Gutenberg’s dream was to create a way of mechanically reproducing medieval liturgical manuscripts without losing any of their colour or beauty of design. (v.5, 581) His dream was destroyed, however, when Fust won a suit against him, the record of which is destroyed, however, when Fust won a suit against him, the record of which is preserved in part in what is called the Helmaspergersches Notariatsininstrument ( the Helmasperger Notarial Instrument), dated November 6, 1455, now in the library of the University of Gottingen. Gutenberg was ordered to pay Fust the total sum of 2,026 guilders, which included the two loans and compound interest. Instead of the chance to perfect his invention, he faced complete financial ruin. (581) Printing the Bible. There is no reason to doubt that the printing of certain books (werck der Bucher, specifically mentioned in the record of the trial, refers to the Forty-two-Line Bible that was Gutenberg’s masterpiece) was completed, according to Gutenberg’s major biographers, in 1455 at the latest. It was estimated that the sale of the Forty-two-Line Bible alone would have produced many times over the sum owed Fust by Gutenberg, and there exists no explanation as to why these tangible assets were not counted among Gutenberg’s property at the trial. After winning his suit, Fust gained control of the type for the Bible, and for Gutenberg’s second masterpiece, a Psalter, and all of Gutenberg’s other printing equipment. (581) He continued to print,using Gutenberg’s materials, with the assistance of Peter Schoffer, his son-in-law, who had been Gutenberg’s most skilled employee and a witness against him in the 1455 trial. The first printed book in Europe to bear the name of its printer is a magnificent Psalter completed in Mainz on August 14, 1457, which lists Johann Fust and Peter Schoffer. . . . .The Psalter is decorated with hundreds of polychrome initial letters and delicate scroll borders that were printed in a most ingenious technique based on multiple inking on a single metal block. Most experts are agreed that it would have been impossible for Fust and Schoffer alone to have invented and executed the intricate technical equipment necessary to execute this process between November 6, 1455, when Gutenberg lost control of his printing establishment and August 14, 1457. (582)