GUILLARD (CHARLOTTE), printer-bookseller from 1518 to 1556.—One mark representing her sign, a golden sun in a starry sky. Below, two lions erect, holding a shield on which are the initials C. G. This lady carried on the printing trade for more than fifty years. She married first, in 1502, Berthold Rembold, a partner of the first printer in Paris, Ulric Gering. Berthold, who had established his domicile on rue Saint-Jacques, 'au Soleil d'Or,' having left Charlotte a widow in 1518, she carried on the business alone until 1520, when she married Claude Chevallon, who took up his abode on the same premises. Chevallon having departed this life, in his turn, in 1542, Charlotte continued in the business until 1556. It was during her second widowhood that the mark in question, which we reproduce herewith, was engraved. I have seen it on a quarto volume entitled, 'Institutionum civilium libri quatuor, 1550. Parisiis, apud Carolam Guillard, viduam Claudi Chevallonii, sub Soli aureo, et Guilelmum Desbois, sub Cruce Alba, in via divi Jacobi.' Claude Chevallon had upon his mark, by way of allusion to his name, two horses standing (cheval-long). But M. Silvestre publishes as his (no. 395) a mark which has the lions.
HARSY (OLIVIER DE), bookseller at Paris, from 1556 to 1584, used Gueullard's mark on several works written by Nicolas Ellain; among others, 'Elegia libri duo ad Joach. Bellaium, quo adhuc vivo eos scripsit.—Parisiis, e typogr. Olivarii de Harsy, ad Cornu cervi, in clauso Brunello'; quarto, 1560.[476] I have no idea why de Harsy adopted Gueullard's mark.
HOTOT (FABIAN), printer at Orléans. See BADE (CONRAD).
HOUIC (ANTOINE), bookseller at Paris. See REGNAULT (BARBE).