William Caxton
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Caxton showing the first specimen of his printing to King Edward IV and Queen Elizabeth at the Almonry, Westminster (painting by Daniel Maclise)
Contents
Biography
Early life
The printer's device of William Caxton, 1478
Caxton was in London by 1438, when the registers of the Mercers' Company record his apprenticeship to Robert Large, a wealthy London mercer, or dealer in luxury goods, who served as Master of the Mercer's Company, and Lord Mayor of London in 1439. After Large died in 1441, Caxton was left a small sum of money (£20). As other apprentices were left larger sums, it would seem he was not a senior apprentice at this time.
Printing and later life
Facsimile of page 1 of Godefrey of Boloyne, printed by Caxton, London, 1481. ---- The Prologue, at the top of page, begins: Here
begynneth the boke Intituled Eracles, and also Godefrey of Boloyne, the
whiche speketh of the Conquest of the holy lande of Jherusalem. (the blank space on this page was for the insertion by hand of an illuminated initial T)
Caxton produced chivalric romances (such as Fierabras), the most important of which was Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, classical works and English and Roman histories. These books appealed to the English upper classes in the late fifteenth century. Caxton was supported by, but not dependent on, members of the nobility and gentry.
Death and memorials
Caxton's precise date of death is uncertain, but estimates from the records of his burial in St. Margaret's, Westminster, tend to show that he died near March of the calendar year 1492. However, George D. Painter makes numerous references to the year 1491 in his book William Caxton: a biography as the year of Caxton's death, since according to the calendar used at the time (24 March being the last day of the year), the year-change hadn't happened yet. Painter writes, "However, Caxton's own output reveals the approximate time of his death, for none of his books can be later than 1491, and even those which are assignable to that year are hardly enough for a full twelve months' production; so a date of death towards autumn of 1491 could be deduced even without confirmation of documentary evidence." (p. 188)In November 1954 a memorial to Caxton was unveiled in Westminster Abbey by J.J. Astor, chairman of the Press Council. The white stone plaque is on the wall next to the door to Poets' Corner. The inscription reads:
- "Near this place William Caxton set up the first printing press in England. This stone was placed here to commemorate the great assistance rendered to the Abbey Appeal Fund by the English speaking press throughout the world."[6]
Caxton and the English language
Caxton printed four-fifths of his works in the English language. He translated a large number of works into English, performing much of the translation and editing work himself. Caxton is credited with printing as many as 108 books, 87 of which were different titles. Caxton also translated 26 of the titles himself. His major guiding principle in translating was an honest desire to provide the most linguistically exact replication of foreign language texts into English, but the hurried publishing schedule and his inadequate skill as a translator often led to wholesale transference of French words into English and numerous misunderstandings.[7]The English language was changing rapidly in Caxton's time and the works he was given to print were in a variety of styles and dialects. Caxton was a technician rather than a writer and he often faced dilemmas concerning language standardization in the books he printed. (He wrote about this subject in the preface to his Eneydos.[8]) His successor Wynkyn de Worde faced similar problems.
Caxton is credited with standardising the English language (that is, homogenising regional dialects) through printing. This facilitated the expansion of English vocabulary, the regularisation of inflection and syntax, and a widening gap between the spoken and the written word. However, Richard Pynson, who started printing in London in 1491 or 1492, and who favoured Chancery Standard, was a more accomplished stylist and consequently pushed the English language further toward standardisation.[9]
It is asserted that the spelling of "ghost" with the silent letter h was adopted by Caxton due to the influence of Flemish spelling habits.[10]
References
- "100 great British heroes". BBC News. Retrieved 15 February 2014
- Joan Thirsk, ed. (2007). Hadlow, Life, Land & People in a Wealden Parish 1460 ~ 1600. Kent Archaeological Society. pp. 107–109. ISBN 978-0-906746-70-7.
- STC 2nd ed.; item 4920
- Duff 1907
- Blake, N. F. (1990). William Caxton and English literary culture. London: Hambledon. p. 298. ISBN 9781852850517.
- http://www.westminster-abbey.org/our-history/people/william-caxton
- James A. Knapp, "Translating for Print: Continuity and Change in Caxton's Mirrour of the World," in: Translation, Transformation, and Transubstantiation, ed. Carol Poster and Richard Utz (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1998), pp. 65–90.
- Caxton's Chaucer – Caxton's English
- Baddeley, Susan; Voeste, Anja (2012). Orthographies in early modern Europe. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. p. 148. ISBN 9783110288179.
- Simon Garfield, Just My Type: A Book About Fonts (New York: Gotham Books, 2011), pp. 82. ISBN 978-1-59240-652-4
Further reading
- N. F. Blake, "Caxton, William (1415~24–1492)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 1 July 2006
- N. F. Blake. Caxton: England's First Publisher (1976)
- N. F. Blake. Caxton and His World (1969)
- Loades, David, ed. Reader's Guide to British History (2003) 1: 236-37; historiography
- The English Charlemagne Romances, Parts III and IV, The Lyf of the Noble and Crysten Prynce Charles the Grete, Translated from the French By William Caxton And Printed By Him 1485.
- The Introduction of Printing into England and the Early Work of the Press: The First Book printed in English (1907), from The Cambridge History of English and American Literature, Vol II
- Duff, Gordon. The Introduction of Printing into England and the Early Work of the Press. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature. vol II ch XIII.
- Caxton's Views on the English Language.
- Caxton's Canterbury Tales: The British Library Copies Images and full transcripts of the whole of Caxton's two editions of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales; a fuller version of this is published on CD-ROM by Scholarly Digital Editions
- Game and Playe of the Chesse A Verbatim Reprint of the First Edition, 1474
- Lienhard, John H. (2006): How Invention Begins: Echoes of Old Voices in the Rise of New Machines. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-530599-X pp. 165–168.
- Painter, George D. (1976): William Caxton – Biography. Chatto & Windus.
- Caxton, William, The Game and Playe of the Chesse. Ed. by Jenny Adams. (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2009) (TEAMS Middle English Texts Series).
External links
| Wikiquote has quotations related to: William Caxton |
| Wikisource has original works written by or about: William Caxton |
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Caxton. |
- Works by William Caxton at Project Gutenberg
- Images from Myrrour of the Worlde from the State Library of Victoria
- Caxton's apprenticeship to Robert Large
- A book of the chesse moralysed From the Collections at the Library of Congress
- AL Ingratitude vtterly settying apart, we owe to calle to our myndes the manyfolde gyftes of grace ... From the Collections at the Library of Congress
- Cordiale quattuor novissimorum. From the Collections at the Library of Congress
- Here begynneth the prohemye vpon the reducynge, both out of latyn as of frensshe in to our englyssh tongue of the polytyque book named Tullius de senectute. From the Collections at the Library of Congress
- Here begynneth the table of the rubrices of this presente volume named the Mirrour of the World or thymage of the same. From the Collections at the Library of Congress
- Livre des faits d'armes et de chevalerie From the Collections at the Library of Congress
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