Jubilejní publikace pražského spolku tiskárenských úředníků, kteří spravovali větší knihtiskárny a písmolijny a rozdělovali práci tiskařům a dalším dělníkům., Přehled aktivit spolku v jednotlivých měsících 25 let jeho trvání doplňuje seznam členů a tabla s jejich podobiznami z let 1890, 1894, 1906 a 1912., Seznam členů., and Pražské spolky a instituce. Pražské kulturní domy, měšťanské besedy, umělecká sdružení, vlastenecké spolky, komunitní centra.
Strahovská knihovna Královské kanonie premonstrátů Praha CZ AA XIV 9 adl. 6, Národní knihovna ČR Praha CZ 52 C 15 adl. 13, Metropolitní kapitula u sv. Víta v Praze Praha CZ X. b. 46 adl. 9, and BCBT37004
The history of Olomouc book printing remains mostly unexplored. Literature often brings distorted information, which must first be verified by studying sources. An example may be the Olomouc printer Vít Jindřich Ettel (+ 1669), about whom some researchers have accumulated a large amount of unverified or misleading information. Nevertheless, numerous archival sources from which it is possible to reconstruct the life and activities of this book printer are available as well. Attention should, however, also be paid to his wife, Anna Alžběta Ettelová, who, after her husband’s death, administered the local printing house alone for three years (until January 1673). Multiple archival sources make it possible to study her activities in further detail and to learn more not only abo, Miroslav Myšák., Obsahuje anglický abstrakt a shrnutí., and Obsahuje bibliografii
The article deals with the printer and Briefmaler (letter painter) Michael Peterle (1537-1588), who is also considered to be a woodcutter by Czech book scientists. It focuses on his pictorial broadsides and illustrated books and analyses the morphological features of the extant woodcuts. It has reached the conclusion that Peterle’s woodcutting activities cannot be proved. Apart from the art-historical perspective, it brings a number of new facts associated with Peterle’s printing activities: for instance, it documents the financial background of Prague printers in the 1570s and 1580s., Jana Tvrzníková., Obsahuje anglický abstrakt a shrnutí., and Obsahuje bibliografii
A so far unknown book printed by the Speyer printer Anastasius Nolt, the New Testament in the "biblia pauperum" style, has been discovered in the Library of the Křivoklát Castle. It was published by Jakob Beringer, a Speyer cleric, who had had Luther’s translation of the New Testament issued in Strasbourg already in 1527 decorated with these woodcuts. and Petr Mašek.