Joos Lambrecht Explained

Joos Lambrecht (1491, Ghent – 1556/7, Wesel) was a Walloon printer, typographer, lexicographer and linguist.

He was the son of Jan Lambrecht and came from a family of engravers of seals and marks used to authenticate cloth made in Ghent. In 1537-1538 he took up this trade taking over from Vincent Lambert, and combined it with a broad range of activities: he was a schoolmaster at the Walloon School and also wrote poetry. His work as a printer is regarded as having particularly good quality.[1]

His Naembouck van alle natuerlicken ende ongheschuumde Vlaemsche woorden is an important book in the history of the Dutch languages. It was a Dutch-French dictionary, French being a language he taught at the Walloon School.[2] He printed the first edition of this book in 1546. For many years no copy was known to have survived until Wytze Hellinga discovered a copy in the library of the Groot Seminarie in Warmond in the Netherlands.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Devroye . Luc . Joos Lambrecht . luc.devroye.org . McGill University Montreal . 14 June 2021.
  2. Book: Haar . Alisa van de . The Golden Mean of languages: Forging Dutch and French in the Early Modern Low Countries (1540-1620) . 2019 . Brill . Leiden . 978-90-04-35521-7 .
  3. Cickx-Indestege . E. . The first edition of the Naembouck by Joos Lambrecht (1546) . Quaerendo . 1971 . 1 . 1 . 13–15 . 10.1163/157006971X00040 .