- John Martyn (publisher)
John Martyn, or Martin, (died 1680) was a prominent
London publisher and bookseller in the second half of the seventeenth century.Martyn started in business in 1649, in partnership with John Ridley; their shop was at the sign of the Castle in
Fleet Street , near Ram Alley. In 1651, Martyn began an independent establishment at the sign of the Bell in St. Paul's Churchyard, "without Temple bar." He continued there for the remainder of his career. He often worked in partnership with other London stationers; he was joined at the Bell by James Allestry, who was his partner there from 1652 until 1664, when Allestry opened his own shop at the sign of the Rose and Crown. They were joined by Thomas Dicas, from 1660 to Dicas's death in 1669. In 1663 Allestry and Martyn became the monopoly publishers for theRoyal Society ; Martyn continued in this role after Allestry's death in November 1670. [Plomer, pp. 2-3, 63, 123.]Allestry and Martyn, and then Martyn alone, served as the Royal Society's publishers through the crucial first two decades of the organization's existence. They issued all of its printed documents, including the "Philosophical Transactions;" they published
Thomas Sprat 's "History of the Royal Society" (1667), andRobert Hooke 's "Micrographia " (1665). On his own, Martyn was an accomplished publisher of law books and of texts inLatin and Greek; his edition of Thomas Blount's legal dictionary "Νομο-λεχικον" ("Novo-lexicon," 1671) is a noteworthy example. [Johns, pp. 216, 314-5.]Martyn was responsible for a wide range of books, including the religious works that were so characteristic of his century, like Edward Wetenhall's "Enter Into Thy Closet, or A Method and Order for Private Devotion" (1666). He issued Francis North's "A Philosophical Essay of Music" and
John Milton 's "The History of Britain", both in 1677; and he published medical works, like the "London Pharmacopoeia" of theRoyal College of Physicians (also 1677). [Furdell, p. 69.]He also published two important works of English literature. He and Allestry issued Samuel Butler's "
Hudibras ", Part 2, in 1664; withHenry Herringman , Martyn published Parts 1 and 2 of "Hudibras" together in 1674; and he and Herringman issued the complete 3-part work in 1678. Martyn also partnered with Herringman and Richard Marriot for the second Beaumont and Fletcher folio of 1679.In 1681, Martyn's widow donated a silver bowl to the Stationers Company in her husband's memory.
Notes
References
* Furdell, Elizabeth Lane. "Publishing and Medicine in Early Modern England." Rochester, NY, University of Rochester Press, 2002.
* Johns, Adrian. "The Nature of the Book: Print and Knowledge in the Making." Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1998.
* Plomer, Henry Robert. "A Dictionary of the Boosellers and Printers Who Were at Work in England, Scotland and Ireland from 1641 to 1667." London, The Bibliographical Society/Blades, East & Blades, 1907.
* Rivington, Charles A. "Early Printers to the Royal Society 1663–1708." "Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London" Vol. 39 No. 1 (September 1984), pp. 1-27.
* Rostenberg, Leona. "Literary, Political, Scientific, Religious, and Legal Publishing, Printing, and Bookselling in England, 1551–1700: Twelve Studies." New York, Franklin, 1965.
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