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Plantin Press
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==History== [[Christophe Plantin]] (c. 1520β1589) of [[Touraine]] was trained as a bookbinder. He fled from Paris where at least one printer had recently been burned at the stake for [[heresy]], and went to Antwerp. There he bound books, became a citizen, and by 1555 began to print books, at first for distribution by other publishers. The city was already an established center of printing woodcuts, engravings and books. Plantin took on an assistant, [[Jan Moretus]] (Moerentorf), who read Latin and Greek and could write correspondence in several modern languages. He became Plantin's business manager, son-in-law and eventually his successor in the Plantin printing press. For over two hundred years the Plantin press had a monopoly, granted by the [[papacy]], for the printing of liturgical formularies, including in Spain.<ref name=WDL1/> In 1562, suspected of heresy, Plantin fled to France for two years. At an auction of his press, friends bought up his equipment on his behalf. After 1564, when Plantin set up again in a new shop at the sign of De Gulden Passer ("The Golden Compasses"), the printers mark of the House of Plantin. It often appeared in a [[vignette (graphic design)|vignette]] on the title page of books from the press, depicting a compass, angels, and the motto ''Labore et Constancia'' ("By Labor and Constancy") which epitomizes the life of the publisher. From about 1570 Plantin employed the engravers [[Jan Wierix]] and his brother Hieronymus. Plantin's successors continued the print at Antwerp until 1867.
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