A scene of paper management and usages: an European early modern tax office was full of papers. Fresh paper sheets, old paper sheets, printed papers, handwritten papers, waste papers, etc. Let's have a deeper look, #paperhistory. A next thread, 1/x
Managing information became a paper business in Early Modern Europe. The expanding administration practices made secretaries, lawyer's offices, tax offices, etc. And they ran on paper, had to store paper, and deal with paper. It was a paper world.
Let's focus on the details. This painted mocking scene is rich of details for #bookhistory and #paperhistory. So many paper usages imagined here. 3/x
Bags, bags, bags. Bags full of documents were literally bags full of paper. These bags could be seen hanging in administration buildings, and they were a mobile storage system. And apparently, some were lying on the floor, some were bigger than others, etc.
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Welcome to the bag system. Your favorite paper storing solution.
Writing and accounting was a necessity in administration. All these records are handwritten documents, with ink, inkpot and quill. Imagine yourself as a paper worker. Working with a quill quietly ignoring the surrounding everyday's noise...
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Unfinished (paper) business. Welcome to your administration experience full of waiting papers in chaotic orders: comments, petitions, proofs, letters of all kinds, testimonies, you name it. If it was relevant for a tax office, it was on paper. All of it. A paper madness.
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Waste paper? Yes, when drafts became useless, letters outdated, papers turned vastly and steadily into used papers. And these leftovers formed and fueled the material production of new papers the paper trdae was waiting for. Early modern Europe was an age of paper recycling. 8/x
Your nowadays paperless office was around 1600 in Europe a paperfull workplace. The more important you were, the more paper sheets, bundles, letters, etc. were lying right in front of you. Want to make a paper career? Train suspicious reading holding many papers! 9/x
Some extra details of importance: firstly, a used quill on the floor, this indicates the hectic workflow of the tax office. When writers were busy, (goose) quills fell to the floor. This detail is not by chance.
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A paper sheet glued to a (broken?) window glass. What is this about? The layout indicates: this is not a broadsheet or a print. It is a handwritten paper sheet. Broadsheets were often glued or pinned to walls and wooden doors, but this is new to me.
Almanacs! These prints were produced in high quantities and reached very large audiences, and they were a characteristic part of the contemporary media ensemble. A paper artefact.
Here we see a glued version of a single-sheet "wall almanac" (German: Wandkalender).
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But what is missing on this painting from a paper perspective? You would expect fresh papers waiting to be used. But where are the empty pages in account books and the fresh paper sheets to produce new paper flows for more administrative steps?
And this threads ends here, good night. Thank you for your attention. If you like these threads, check with #paperhistory in my Twitter history. There are some more.
So much paper in this 1665 painting from Cornelis N. Gijsbrechts. You see an open cupboard door, as art history labelled the image, but what you also see: prints, letters, a broadside, an almanac, stored unused paper sheets. Early Modern Europe was a paper age. A
thread, part 1.
This painting of late seventeenth century echoes the availability and usages of paper in Europe. By at least the fifteenth century, paper was increasingly used in more and more individual and public contexts. Have a look: brill.com/view/book/edco…
Part 2 of the thread.
Let's start with the letters. Writing letters, corresponding, was a thing in Europe. Managing your business or scholarly world, wrestling with administrative work, news transmission, and much more, all this was a paper using practice. You see folded and opened letters. Part 3.
Early Modern Europe was a paper age - a first period of paper usages. Especially managing information became a paper business as the painting "The Lawyer's Office" (1628) from Pieter de Bloot @rijksmuseumt1p.de/1awb highlights. A meta thread for #paperhistory. 1/x
As I have highlighted in earlier threads like this one (
), paper was from the fourteenth century onwards increasingly being used for more and more communication flows. Hello inky paper states and letter writing humans, here comes the printing industry.
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The artifact paper became more and more present in Europe, for example in schools as I have shed light on here:
The Notary is a painting of mid-sixteenth century by Marinus van Reymerswaele. What we see is secretary work with paper: record keeping practices, writing, folding, storing.
A thread for #paperhistory and #bookhistory.
Notaries needed offices in early modern Europe, because they provided paper businesses: they used papers as a general service. In fact, producing evidence in a lawsauit is a paper practice. First things first: writing on paper on a regular basis is the main office work.
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Let's focus on what writing was: a paper using literate practice that required - apart from paper - some more special materials, most importantly ink, an inkhorn, and a quill.
This printed image appeared as one of the 1680s media reactions to the ongoing military tensions between Christian European states and the Muslim Ottoman Empire. #mediahistory#bookhistory
Source: t1p.de/5ram
Copperplate print "Ein Kalb mit einem Türcken Kopf", 1683.
Whenever the general conflict and their military campaigns heated up in the seventeenth-century, media flows about Ottomans ("Türcken") found their way into print in Christian Europe. Broadsides and pamphlets, even a German newspaper devoted to the topic was published these days.
The depiction of an encountered Christian threat as a news-worthy (and good-selling) deformed animal or even “monster” followed in response to assumed news-buyer demand by economic-driven publishers. Early modern media coverage of relevant news events was in its core a business.
Why do we call early modern Europe a paper age? Well, let's have a look at the hints given on this painting from early seventeenth-century by Jan Lievens. Source: t1p.de/of6z (Alte Pinakothek, München).
Let's start with this instrument, almost hidden, but important for paper usages: the quill. More precisely: the feather quill, often a goose feather prepared for writing. Nota bene: the word 'pen' derives from penna, Latin for feather. No quill, no fun at the secretary.
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Writing letters and records was not only a content managing information battle, it was a material business too. In order to use a quill you needed ink. Your pen/quill would have to be refreshed constantly with ink. This inkwell reminds us of the material conditions of writing. 3/
We will build an online reference work for the annually-published Early Modern German writing calendar, the #Schreibkalender, funded by @dfg_public and in cooperation with the "AG Digitale Forschungsdaten und Forschungsinformationen" @UniFAU.
While being a characteristic part of the contemporary media ensemble in the German-speaking areas of Europe, the #Schreibkalender was produced from its beginning in 1540 in high quantities and reached very large audiences. #bookhistory#mediahistory
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The #Schreibkalender was a paper-based material artefact resulting from complex and specialized publishing and printing processes, and also a document of handwritten interaction. Within the typical dual content of the Kalendarium (containing astronomical information and ...