NOVEL Kingdombuilding: All My Inventions Are Novelty Chapter 80: Taking Another Step Forward

Kingdombuilding: All My Inventions Are Novelty

Chapter 80: Taking Another Step Forward
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Chapter 80: Taking Another Step Forward

"Yes, while the industrial district is under construction, now is the time to build the Oxford Academy as well. This way, the common people in the domain will have a place to study." Simon said.

As more and more people joined the Oxford Academy for classes, the current space was becoming increasingly inadequate.

Thus, Simon decided to build a proper academy, the first comprehensive school close to a modern educational institution.

The academy would cover a large area and integrate various specialised disciplines. The textbooks he had been writing day and night were prepared for the Oxford Academy.

Given that education in Brambleford was essentially starting from scratch, and he couldn’t create countless clones like a ninja, Simon had to adopt a method where senior students taught junior students.

He only needed to teach the highest-level students, and the knowledge would be passed down layer by layer.

In isolated civilisations, people often grow complacent with their current lives and show little interest in change, which is extremely dangerous.

In modern times, it wasn’t until the cannons of foreign powers blasted open the doors of the isolated civilisation that the entire society woke up and sought change. But by then, it was already too late.

Therefore, Simon wanted to spread different ideas throughout his domain to break the long-standing cultural constraints and awaken the people of the Eldorian Empire, prompting them to make the necessary changes.

He wanted to usher in an era of a hundred schools of thought contending once again, ending the age where a single ideology dominated the land.

Of course, he wouldn’t openly oppose the existing culture, as that would inevitably provoke attacks from scholars across the empire, which would be detrimental to his efforts to recruit talent. He only needed to abolish the policy of ’sole reverence for singular culture’ and encourage other academic disciplines.

He believed the people could distinguish right from wrong, what to preserve, and what to discard.

At this moment, only a portion of the one hundred thousand slaves had been put to work. Until new workshops were established, they could only serve as construction workers.

That’s why Simon had Baldwin seize this opportunity to build the Oxford Academy.

Baldwin nodded and then brought up another matter: "My Lord, the massacre of the seventy-two households in Ashenford has been solved. Congratulations, Your Highness, on gaining another city. The Goldwynd family has also suffered heavy losses."

A faint smile appeared on Simon’s lips. "Brambleford, Dunmere and Ashenford, we’ve already taken control of half of the military and administrative power. Let them continue to fight among themselves. We just need to steadily consolidate our power from top to bottom. Chief Secretary, your task is not light."

Baldwin smiled. "This official is not afraid of hard work, only that Your Highness might not support me. Now that Your Highness is backing me, I will naturally devote myself fully, even to the point of death."

Simon was grateful that, although his predecessor had been a scoundrel, there were still some talented people around him. Otherwise, he wouldn’t have been able to achieve so much alone.

"Also, I see that Your Highness looks tired. You must take care of your health. I heard from Ysabeau that Your Highness has been writing a lot and needs to make many copies. These tasks can be delegated to a few scholars." Baldwin advised, his habit of offering counsel as a former censor still intact.

Simon laughed. His fatigue was due to staying up late writing textbooks, but he had no intention of copying them himself. He spoke. "Chief Secretary, I’m not foolish. I have a clever plan."

Hearing this, Baldwin became interested. For scholars, books were of utmost importance. In the Eldorian Empire, books were mostly copied by hand, which made them expensive. Many students from poor families couldn’t afford them. He spoke. "It seems Your Highness is about to surprise me again."

Simon waved to Baldwin and spoke. "Come, I’ll show you."

With that, Simon took Baldwin to the Machinery Department. In Simon’s vision, the Machinery Department was no longer just a production unit but a research and development centre.

Simon’s new technologies would be born here, as it housed Brambleford’s most skilled technical talents.

Inside the Machinery Department, Fjord was leading craftsmen in producing small metal blocks. These blocks were engraved with standard English letters; these were the type moulds for movable type printing.

Simon was currently preparing to establish a new workshop: the printing workshop, which would use lead-type printing.

This was a printing technique similar to movable type printing but more advanced. Instead of using clay, the type moulds were made of metal, which extended their lifespan and eliminated the need to discard them after a single use.

This method was inspired by the lead-type printing technique from the 15th century in the modern era, which Simon deemed the most feasible to implement.

If all went well, this printing technique could allow a printing press to produce three hundred sheets of paper per day, which was more than enough for Simon’s needs.

After all, with enough workers and type moulds, mass production was possible.

When Baldwin saw the movable type, his jaw dropped in astonishment. The Eldorian Empire currently used block printing, a slow and inflexible method.

What he saw now was a completely different scene. The type moulds beside Fjord varied in size and could be arranged flexibly according to requirements.

"This... This is a monumental achievement that will benefit generations to come! If Baldwin had previously looked down on Simon’s money-making products, he now admired him from the perspective of a scholar.

Simon wasn’t surprised by Baldwin’s reaction. This lead-type printing technique utilised lead for casting the moulds, and Simon had standardized the font sizes based on modern measurements, such as ’small four’ and ’small five.’

This was why the type moulds Fjord produced varied in size.

"Chief Secretary, Brambleford will no longer lack books. Of course, there’s one more thing: paper." Simon said.

Printing also required suitable paper. While establishing the printing industry, Simon hadn’t neglected the construction of a paper-making workshop. The art of paper-making had remained largely unchanged throughout history, with the main differences lying in the machinery and labour.

For power, Simon could only rely on water and oxen, so the Machinery Department was also producing ox-powered pulp beaters to improve the efficiency of pulp production. The paper-making process essentially involved degumming, pulping, sheet formation, and drying. Shortening any of these steps could increase productivity.

Degumming involved steaming and soaking the raw materials in an alkaline solution to fiberise them. Pulping turned these fibres into a paste, and sheet formation used a sieve to lift the pulp, creating wet paper, which was then dried. fгee𝑤ebɳoveɭ.cøm

For now, Simon didn’t need much paper, so a purely manual and ox-powered paper-making workshop could produce enough paper for Brambleford. After all, this was still an era where illiteracy was rampant.

Compulsory education was something he couldn’t even dream of at the moment; there was no money and no teachers.

For now, he could only focus on cultivating a group of talented individuals and take things step by step.

Overall, the most important thing he had achieved was introducing lead-type printing technology. This technology had been used in the modern era until laser printing replaced it. For the Eldorian Empire, this was nothing short of a revolution in printing.

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