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thesaurus/cni00052609 Chepman, Walter

Chepman, Walter

Identifiant de la noticecni00052609
URIhttp://data.cerl.org/thesaurus/cni00052609
Dernière modification2014-03-14

Plus d'information

Dates d'activité1507-1810
Activitéprinter
Ressource en lignehttp://www.nls.uk/
Scottish Book Trade Index online (list)

Lieu d'activité

Lieu d'activitéEdinburgh; In the Southgait (Cowgate) at the foot of Blackfriars Wynd (1507 - 1508)
Edinburgh (1809 - 1810)

Entrées associées

Voir aussiA Merchant Burgess of Edinburgh. Had dealings with Andrew Halyburton in 1494 (Ledger of Andrew Halyburton p.11) and appears regularly in the records after that. In 1508 he set up first printing press in Scotland with Androw Myllar under Letters patent granted by James IV 15 Sept 1507. The patent specifies that they are to print mass books of the Aberdeen use in consultation with William Elpinstone, Bishop of Aberdeen. Chepman seems to have been the business partner and Andro Myllar the practical printer. They printed at Edinburgh from 1508-10. When Chapmen and Myllar were about to issue the the Aberdeen Breviary, Chepman laid a complaint before the Privy Council against certain Edinburgh merchants who were importing service books of Salisbury use 14 January 1510. On 14 January, the Privy Council summoned and admonished William and Francis Frost, William Sym and Andro Ross and ordered them to import no more Salisbury service books. In 1514 and 1515 Walter Chepman was Dean of Guild of Edinburgh. His first wife was Margaret Kerkettle, who died before 1506, and his second Agnes Cockburne who survived him. Will registered of Agnes Cockburne Relict of Walter Chapman, burgess of Edinburgh 24 July 1565. David Chepman, bookbinder was the son of Walter Chepman and Agnes Cockburne. Walter Chepman died between 16 September 1528, when he endowed a mortuary chapel in the lower part of the cemetry of St Giles and 2 April 1529 when his widow delivered all his goods to his son David.

Noms

RubriqueChepman, Walter
utilisé dans: National Library of Scotland, Scottish Book Trade Index

Sources

Trouvé dansAldis 1904. — Dickson & Edmond . — EdinTest. — The Chepman and Myllar Prints: nine tracts from the first Scottish press, Edinburgh 1508. A facsimile with a bibliographical note by William Beattie. Edinburgh: Edinburgh Bibliographical Society, 1950.

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