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1.3.5: 1460 - 1585 - Methods of distribution/advertisingThe transportation of books took place by wagon or by ship. Although books were a product of little volume and high value, they were heavy and also very vulnerable. In order to protect them against water and other damage, books were transported in bales or barrels. In this form we see them repeatedly pass the toll on the Lek at Schoonhoven. Printed books were sent, as were manuscripts, in gatherings and binding was done at the place of destination. Trading in books over great distances often involved the necessity of transferring them one or more times. In order to counter the problems of transfers in long-distance trade, publishers quickly discovered the advantages of trade centres as a place to set up business. This is one of the explanations for the dominance of Antwerp in the period up to 1585. Distribution took place at local, regional and international level. Retail trade in the place of residence of the printer-publisher took place in the bookshop attached to the workshop. Colporteurs and hawkers were sent to the smaller towns and villages in the area. Hawkers, incidentally, also played a major role during the time of the Reformation in the dissemination of banned books over long distances as, for example, was shown in the trial of the printer Books produced as stock and offered to an unknown market had to be promoted. In the books themselves the readers were addressed enticingly in a foreword or more often on a title page. The first Dutch-language title page was from author: K. Goudriaan |
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