
See the Oldest Printed Advertisement in English: An Ad for a …
Apr 11, 2019 · In the English language, it goes back to at least to the mid-fifteenth century — specifically, to the year 1476, when Britain’s first printer William Caxton produced not just a …
The Oldest Surviving Printed Advertisement in English …
Jan 24, 2019 · It promotes Caxton’s Sarum Pie, or the Ordinale ad usum Sarum, a handbook for priests. Only a handful pages of this text survive today, including one recently rediscovered in …
Caxton Prints the First Book Advertisement in the English Language
The small broadside, which offered for sale Caxton’s edition of the Sarum Ordinal or Pye, the priest’s manual of variations in the Office during the ecclesiastical year, was intended to be …
The Sarum Missal - Anglican
The Sarum Missal The Sarum Rite was the liturgical form used in most of the English Church prior to the introduction of the first Book of Common Prayer in 1549. Like most of the liturgies of the …
Finding one of the oldest examples of printing in Britain: the story …
Nov 17, 2017 · Advertisement for Sarum Pie [‘Ordinale ad usum Sarum’] ([Westminster: William Caxton, c.1476-7]) ©Bodleian Libraries A perilous journey What happened between the time …
Advertisement for Sarum Pie- Caxton and Beyond
Format: Broadside 4°. Ideal collation: Printed on one side only.
Medieval Spam: The Oldest Advertisements for Books
Dec 5, 2014 · The small strip of paper seen in Fig. 4 is an advertisement that promoted William Caxton’s Sarum Pie (‘Ordinale ad usum Sarum’), a religious book he printed in his …
Incunabula – medievalbooks
Jan 24, 2019 · It promotes Caxton’s Sarum Pie, or the Ordinale ad usum Sarum, a handbook for priests. Only a handful pages of this text survive today , including one recently rediscovered in …
unknown leaf from his Ordinale seu Pica ad usum Sarum (1476-77), also known as the Sarum Pie, at the University of Reading Special Collections Service is therefore noteworthy, …
2019 - Page 85 of 117 - Open Culture archive | Open Culture
Apr 11, 2019 · In the English language, it goes back to at least to the mid-fifteenth century — specifically, to the year 1476, when Britain’s first printer William Caxton produced not just a …