The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain 1999
DOI: 10.1017/chol9780521573467.002
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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The reading group of French literature was not limited to the court and upper nobility, but also included the professional and merchant class. 230 Another profitable field was the printing of English law books, for the uniqueness of the English common law meant that the Roman law books printed in great quantities on the Continent were of little use in England. English law depended largely on precedent and statute; it was a field in which the changeover from manuscript to print was to be both rapid and comprehensive.…”
Section: Publishing Categoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The reading group of French literature was not limited to the court and upper nobility, but also included the professional and merchant class. 230 Another profitable field was the printing of English law books, for the uniqueness of the English common law meant that the Roman law books printed in great quantities on the Continent were of little use in England. English law depended largely on precedent and statute; it was a field in which the changeover from manuscript to print was to be both rapid and comprehensive.…”
Section: Publishing Categoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…269 According to Lotte Hellinga and Joseph Burney Trapp, "Caxton aimed to improve the quality of English life by translating into his mother tongue works embodying the lively and more widespread literary ambience he had come to know in Flanders. " 270 Whether or not this assessment is accurate, his interest in financial profit can hardly be denied. 271 To achieve this, he lay utmost importance on the content he offered.…”
Section: William Caxtonmentioning
confidence: 99%
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