Ernst Vögelin

Ernst Vögelin (August 10, 1529 - 1589[1][2]) was a 16th-century German pioneer book printer.[3]

An illustration from a 1581 book printed by Vögelin

Vögelin was born in Konstanz.[1] He studied in Leipzig,[3] married a daughter of the first Leipzig printer[4] Valentin Bapst, took over his shop,[5] and expanded the establishment with a type foundry, publishing house, and a bookstore. By 1559 it has become the largest print shop in eastern Germany.[4] Heavily indebted and accused of Calvinism, Vögelin had to leave the town in 1576.[2][3] Since 1579 he was in Neustadt.[2] His shop was later run by his sons, Gothard, Philip and Walentin.[2] His successors' shop in Heidelberg, was first to print Johannes Kepler's Astronomia Nova.[6]

Ernst Vögelin's notable printings include the Protestant Corpus doctrinae under the title Corpus doctrinae christianae.[7]

References

  1. Geschichte der heimlichen Calvinisten in Leipzig. 1574 bis 1593, Neujahrsblätter der Bibliothek und des Archivs der Stadt Leipzig, Volume 1, C.L. Hirschfeld., 1905, pp. 6-11 (Google e-books)
  2. Vögelin, Ernst (1529 - 1589), also this record; records of Europe's printed heritage
  3. "Literary Leipsic", by Amelia von Ende, in: The Bookman, Vol. 39, 1914, p. 405
  4. Leipzig - city of books Archived 2014-03-13 at the Wayback Machine, by Walter Mayer, Karlsruhe/Germany, Current Concerns 2012, No 11, 12 March 2012
  5. A description of De Philippi Melanchthonis ortu, totius vitae curriculo et morte. by Abe Books (retrieved March 12, 2014)
  6. Max Caspar, Kepler, 1993, ISBN 0486676056, p. 141)
  7. p. 166
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.