-
An Early Case of the Printer’s Self-Censorship in Constantinople
- The Library: The Transactions of the Bibliographical Society
- Oxford University Press
- Volume 16, Number 4, December 2015
- pp. 381-404
- Article
- Additional Information
- Purchase/rental options available:
This article focuses on the printing activities of Nicodemos Metaxas, a Venetian subject and Orthodox monk of Greek origin, hailing from the Ionian island of Cephalonia. Nicodemos learned the art of printing in London’s Fleet Street and published five volumes, forming an exquisite collection of theological and rhetorical works by select Greek scholars and Orthodox clergymen. In 1627, he established the first Greek printing press in Constantinople with equipment transferred from England. The editing process of Patriarch Cyril Lucaris’s Against the Jews, a tract Nicodemos published in the same year, reveals a curious example of the printer’s self-censorship. The official Ottoman stance towards non-Muslim publishing in the Empire is manifested through the arrest, trial, and subsequent release of the Greek printer.