A Presentation on Johannes Gutenburg, Inventor of the Printing Press
Eypan Mercado Edmonton – Johannes Gutenburg, the inventor of the printing press, is having a presentation about him in a few schools. Johannes was the inventor of the printing press, which was invented in the year 1450, Germany, this is to inform others of the contribution Johannes Gutenburg has done.
Gutenburg’s invention allowed more people than ever to get books at such a cheap price, which impacted many societies. His invention of the printing press could make an enormous 1000’s of pages compared to the regular 40-50. He used existing technology in his time and some of his own to make the creation we all use today. This inspired other people to use
Throughout the Holocaust, 6 million Jewish people were murdered.1 million children were among the victims. Possibly the most profound defender of human rights in modern history, Oskar Schindler has passed all defender criteria in flying colors. Oskar Schindler was born on April 28, 1908, in the Czech Republic. He was raised in Zwittau, Sudetenland, now present day Czech Republic. In his life, he went through many failed businesses, only finding success in the war at his factories. He is credited with saving the lives of 1200 jews from almost certain extermination.
Moving on to York Robin joined with the Hood family and became known as Robert Hood. His adoptive father Johannes Hood was a miller by trade and one of Robin’s Merry Men was “Much the miller's son.” Robin and the tailor Rad de Waddesley became freemen of York in 1364 and two years later, the miller’s son, Adam Hood joined them dealing in cloth and clothing across the Greenwood. The Virgin Mary, who Robin loved, was the patron saint of the Drapers' Guild. Members of the guild supported their bereaved families and perhaps this explains Robin’s reputation for taking from the rich and giving to the poor.
Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg was famous for many things, such as being a goldsmith, a blacksmith, a printer, and a big time publisher. In Europe he introduced printing to many people there. He grew up knowing a lot about tradesmith, most of his family worked with metal. They say his “early life was a mystery”, because no one could ever find out that much stuff from when he was younger. Once Gutenberg introduced printing and published the bible called “Forty-two-line” he automatically talked his way into getting a loan for 800 guilders.
Once upon a time, there was a German Knight named Fritz Obermueller, whose Father was a blacksmith named Dietrich. His Mother was named Elisabeth. He was in the Treehouse Coffee ‘N’ Cake Shoppe, which belonged to King Adolf, the German King. Fritz was sipping his cappuccino with Elsese, the German Princess. He was in Hamburg, away from his parents in Frankfurt because he was one of King Adolf’s Knights. Therefore, he was granted a free coffee every day. He wanted revenge from the French Prince, Pendragon, because he had beaten them in the last battle. Well, guess who came to Hamburg that day. It was pendragon, and he was looking more fearsome than ever. His arms and legs were jacked.
Tom Hanks was a great American actor born July 9, 1956. His childhood was very different from a lot of children. His family would move a lot because his father got a lot of new jobs, but his father did settle in Oakland, California eventually(“Biography.com Editors”). His mother and father got divorced and he lived with his father. All his siblings except his youngest brother lived with their father. His father married a woman who had eight, yes eight children( Tom graduated from Skyline High School in 1974. This was the end of his childhood, but not his education.
Carl van Vechten, born in 1880 in Cedar Rapids, and died in 1964 in New York City, was an American photographer, critic, essayist, and writer. Graduating from the University of Chicago (1903), then contributing to "Chicago American", Van Vechten moved to New York, where he started to develop his interests in music, dance, and theatre, as a critic at "New York Times". Even though in his journalist career he often provided visual material accompanying his articles, his real growth in photography came not until 1932, given his first 35mm Leica camera. During the next decades of his artistic prominence, van Vechten produced a vast body of work, which can be named an anthology of the most important figures of the 20th century culture. He instantly
Gutenberg was a very intelligent man. Johannes Gutenberg had no children or a wife he was a lonely person he focused on the printing press. He did not only invent the printing press he also had his own bible it was called Jonas Gutenberg 42 lines. There are several different versions of the . Jonas Gutenberg's Bible was mainly focused on determination and to have a mind set on things and accomplishing them. Johannes Gutenberg Bible was made in a 42 line bible. Gutenberg made many accomplishments like making the printing press, movable printing press, and his bible. Gutenberg invented the moveable printing press in 1440 and the original printing press in 1439 and he made the bible in 1445. He was a very busy man. Johannes Gutenberg made a bible because he wanted his bible to be first printed bible on earth the rest of the books and bibles. Johannes Gutenberg's first printed book was his own written bible. Johannes Gutenberg's first ever book printed book/bible was in Europe and was not printed by the original printing press it was by the movable one the one he made in 1440. Johannes
Joahannes Gutenburg, a German artisan, created the first movable type printing press. With this new invention the painstakingly long process of handwriting manuscripts became dated and unnecessary for most
63. Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press and made it so people could get books and reading materials. This over time made people more literate and they could read and increased the printing industry.
Raoul Gustav Wallenberg was born August 4, 1912 near Stockholm, Sweden into a prominent family. He is the son of Raoul Oscar Wallenberg and Maria Sofia Wising and the older brother of Nina Lagergren and Guy von Dardel. His father died before he was born, so he was raised by his mother and grandparents. His grandfather wanted to make him a citizen of the world so he arranged for most of his education, as well as trips to foreign countries, where he became proficient in languages and the art of diplomacy. After graduating from high school and serving in the Swedish military he traveled to the United States and majored in architecture at the University of Michigan. He graduated in 1935 with honors and went back to Sweden to find work as an architect
German Gutenberg invented the Printing Press, which changed society after the plague. Books used to be expensive in the Middle Ages because they were hand written , but the Printing Press produced books rapidly and the production of books was cheap. An immediate effect of the Printing Press was that it spread information quickly. After the invention of the Printing Press, people read more and were educated better. The Printing Press also helped preserve history. Wood Block Printing was invented by the Chinese, as a result of Woodblock Printing the Information Age began.
During the late 1400’s a German named Johann Gutenberg invented the printing press. The printing press was a fast working machine that pressed paper against a full tray of ink that was movable to type. The ending results was an exact replica of the page. The printing press made a huge impact on European society for many reasons. They use to hand write copies of books and that took a couple of months to do, now they can produce as many books as they like.
Through the invention of the steam engine goods could be transported quicker and cheaper. As well as people being able to travel further quicker for cheaper. Also the invention of the steam engine allowed for more train tracks to have to be built (Railway maps of england wales 1852), this allowed for there to be more workers. Another invention that had a great impact on society is the cottone machines. These cotton machines took raw cotton and wove it into fabric(London news,23 august 1851 in jeffrey auerbach).
Johann Gultenberg played a very important part in history. He was the publisher who introduced printing to Europe. Many frowned upon his invention of the movable mechanical printer in the beginning. They called it “dark magic” and wanted Gultenberg eliminated. Fortunately that didn’t actually happen. Gultenbergs invention changed the lives of many people. Having printers enabled books to be available to more people which made people smarter. Although he never got any profit from inventing the printer and died in poverty, he made a trimendice impact on everyone’s lives and his work was not in vain.
Because of the printing press, many books were made. Due to the abundance of books, people began learning how to read. Gutenberg’s invention did not only increase the amount of books in the Renaissance, it improved literature. It was a major catalyst for later scientific catalyst revolution. Gutenberg used his intelligence to create the printing press, and thanks to him, reading was spread across the world.