhairav J Furcifer Khanna Rakesh 2020 Ghosts Monsters and Demons of India Blaft Publications Pvt Ltd pp 320 321 ISBN 9789380636474 Baird Russell N 1967 The Penal Press Northwestern University Press p 28 a b Lause Mark A 1991 Some Degree of Power From hired hand to union craftsman in the preindustrial American printing trades 1778 1815 Fayetteville University of Arkansas Press p 16 ISBN 9781557281852 Other sources Edit Frank Granger 1997 The Printer s Devil Retrieved December 25 2005 Rev E Cobham Brewer LL D year unlisted Character Sketches of Romance Fiction and the Drama Retrieved December 25 2005 Pubs and Breweries of the Midlands Past and Present year unlisted The Printer s Devil Retrieved December 25 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Printer 27s devil amp oldid 1177953340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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