Benjamin Tabart

Benjamin Tabart (1767–1833) was an English publisher and bookseller of the Juvenile Library in New Bond Street, London. Many of the books in his list were written by himself. In an age of strictly moralizing children's literature, he broke ground with his fairy tales and light-hearted nursery stories and chapbook tales.[1] His is the first printed version (1804) of the tale of Jack and the Beanstalk.[2]

Tabart had for an editor Mary Jane Clairmont, the second wife of William Godwin, and maintained close professional relations with the prolific publisher, Sir Richard Phillips.

The standard bibliography of Tabart's production is Marjorie Moon, Benjamin Tabart's Juvenile Library: A Bibliography of Books for Children Published, Written, Edited and Sold by Mr. Tabart, 1801–1820. (Winchester: St Paul's Bibliographies) 1990.

Notes

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gollark: But this doesn't really mean much. Sanely designed systems now will be using stuff like scrypt/bcrypt/argon2.
gollark: It displays roughly okay.
gollark: I see.
gollark: It's not meaningful to just say "it can do 86970 passwords/second".
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