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has been frequently asserted that all Caxton's books were printed in a part of Westminster Abbey; this must be mere conjecture, because we find no statement of it from himself: he first mentions the place of his printing in 1477, so that he must have printed some time without informing us where. With all possible respect for the opinions of Dr. Dibdin, and the numerous writers on our early typography, I have very considerable doubts as to whether Caxton really printed _within the walls of the Abbey_ at all. I am aware that he himself says, in some of his colophons, "Emprinted in th' Abbey of Westmynstre," but query whether the _precincts_ of the Abbey are not intended? Stow, in his _Annals_ (edit 1560, p. 686.), says,--"William Caxton of London, mercer, brought it (printing) into England about the year 1471, and first practised the same in the _Abbie_ of St. Peter at Westminster;" but in his _Survey of London_, 1603 (edit. Thoms, p. 176.), the same writer gives us a more full and particular account; it is as follows:-- "Near unto this house [i.e. Henry VII.'s alms-house], westward, was an old chapel of St. Anne; over against the which, the Lady Margaret, mother to King Henry VII., erected an alms-house for poor women, which is now turned into lodgings for the singing men of the college. The place wherein this chapel and alms-house standeth was called the Elemosinary, or almonry, now corruptly the ambry, for that the alms of the Abbey were there distributed to the poor; and therein Islip, abbot of Westminster, erected the first press of book-printing that ever was in England, about the year of Christ 1471. William Caxton, citizen of London, mercer, brought it into England, and was the first that practised it _in the said abbey_; after which time the like was practised in the abbeys of St. Augustine at Canterbury, St. Albans, and other monasteries." Again, in the curious hand-bill preserved in the Bodleian Library, it will be remembered that Caxton invites his customers to "come to Westmonester _into the Almonestrye_," where they may purchase his books "good chepe." From these extracts it is pretty clear that Caxton's printing-office was in the Almonry, which was within the precincts of the Abbey, and not in the Abbey itself. The "old chapel of St. Anne" was doubtless the place where the first printing-office was erected in England. Abbot Milling (not Islip,
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