Book curse
A book curse was a widely employed method of discouraging the thievery of manuscripts during the medieval period. The use of book curses dates back much further, to pre-Christian times, when the wrath of gods was invoked to protect books and scrolls.
History
Ancient curses
The earliest known book curse can be traced to Ashurbanipal, King of Assyria from 668 to 627 BCE, who had the following curse written on many or all of the tablets collected at the library at Ninevah, considered to be the earliest example of a systematically collected library:[1]
I have transcribed upon tablets the noble products of the work of the scribe which none of the kings who have gone before me had learned, together with the wisdom of Nabu insofar as it existeth [in writing]. I have arranged them in classes, I have revised them and I have placed them in my palace, that I, even I, the ruler who knoweth the light of Ashur, the king of the gods, may read them. Whosoever shall carry off this tablet, or shall inscribe his name on it, side by side with mine own, may Ashur and Belit overthrow him in wrath and anger, and may they destroy his name and posterity in the land.
Another curse from Ninevah states: "Whoever removes [the tablet], writes his name in the place of my name, may Ashur and Ninlil, angered and grim, cast him down, erase his name, his seed, in the land.[2] Other book curses were more discreet: “He who fears Anu, Enlil, and Ea will return it to the owner’s house the same day”, and “He who fears Anu and Antu will take care of it and respect it”.[3]
Because these tablets were made of clay, and thus easily vandalized, there were specific curses to protect against such acts, such as: “In the name of Nabu and Marduk, do not rub out the text!”[4] Nabu was the Babylonian god of writing and wisdom, son of Marduk and Sarpanitu.[5] A more detailed curse to prevent vandalism went as follows:
He who breaks this tablet or puts it in water or rubs it until you cannot recognize it [and] cannot make it to be understood, may Ashur, Sin, Shamash, Adad and Ishtar, Bel, Nergal, Ishtar of Ninevah, Ishtar of Arbela, Ishtar of Bit Kidmurri, the gods of heaven and earth and the gods of Assyria, may all these curse him with a curse that cannot be relieved, terrible and merciless, as long as he lives, may they let his name, his seed, be carried off from the land, may they put his flesh in a dog’s mouth”.[6]
Medieval curses
In their medieval usage, many of these curses vowed that harsh repercussions would be inflicted on anyone who appropriated the work from its proper owner. The punishments usually included excommunication, damnation, or anathema. Excommunication was the lightest of the curses because, in the Medieval Catholic Church, it was a reversible state. Both excommunication and anathema required identification of the guilty party as well as action on the part of the Church. Damnation had the benefit of not requiring human intervention as it was a state that the Creator, not the Church, visited instantly upon the soul of the perpetrator. All three types of curses were considered to be effective deterrents against the book thief.
At the time, these curses provided a significant social and religious penalty for those who would steal or deface books, which were all considered to be precious works before the advent of the printing press. Writes Stephen Greenblatt, in The Swerve: How the Word Became Modern: “Books were scarce and valuable. They conferred prestige on the monastery that possessed them, and the monks were not inclined to let them out of their sight. On occasion monasteries tried to secure their possession by freighting their precious manuscripts with curses.”[7]
One oft-quoted example of a book curse, purportedly from a Barcelona monastery, is actually fictional,[8] taken from the 1909 hoax The Old Librarian's Almanack:[9]
And what Condemnation shall befit the accurst Wretch (for he cannot justly claim the title of Man) who pilfers and purloins for his own selfish ends such a precious article as a Book? I am reminded of the Warning display'd in the Library of the Popish Monastery of San Pedro at Barcelona. This is the version English'd by Sir Matthew Manhan, who saw it writ in Latin in the Monastery, as he himself describes in his learn'd Book, Travels in Spanish Countries, 1712. The Warning reads thusly: "For him that stealeth a Book from this Library, let it change to a Serpent in his hand and rend him. Let him be struck with Palsy, and all his Members blasted. Let him languish in Pain, crying aloud for Mercy and let there be no surcease to his Agony till he sink to Dissolution. Let Book-worms gnaw his Entrails in token of the Worm that dieth not, and when at last he goeth to his final Punishment let the Flames of Hell consume him for ever and aye.'
Medieval scribes wrote most curses in the book's colophon. This was the one place in a medieval manuscript where a scribe was free to write what he wished, so book curses tend to be unique to each book.[10][11][12] Occasionally, a clever scribe would put a curse in the form of a rhyme:
Steal not this book my honest friend
For fear the gallows should be your end,
And when you die the Lord will say
And where's the book you stole away?[13]
Document curse
A significant subset of the book curse is the document curse. These curses were employed in much the same way as the book curse, but with one significant difference; while book curses almost always protected a physical book, document curses were generally worded to protect the text of the document that contained them. They were often found in wills, grants, charters and sometimes in writs.[14]
See also
References
- ^ Norton, Jeremy. "Knowledge as Power: The Earliest Systematically Collected Library as Distinct from an Archive (668 BCE – 627 BCE)". History of Information. Retrieved September 14, 2014.
- ^ Casson, L. (2001). Libraries in the ancient world. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 12.
- ^ Casson, 2001, p.13
- ^ Casson, 2001, p.13
- ^ Lurker, Manfred (2004). The Routledge Dictionary of Gods, Goddesses, Devils & Demons. Routledge. p. 131. ISBN 9780203685259.
- ^ Casson, 2001, pp. 13-14
- ^ Greenblatt, Stephen (2011). The Swerve: How the World Became Modern. W.W. Norton & Company. p. 30. ISBN 9780393064476.
- ^ Higgins, Colin (June 8, 2011). "Marx, Pandora & the Tower of Porn". Times Higher Education. Retrieved Jan 1, 2012.
- ^ Wiegand, Wayne A. (1979). The History of a Hoax: Edmund Lester Pearson, John Cotton Dana, and the Old Librarian's Almanack. Beta Phi Mu.
- ^ Cyrus, Cynthia J. (2009). The Scribes for Women's Convents in Late Medieval Germany. University of Toronto Press. p. 162.
- ^ Downton, Dawn Rae (December 13, 2013). The Little Book of Curses and Maledictions for Everyday Use. Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.
- ^ Goodspeed, Edgar Johnson (1935). The Curse in the Colophon. Willett, Clark, & Company.
- ^ Murray, Stuart (2009). The Library: An Illustrated History. Skyhorse Publishing. p. 41. ISBN 9781602397064.
- ^ Danet, Brenda; Bogoch, Bryna Bogoch (Spring 1992). "'Whoever Alters this, may God Turn His Face from Him on the Day of Judgment': Curses in Anglo-Saxon Legal Documents". The Journal of American Folklore. 105 (416): 132–165, page142.
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External links
- Anderson, Sandra (2003). "Bibliomania and the Medieval Book Curse". Retrieved 3 May 2008.
- Basbanes, Nicholas A. (1995). A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books. Owl Books. p. 35. ISBN 0-8050-6176-2.
- University Libraries, University of Colorado Boulder (July 15 – September 13, 2002). "European Manuscripts from the Middle Ages, 500-1500". Ploughing the Parchment exhibit. Retrieved March 2, 2006.