Johannes Gutenberg's vision was to revolutionize the way information was shared and knowledge was disseminated. He sought to create a method that would make books affordable and accessible to the common man. His invention of the printing press, using movable type, democratized knowledge and laid the foundation for the spread of learning to the masses.
Johannes Gutenberg was born around 1400 in Mainz, Germany. His full name was Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg. His father was a wealthy merchant and his mother came from a family involved in the goldsmith trade. Gutenberg’s father likely had connections with the ecclesiastical mint, and young Gutenberg grew up knowing the trade of goldsmithing. This background was helpful when he started experimenting with printing in Strasbourg, circa 1436. Gutenberg was able to make the innovative leap to mechanize bookmaking. Prior to Gutenberg’s invention, books were copied by hand or printed from engraved wooden blocks—processes that could take months or years to complete. Gutenberg’s press could churn out pages at a rate of about 25 per hour, and his mechanized process spread rapidly throughout Europe, leading to a sharp increase in the number of books and written works being produced. Gutenberg’s printing press had profound impacts on universities, churches, the spread of science and the structure of political structures. Despite his great contribution to the world, Gutenberg spent the last years of his life in poor and blind. He died in 1468 and was buried in the Franciscan church at Mainz, his contributions largely unrecognized.
Johannes Gutenberg never received any awards or recognitions during his lifetime. However, his invention has been hailed as one of the most important in human history. In 1997, Time-Life magazine picked Gutenberg's invention of the movable type printing press as the most important event of the second millennium. In 1999, the A&E Network ranked Gutenberg as the most influential person of the second millennium on their 'Biographies of the Millennium' countdown. In 1998, the United States Postal Service issued a five dollar postage stamp commemorating Gutenberg's invention. Today, numerous awards in the field of printing, including the esteemed Gutenberg Award, are named after him.
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