Peter Stent (c. 1613–1665) was a seventeenth-century London printseller, who from the early 1640s until his death ran one of the biggest printmaking businesses of the day.
Edward Calver wrote verses to a set of Stent's plates from 1635.
[5] He also recycled plates he had acquired, in new printings: for example of the penmanship of Martin Billingsley,[6] by George Gifford,[7] from Sir Robert Peake and Thomas Rowlett via Thomas Hinde.
[8] Stent died in the Great Plague of London.
This English business-related biographical article is a stub.