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  1. Robert Granjon (Paris, c. 1513 - Rome, 1590) was a French punchcutter, a designer and creator of metal type, and printer. [1] [2] [3] He worked in Paris , Lyon , Antwerp , and Rome . [1] He is best known for having introduced the typeface style Civilité , for his many italic types and his fleuron designs, although he worked across all genres ...

  2. Robert Granjon was a French punchcutter, a designer and creator of metal type, and printer. He worked in Paris, Lyon, Antwerp, and Rome. He is best known for having introduced the typeface style Civilité, for his many italic types and his fleuron designs, although he worked across all genres of typeface and alphabet across his long career.

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  4. Jun 6, 2020 · Robert Granjon lived in the 1500s. The new style of typeface he invented in 1557, modeled on contemporary Gothic cursive handwriting, and later came to be know as Civilité, after the Civilité or 'etiquette' books which the typeface often appeared in. Although Granjon really anted his Civilité to become the national typeface of France. However, it never really caught on, and could compete ...

  5. views 1,670,920 updated. Robert Granjon (grăn´jən, Fr. rōbĕr´ gräNzhôN´), fl. 1545–88, French designer of type and printer. He began his work in Paris and afterward worked in Lyons, Antwerp, and Rome. The types that he designed and made included roman, italic, Greek, Hebrew, and Syriac. He is known especially for his caractères de ...

  6. Robert Granjon (* 1513 à Paris ; † 16 novembre 1589, ou mars 1590, à Rome), est un libraire, imprimeur, fondeur et graveur de caractères français. Il est surtout connu pour avoir introduit une nouvelle écriture typographique : les caractères de civilité .

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CivilitéCivilité - Wikipedia

    Civilité. Civilité type in Dialogue de la vie et de la mort, printed and published by Granjon. Civilité type ( French: Caractères de civilité) is a typeface introduced in 1557 by the French punchcutter Robert Granjon. These characters imitate French cursiva letters of the Renaissance, specifically a formal style of secretary hand.

  8. Robert Granjon worked in the second half of the 16th century, mainly at Lyon, but was also recorded at Paris, Rome and Antwerp. He is still famous because of his Civilité types, imitating French gothic cursive calligraphy. His main contribution was an italic type known as "Parangon de Granjon".

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