A number of rudimentary introductions to the Greek and Hebrew alphabets have been printed in the 16th century: in a few pages and with a few examples they detail the essentials of the Greek and Hebrew alphabets and their pronunciations. A grammar proper - i.e. a study of the language itself - is not included. The first known, a combined Alphabetum Graecum et Hebraicum, was published in Paris in 1528 by Robert Estienne. This kind of editions remained a specialty of the Estiennes. H. Omont, 'Alphabets grecs et hébreux publiés à Paris au XVIe siècle' in Bulletin de la Société de l'Histoire de Paris et de l'Ile de France, novembre-décembre 1884, details 19 Greek (between 1528 and 1590) and 20 Hebrew (between 1528 and 1567) Alphabets printed at Paris. Of the 19 Greek Alphabets 10, and of the 20 Hebrew Alphabets another 10, were published by the Estiennes. Omont lists also some 16th century Alphabets printed outside Paris: 5 Greek alphabets (1540-1600: 2 at Geneva by the Estiennes; 2 at Lyons; 1 at Frankfurt) and 7 Hebrew Alphabets (3 at Geneva by the Estiennes; another one at Geneva; 1 at Basel, 1 at Strasbourg, 1 at Antwerp). The latter is a Plantinian edition - but the only one of the entire list with a different title (Prima Hebraicae linguae elementa…) and with the author named (Melissander: see no. cp010165). The three known Plantinian Alphabets are not mentioned by Omont. All three were largely inspired by, if not textually following, the Estienne-editions.