Education and learning in the 1450s involved books that were beautiful but expensive and few in number, written in Latin, and dominated by the Church. The introduction of paper from China and the Gutenberg printing press led to books being made more quickly and cheaply, translated into many languages, and the opening of schools, marking changes in education during the Renaissance period.
Education and learning in the 1450s involved books that were beautiful but expensive and few in number, written in Latin, and dominated by the Church. The introduction of paper from China and the Gutenberg printing press led to books being made more quickly and cheaply, translated into many languages, and the opening of schools, marking changes in education during the Renaissance period.
Education and learning in the 1450s involved books that were beautiful but expensive and few in number, written in Latin, and dominated by the Church. The introduction of paper from China and the Gutenberg printing press led to books being made more quickly and cheaply, translated into many languages, and the opening of schools, marking changes in education during the Renaissance period.
Stanley J. Stein, Barbara H. Stein - Apogee of Empire - Spain and New Spain in The Age of Charles III, 1759 - 1789 (2003, The Johns Hopkins University Press)