Bastarda

Bastarda or bastard is a term applied to a variety of scripts and typefaces originating in western Europe during the Renaissance.

Bastarda or bastard is a term applied to a variety of scripts and typefaces originating in western Europe during the Renaissance.

Scripts

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Handwriting model in de Iturzaeta's Arte de escribir letra bastarda español

One form of bastarda is "bastard Gothic": the blackletter manuscript hands used in various parts of continental Europe in the 14th and 15th centuries, mainly to write vernacular narratives.[1] Similar English scripts are sometimes distinguished as "bastarda Anglicana" or simply "Anglicana".

Spanish bastarda, by contrast, was a modified form of Italic script which remained in use there until as late as the 1830s.[2] The paleographer A. S. Osley characterized this bastarda as the "true successor" of the Italic hand, which had been supplanted by an early form of copperplate script outside Spain.[3]

Type

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Bastarda type in Fry's Pantographia

Early printers produced a variety of typefaces based on local bastarda blackletter.[1][4]

Over time, most of Europe's printers standardized on Antiqua (or "roman") typefaces, and bastarda type fell out of use in most countries.[1] Despite this trend, the German variety developed into the national Fraktur type, which remained in use until the mid-twentieth century.[5]

British typeface designer Jonathan Barnbrook has designed a contemporary interpretation of these early typefaces titled Bastard.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Febvre, Lucien; Martin, Henri-Jean (1976). The Coming of the Book : The Impact of Printing 1450-1800. London: Verso. p. 79.
  2. ^ de Iturzaeta, José Francisco (1827). Arte de escribir letra bastarda española. Muñoz.
  3. ^ Osley, A. S. (1979). "Canons of Renaissance Handwriting". Visible Language. 13 (1): 81. Retrieved 4 February 2026.
  4. ^ Derolez, Robert (2003). The Palaeography of Gothic Manuscript Books From the Twelfth to the Early Sixteenth Century. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-521-80315-1. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  5. ^ A.F. Johnson, Type designs, their history and development. Third edition. (London: 1966) pp. 21–23
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