One of Mainz's major attractions is the Gutenberg Museum. This museum is close to Mainz Cathedral and it was not open on Monday, but we booked it for a group so we could still go in. Gutenberg, the father of modern printing technology, although hundreds of years later than Bisheng, invented lead-type printing in Europe, and also invented the printing press. His inventions were rapidly popularized in Europe. The museum holds the Gutenberg printed Bible, and the thick Bible is printed out and hand-decorated by the monks, and the first sentence is thickened, so each book is a unique treasure.
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One of Mainz's major attractions is the Gutenberg Museum. This museum is close to Mainz Cathedral and it was not open on Monday, but we booked it for a group so we could still go in. Gutenberg, the father of modern printing technology, although hundreds of years later than Bisheng, invented lead-type printing in Europe, and also invented the printing press. His inventions were rapidly popularized in Europe. The museum holds the Gutenberg printed Bible, and the thick Bible is printed out and hand-decorated by the monks, and the first sentence is thickened, so each book is a unique treasure.
It is actually a museum of printing, where you can see a lifetime of bronze statues and clay movable-type artifacts. Germany is on this basis to turn the mud into a lead character, which is an invention that Germany is proud of. Students interested in this can come.
A museum reflecting the history of Gutenberg, the museum has many special displays, interesting places.
Very beautiful museum, pleasant scenery, especially beautiful. Have the opportunity to walk more.
The name Gutenberg is really familiar. The main street in our pony bag is Gutenberg Avenue. It was only later that I learned that the first person in European movable type printing went to the museum and you would feel the charm of the text. It is difficult to imagine what a world would be without the text in the long history. Here you need to be patient and quietly following the evolution of printing to savor history