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Colophon   Listen
noun
Colophon  n.  An inscription, monogram, or cipher, containing the place and date of publication, printer's name, etc., formerly placed on the last page of a book. "The colophon, or final description, fell into disuse, and... the title page had become the principal direct means of identifying the book." "The book was uninjured from title page to colophon."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Colophon" Quotes from Famous Books



... almost to the primitive simplicity of the oldest printed books, which had no title-pages, properly speaking, at all, or merely gave, with extreme brevity, the name of the work, without printer's mark, or date, or place. These were reserved for the colophon, if it was thought desirable to mention them at all. Thus, in the black-letter example of Guido de Columna's 'History of Troy,' written about 1283, and printed at Strasburg in 1489, the title-page is ...
— Books and Bookmen • Andrew Lang

... the Cytye of London, the fourth Sonday of Advent, by Alexander Seyton, and Mayster Willyam Tolwyn, persone of S. Anthonyes in the sayd Cytye of London, the year of our Lord God M.D.XLI., newly corrected and amended." (The colophon,) "Imprinted at London in Saynt Sepulchre's parysshe, in the Olde Bayly, by Rychard Lant. Ad imprimendum solum." ...
— The Works of John Knox, Vol. 1 (of 6) • John Knox



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