A Bookmark is a thin marker, commonly
made of card, leatherette, or fabric, used to keep the reader's place in a book
and to enable the reader to return to it with ease. Other frequently used
materials for bookmarks are leather, metals like silver and brass, silk, wood,
and cord. Many bookmarks can be clipped on a page with the aid of a page-flap.
Bookmarks were used throughout the medieval period, consisting usually
of a small parchment strip attached to the edge of folio (or a piece of cord
attached to headband). As the first printed books were quite rare and valuable,
it was determined early on that something was needed to mark one's place in a
book without causing its pages any harm. Some of the earliest bookmarks were
used at the end of the sixteenth century, and Queen Elizabeth I was one of the
first to own one.
Modern bookmarks are available in a huge
variety of materials in a multitude of designs and styles. Many are made of
cardboard or heavy paper, but they are also constructed of leather, ribbon,
fabric, felt, steel, wire, tin, beads, wood, plastic, vinyl, silver, gold, and
other precious metals, some decorated with gemstones.
The first detached, and therefore
collectible, bookmarkers began to appear in the 1850s. One of the first
references to these is found in Mary Russell Mitford's Recollections of a
Literary Life (1852): "I had no marker and the richly bound volume closed
as if instinctively." Note the abbreviation of 'bookmarker' to 'marker'.
The modern abbreviation is usually 'bookmark'. Historical bookmarks can be very
valuable, and are sometimes collected along with other paper ephemera.
By the 1860s, attractive machine-woven
markers were being manufactured, mainly in Coventry, UK, the centre of the
silk-ribbon industry. One of the earliest was produced by J.&J. Cash to
mark the death of the Prince Consort in 1861. Thomas Stevens of Coventry soon
became pre-eminent in the field and claimed to have nine hundred different
designs.
Woven pictorial bookmarks produced by
Thomas Steven, a 19th-century English silk weaver, starting around 1862, are
called Stevengraphs. Woven silk bookmarks were very appreciated gifts in
Victorian days and Stevens seemed to make one for every occasion and
celebration. One Stevengraph read: All of the gifts which heaven bestows, there
is one above all measure, and that's a friend midst all our woes, a friend is a
found treasure to thee I give that sacred name, for thou art such to me, and
ever proudly will I claim to be a friend to thee.
Most nineteenth-century bookmarks were intended
for use in bibles and prayer books and were made of ribbon, woven silk, or
leather. By the 1880s the production of woven silk markers was declining and
printed markers made of stiff paper or cardboard began to appear in significant
numbers. This development paralleled the wider availability of books
themselves, and the range of available bookmarkers soon expanded dramatically.
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