Johannes Schott (19 June 1477 – 1550) was a book printer from Strasbourg. He printed a large number of books, including tracts from Martin Luther and other Reformation. He was a well-educated man, who had relationships with some of the leading humanists of his time. His press also was one of the first to be able to print chiaroscuro woodcuts.
The first known book printed by him dates from 1500 (his father died in 1499); he was active as a printer for half a century. A lull in his activity occurred between 1503 and 1508, when he produced only three books, all versions of the Margarita Philosophica, an encyclopedia by German humanist Gregor Reisch. The locations of those three books may indicate that the Schott press was moving around, with stops in Freiburg and Basel. Kusukawa proposes that the first printing may have happened in Freiburg "to allow Schott to work closely with the author".
Some 130 titles from his press are known, but the real number probably exceeds 150. They include many humanistic works (from Italian scholars and Germans, particularly Ulrich von Hutten), and also classical literature. When Martin Luther began his efforts to reform the Catholic church, Schott put his press to the service of the Reformation, maintaining a personal relationship with Luther besides a professional one. Schott printed Luther's so-called Invocavit Sermons, based on notes sent to him by people in Wittenberg. Schott also printed Ulrich von Hutten's Ulrichi ab Hutten cum Erasmo Rotirodamo, Presbytero, Theologo, Expostulatio (part of von Hutten's polemic with Desiderius Erasmus), which contained a woodcut of von Hutten and Erasmus; it was thought (in 1850) to be the earliest known woodcut of the latter. He also published books on medicine, many of which were reprinted, even abroad. Like his father, he valued the esthetics of his books; a number of them are embellished richly with woodprints, some of which by Hans Baldung and Hans Wechtlin. Schott's formschneider or block-cutter was (according to the Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie) the first to create chiaroscuro woodcuts with three blocks.
Copyright case
Notable books
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