TOEFL Reading Practice Test #44
TOEFL Reading Practice Test #44 - Gutenberg and the Rise of Printing in Europe
Nothing separated the medieval world in Europe more sharply from the Early Modern period than the advent of printing with movable type. This German invention was the result of a long and intricate evolution. Ancient civilizations primarily used papyrus to record writing. Between 200 B.C. and A.D. 300, this material was supplemented by vellum—calfskin that had been treated and polished with pumice stone. In late Roman times, parchment, made from similarly smoothed sheep or goat skin, became widespread. During the early Middle Ages, Europe adopted an industrial process from China that transformed fibrous material into pulp, which was then spread into sheets and called cloth parchment. By around 1150, the Spanish had developed the first paper mill, producing affordable paper—a term derived from “papyrus”—that quickly became the standard medium. One of the most important developments of the later Middle Ages was the increasing availability of cheap paper. Even in technologically lagging England, a single sheet, equivalent to eight octavo pages, cost only a penny by the fifteenth century.
Between 1446 and 1448, two German goldsmiths, Johannes Gutenberg and Johann Fust, capitalized on the availability of cheap paper to make a critical leap in how texts were reproduced. The older method involved printing from carved wooden blocks; Gutenberg and Fust introduced movable metal type for the letterpress. This innovation had three main advantages: it could be reused until worn out, it was easily recast from a mold, and it created consistent lettering. Gutenberg began printing his Bible—the first book made with movable type—in 1450 and completed it in 1455. Despite the complexity of the task, which required innovations in ink, paper handling, and even adapting a winemaker’s screw press for printing, the final product was anything but primitive. Its clarity and quality still impress modern viewers.
Printing was a technical revolution that gained momentum quickly. Fifteenth-century Europe, particularly Germany and Italy, was already home to a growing network of skilled workshops, or intermediate technology. These workshops quickly adapted to printing, making it the first true industry in Europe. The boom was fueled by two key forces: demand for affordable classical texts and the push to translate the Latin Bible into vernacular languages. Reference books also became popular. Printing presses spread across German cities, and by 1470, Nuremberg had become a hub of the international book trade, with 24 presses producing books distributed at fairs across western and central Europe. Meanwhile, monastic scriptoria—where monks hand-copied texts—continued to operate, primarily creating luxury books that printing could not yet replicate. The new technology focused on producing books for wide, low-cost distribution.
Though there was no direct competition between manuscript and printed books, national rivalries did emerge. Italy, eager to catch up with Germany, brought in two leading German printers to set up presses in one of its premier scriptoria. German printers faced a disadvantage in the form of their complex typeface, mockingly called “Gothic” by the Italians and later known as black letter. Outside Germany, this typeface was unpopular. The Italians, by contrast, developed a clear and elegant typeface known as roman, which became the preferred style of the future. The next major development, italic type, mimicked handwriting and had a distinctly Italian character.
While the Germans pioneered movable type, the Italians reasserted influence through their superior design and readability. By 1500, although 60 German cities had printing houses, Venice alone boasted 150 presses. Nonetheless, many regions and governments sought their own presses, making printing an international business. The results were dramatic. Before the printing revolution, the largest European libraries contained at most 600 books, and the continent as a whole held fewer than 100,000. By 1500, just 45 years after Gutenberg’s Bible, Europe had 9 million printed books in circulation.
TOEFL Reading Practice Test #44 - Gutenberg and the Rise of Printing in Europe
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