Reporting in the time of Bouts
Not only academics were now making use of the new printing press. Other people could also have their religious ideas or views printed and widely disseminated around the world for relatively little money. This development caused social unrest. The printed word had always been a source of reliable knowledge, but could it still be trusted now?
In the 15th century, there were no newspapers, magazines or other regular news reporting like today. Miraculous incidents, scientific discoveries, knowledge of the 'New World' and all sorts of newsworthy information were disseminated in the form of reports, leaflets, pamphlets and spectacle prints. Reporting on miraculous occurrences, for instance, was often coloured. Pamphlets or leaflets often appeared anonymously and were sold on the streets by market vendors. This popular form of news reporting reached wide sections of the population and is in fact a forerunner of the modern tabloid press. Although this 'coloured' reporting was often considered truthful in Bouts' time, today we know better: is this fake news avant la lettre?