About This Book
The narrative traces the development of Cambridge printing from its sixteenth‑century origins through successive eras to the early twentieth century, detailing the careers of individual university printers, their disputes with London stationers, and the institutional changes that shaped scholarly publishing. It profiles key figures and the emergence of press syndicates, surveys technical and commercial practices across the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries, and describes adaptations in premises, management, and output as publishing expanded. The study draws on university registry documents, accounts, and prior bibliographical work, and concludes with appendices listing university printers and a catalogue of early Cambridge imprints.
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