Trivia: Where printing began

The printing press was invented in Germany by the goldsmith and printer Johannes Gutenberg in 1447. Printing
methods based on Gutenberg’s printing press spread rapidly throughout
first Europe and then the rest of the world, replacing most block
printing and making it the sole progenitor of modern movable type
printing.

The printing
press was invented in Germany by the goldsmith and printer Johannes
Gutenberg in 1447. Printing methods based on Gutenberg’s printing press
spread rapidly throughout first Europe and then the rest of the world,
replacing most block printing and making it the sole progenitor of
modern movable type printing. Printing’s effect on civilization has
often been discussed in terms of the effect of the “printing press” on
civilization—a rhetorical device, which alludes to the pivotal role of
the printing press in the global spread of printing.

Movable type printing,
which allowed individual characters to be arranged to form words, is a
separate invention from the printing press. In what is regarded as an
independent invention, movable type printing as we know it today was
invented in Germany by Gutenberg in the 1440s, although the first known
invention was in China by Bi Sheng between 1041 and 1048.

Adapted from Wikipedia

Related posts:

  1. Dress up your fleet: Vehicle Signage
  2. What do your signs say?
  3. Print Management with a difference