Unbound Report with References
Instructions: Format the
information below in and Unbound Report with References.
Put your full name at the end of the document and print it. Save the file as
Gutenberg Report.doc to your personal student folder.
title:
Johannes Gutenberg
body copy:
Johannes Gutenberg was a German goldsmith and inventor
credited with inventing movable type printing in
subtitle/side
heading:
Books were a privilege
body copy:
In
subtitle/side heading:
Movable type brought books to the masses
body copy:
The demand for written information was growing. A German inventor and metalworker named Johannes Gutenberg recognized this demand and saw a way to make money. In the 1430s, Gutenberg began trying new ways of printing. He combined parts of presses used to make wine and paper to build a printing press. Gutenberg then used ideas first developed by the Chinese to come up with a new way of printing using movable type. Gutenberg put his metalworking skills to use in forming metal numbers and letters. He then arranged these numbers and letters to form words and sentences. Next, he placed them in rows on the printing press. Gutenberg could move the numbers and letters around as needed. Movable type allowed Gutenberg to print many books faster than ever before.
subtitle/side
heading:
The Gutenberg Bible
body copy:
The first major text printed by Gutenberg was a 1,200-page
Bible that became known as the Gutenberg Bible. About 300 copies of the
Gutenberg Bible were printed. Each copy cost about three years' wages for an
average German worker. Before Gutenberg had a chance to make his fortune from
the Gutenberg Bible, his partner sued him. Johann Fust had lent Gutenberg the money he needed to begin
printing his Bible, but Fust wanted the money back
quickly. When Fust asked Gutenberg to pay back the
loan and he was not able to pay, Fust sued him.
Gutenberg lost the lawsuit and had to give up his printing equipment to pay
back what he owed to Fust. The lawsuit left Gutenberg
without money. Some historians believe he continued to print on borrowed
equipment. Toward the end of his life, Gutenberg lived off the kindness of the
archbishop of
subtitle/side
heading:
More people had greater access to information. Does that sound familiar?
body copy:
Gutenberg's printing press and movable type changed
communication forever. By the end of the 1400s, books had become available to
more people. New ideas in science, religion, and art spread quickly across
references:
Simmons, S. E. (1998). The Life of Gutenberg. Inventions Monthly, 11, 17-21.
Molina, E. J. (1971). Gutenberg, A Man of His Words. Summer Hill Publishing, New York,
128-129.