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John Reynes

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Name
  
John Reynes


Died
  
1544

John Reynes Browse All Images by John Reynes fl 15101544 d LUNA

John Reynes (fl. 1527–1544) was a stationer and bookbinder in London, England. Reynes's name first appears in the colophon of an edition of Ralph Higden's Polycronycon, issued in 1527, and he continued to publish books at intervals up to 1544. He is, however, better known as a bookbinder, and numbers of stamped bindings are in existence which bear his device. They have, as a rule, on one side a stamp containing the emblems of the passion, and the inscription Redemptoris mundi arma, and on the other a stamp divided into two compartments containing the arms of England and the Tudor rose. His other stamps, about six in number, are rarer.

John Reynes 16thcentury English panelstamped binding John Reynes Uu82

John Cawood, the printer, who was master of the Company of Stationers in 1557, was apprenticed to Reynes, and put up a window in his memory in Stationers' Hall.

References

John Reynes Wikipedia