Les Grecs du roi (lit. "the king's Greeks") are a celebrated and influential
Greek alphabettypeface in the
Greek minuscule style which was cut by the French
punchcutterClaude Garamond between 1541 and 1550.
Arthur Tilley calls the books printed from them "among the most finished specimens of typography that exist".[2]
The Grecs du roi punches were ordered by
Pierre du Chastel on behalf of King
Francis I of France from
Robert Estienne in a contract dated 2 November 1540 and remain the property of the French government.[3] The design was based on the handwriting of the
Cretan copyist
Angelo Vergecio, and includes many alternate letters and
ligatures. The Grecs du roi were influenced by types cut by
Francesco Griffo and used by printer
Aldus Manutius in Venice. The types formed the basic model for Greek typefaces for the next two centuries.[4]
History
Garamond contracted to cut the Grecs du roi types on 2 November 1540.[5][6] It took Garamond nearly 10 years to complete all the sizes. In 1543, he completed the medium sized 16pt character set, which he named "gros romaine". Three years later, in 1546, he completed the small sized 9pt character set which he named "Cicéro". Finally, in 1550, he completed the large sized 20pt character set, which he named "gros parangon".[7][8][9][10]
The Grecs du roi were extremely influential and became a model other printers and publishers quickly sought to emulate, with versions by other French punchcutters even before Garamond had finished the last size.[11] According to
John A. Lane, the most popular imitations were those made by
Pierre Haultin and
Robert Granjon, which were also widely used abroad.[12][13] More obscure versions in France were made by du Villiers, Jean Arnoul le Jeune dit Picard and possibly Michel Du Boys, and abroad one known in Hamburg from 1587, and in the sixteenth century several by
Jean Jannon and one made in London by Arthur Nicholls.[14][15]
The Grecs du roi style, although extremely influential, placed significant demands on printers, since it requires a choice among many possible sorts that could be used in every word, in contrast to Latin-alphabet general-purpose typefaces which do not attempt to simulate handwriting as closely. Typefaces designed for Greek since that time have generally been much simpler, with a decline in number of ligatures. Gerry Leonidas, a leading expert on Greek typesetting, felt that Vergecio's handwriting "has all the marks of a script that is unsuitable for conversion to [printing]."[16]
In 1946, the original punches were classified as historical monuments.[17]
Digitizations
A digital revival of the Grecs du roi was created by Franck Jalleau of the Imprimerie Nationale and used for a publication of
Pindar's Olympic Odes on the occasion of the
2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.[18][19]
A later digital revival of the Grecs du roi was created by Anagrafi Fonts in 2009, being renamed to KS-GrequeX in the process. It includes 2 weights and over 1100 glyphs and ligatures, more than Garamond had cut.[20]
Mindaugas Strockis created a free digital font named Grecs du roi WG in 2001, though it lacks ligatures.[21]
^Franck Jalleau, "La recréation numérique des Grecs du Roi", Claude Garamont: créateur typographique, conference in Amiens, France, 29 September 2011
[1]
^"Archived copy". www.flf.vu.lt:80. Archived from
the original on 17 October 2005. Retrieved 20 July 2022.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link)
Carter, Harry, ed. (1969). The type specimen of Delacolonge. Les caractères et les vignettes de la fonderie du sieur Delacolonge, Lyons, 1773. Introduction and notes by Harry Carter. (Facsimile ... made from a copy belonging to the publishers.).
Lane, John A. (1996). "From the Grecs du Roi to the Homer Greek: Two Centuries of Greek Printing Types in the Wake of Garamond". In Macrakis, Michael S. (ed.). Greek Letters: From Tablets to Pixels. Oak Knoll Press.
ISBN9781884718274.
Lane, John A. (2004). Early Type Specimens in the Plantin-Moretus Museum: annotated descriptions of the specimens to ca. 1850 (mostly from the Low Countries and France) with preliminary notes on the typefoundries and printing offices (1. ed.). New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll Press.
ISBN9781584561392.
Slimbach, Robert (2005). "The Making of Garamond Premier". Garamond Premier Pro: a contemporary adaptation; modelled on the roman types of Claude Garamond and the italic types of Robert Granjon. San Jose: Adobe Systems. pp. 15–21.