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The history of the office of the King's Printer in England is a complex one, reflected in the imprints of London Bibles. From 1743, when Cambridge resumed Bible printing, and more particularly from the late 1760s, when the Baskett interest at Oxford had come to an end and Eyre had become King's Printer, there was competition within England among the three privileged printers. From 1743 there was an uninterrupted flow of Bibles and prayer books from Cambridge. This chapter discusses three episodes in the history of Bible printing at Cambridge in the eighteenth century. The Oxford Bible press was the most active of the three privileged printers in England in the eighteenth century, though when members of the Baskett family were concurrently printers to the university and King's Printers there is the possibility that imprints do not reflect the true place of printing. The chapter explains three notable editions bearing Oxford imprints.
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