Vincenzo Valgrisi

Vincenzo Valgrisi, also known under his Latinized name as Vicentius Valgrisius (c. 1490), was a French-born printer active primarily in Venice in the 16th century.

An act of sale dated December 16, 1532 documents that Valgrisi, along with his father-in-law acquired a bookshop at the sign of The Head of Erasmus where he attests to having lived in Venice for many years.

In 1570, the Roman Inquisition fined him 50 ducats (about 6oz of gold) for selling prohibited books.

His storehouse was found to contain 1,150 volumes of prohibited works, including 400 copies of Simolachri, historie e figure de la morte, Valgrisi's imitation of Hans Holbein's Dance of Death.

[2] His edition of Orlando Furioso by Ariosto is noted for two innovations: the start of every canto was preceded by a full page illustration (not a small vignette as was common in his time), and the text was accompanied by maps that followed the movements of the characters.

Valgrisi's printer's mark. It is composed of a tau cross around which a snake coils and supported by two hands and labelled with his name, Vincent.