Bibliotheca Fictiva Collection

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"Shakespeare" reads about a Jesuit plot to kill the King! From the Bibliotheca Fictiva Collection, nr. 4200972

The Bibliotheca Fictiva Collection of Literary and Historical Forgery is the premier library collection in the world that is dedicated entirely to the subject of textual fakery and imposture. The collection totals nearly two thousand rare books and manuscripts and is kept at the Special Collections Department of Johns Hopkins University’s The Sheridan Libraries.

The Oracles of Leo the Wise and the Fall of the Turks, 1596 (from the Bibliotheca Fictiva Collection, nr. 8862176)

The collection has been built up over more than a half-century by the antiquarian booksellers, collectors, and book historians Arthur and Janet Freeman. The first items were acquired by Johns Hopkins in 2011, and hundreds of additional accessions have enriched the collection ever since.

Scope

The Bibliotheca Fictiva collection spans the entire Western tradition from classical and biblical antiquity to the early-to-mid-twentieth centuries and contains both literary forgeries, and credulous defenses or popular demolition of them. Arthur and Janet Freeman collected works in “the entire range of literary forgery, that is to say the forgery of texts, whether historical, religious, philological, or ‘creatively’ artistic, in all languages and countries of the civilized Western world, from c. 400 BC to the end of the twentieth century” and “sought the original publications of such spuria, and their first and ongoing exposures (or obstinate endorsements), in whatever printed editions seemed most significant (along with manuscripts and correspondence when applicable), with a special emphasis […] on evocative annotated and association copies.” Although they “admitted specimens of the more conventional physical forgeries—faked printings, falsified provenance and ‘autograph’ annotation, etc.”, their main interest lay “in the deceptive creation of spurious text and fictive record, and the history of its investigation and discredit, or indeed its survival in present-day controversy.”[1][2]

Chronology

Access, valorization and digitization

References

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