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1. THE GUTENBERG BIBLE |
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[BIBLIA LATINA] (the “Gutenberg Bible” or “42-Line
Bible”). Fragment of 31 consecutive leaves. [Mainz: Johannes Gutenberg,
Johannes Fust, and Peter Schoeffer, in press before October 1454]. Bridwell Library’s 31 leaves of the Gutenberg Bible, including the books of Jeremiah, Lamentations, and Baruch, came from an incomplete second volume discovered in 1828 in a farmhouse near Trier, Germany. It eventually became the property of a Jewish chemist who sold it through Sotheby’s in 1937 to finance his escape from Nazi Germany to London. The American buyer was Arthur A. Houghton, Jr., who in 1953 turned it over to Charles Scribner’s Sons in New York. This firm removed 116 leaves of the New Testament for a collector in Chicago (they are now at the Lilly Library at Indiana University) and sold the 132 remaining leaves individually and in small groups. The largest of these groups, the present 31-leaf fragment, went to John M. Crawford, Jr., of New York City, whose agents sold it to Bridwell Library on 11 June 1970.
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Exhibit Curated by Eric White,
PhD Webdesign by Elizabeth Haluska-Rausch, PhD Photography by Jon Speck |
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