11-10-2016, 01:03 PM
There has been so much interest shown in my so-called "Libri theory" that I thought I might add a thread here.
If you want to skip the introduction and go straight to the details, see the list of posts below.
For those who prefer a summary:
As far as I was able to discover* nobody in Voynich studies had ever heard of Guglielmo until I began writing up a few posts in 2015, not only because he was in the right place at the right time to give or to return books to the Jesuits, via Fr.Beckx, but because if Beckx had gained the manuscript from Libri, then all bets are off about where it had been kept between the last quarter of the seventeenth century and 1910-12.
_* some people don't think it necessary to acknowledge precedents, and don't like to pass on such information.
Libri was a member of the minor nobility in Italy, apparently a bit of a social climber, and his great friend was a certain nobleman named Manzoni, whose own library at his death was counted as 300, 000 volumes (yes, hree hundred thousand).
Both men lived in Florence and both - I think - had smaller villas in Fiesole.
Guglielmo Libri developed a habit of helping himself to other libraries, perhaps as a way to increase his own social standing, and have something to talk about to the man he so admired, Count Manzoni.
When the Napoleonic wars resulted in the contents of many libraries in Italy being stolen or confiscated, or simply claimed as French in areas taken by Napoleon, our dear Guglielmo wangled his own appointment as "overseer of French libraries". including also an office as Administrator of the “ecclesiastical patrimony of Prato” [ref: Maria Fubini Leuzzi, ‘Guglielmo Libri amministratore …];
Prato links to a certain Datini - but don't you dare! I'm still working on that topic and already published a "Statement of Intention'.

Once he had obtained that official position, Libri's thefts became more numerous and finally more obvious - ito the point where he had to leave France. He aarrived in England with trunks and trunks of rare medieval monastic and secular manuscripts, some certainly as old as the seventh and eighth centuries (i.e. before Charlemagne)
So that is could be why, when Wilfrid arrived in England a couple of decades later - another continental aristocrat with trunks and trunks of medieval manuscripts, one expects that the English might feel a little wary of any very unusual elements in his collection.
By 1868 Libri sensed his death imminent and returned to Florence with what books he'd not sold in England, soon moving up to the small hilltop village and nobles' place of retreat 10 kilometers away, in Fiesole.
According to the Jesuits' offiical history, Fr. Beckx had gone direct from Rome to Fiesole in the 1860s, as Jesuits were being expelled from Rome. He apparently remained there in a former 'Hieronymite' house that had been built by Cosimo de medici on the hill behind the Medici villa.
This old hermitic centre the Jesuits bought. So they inherited anything in it, too. (Interesting..)
Guglielmo passed on most of his remaining collection (not all stolen) to his friend, Count Manzoni, who also had a house in Fiesole. So we can suppose Fiesole held about 350,000 collectable MSS by now.
Guglielmo then died, around the middle of 1869.
Fr. Beckx didn't return to Rome until 1873.
In the meantime, the late Guglielmo's manuscript collection seems to have shrunk, or vanished from the house of Manzoni.
I suppose it's possible that Manzoni took some, but the historical record doesn't suggest he did that.
So Perhaps on his deathbed, Guglielmo had wished to see the most important Jesuit in Italy, who was just up the road, and ask him to organise the return of any illegally-acquired books he still had, to leave this life with a clear conscience. Who knows?
And then finaly... as postscript, a thread recently published here led Rene and Ellie V to mention that Fr. Strickland - who served as middleman between the Jesuits in Rome, and Wilfrid Voynich - once wrote to Wilfrid telling him that for the convenience of the current Provincial, Wilfrid should send the "1,000 books" that Wilfrid had selected to the Jesuit house in florence, where the current Provincial would be able to check them over before they were sent on to Rome.
So what do you think? "The castle" an Italian "palazzo"? The Jesuit Villa, or Count Manzoni's house in Fiesole? The Medici villa?
So the story so far is that we have Fr. Strickland and "1,000 volumes" and Wilfrid Voynich all in the vicinity of Florence - and perhaps ten kilometers from Fiesole, or in Fiesole and ten kilometers from Florence.
(On Wilfrid's own warehouse in Italy - see the original research by Rich Santacoloma, published on his blog. You don't have to accept his theory of a conspiracy).
But wait! There's more.
When Kraus donated the Voynich MS to Yale, he donated *at the same time* works certainly ones earlier "acquired" by Guglielmo Libri.
English collections also contain works that were acquired from a notable English bibliophile, and who in turn had purchased both from Libri and from Wilfrid.
So.. that's the introduction.
----
More details in the posts I put out while researching this previously untouched topic. (I expect that the usual suspects have filched the basic material and neglected to mention whose research they were helping themselves to... lots of Guglielmos around. Not so many Manzonis.
'You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (March 19th., 2015)
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (March 20th., 2015).
'You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.', (March 23rd., 2015)
'You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.' (April 4th., 2015);
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.'. (April 23, 2015);
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (30th., April 2015)
'... You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.' (April 30th., 2015);
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (October 6th., 2015)
'You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.' (March 5th., 2016)
If you want to skip the introduction and go straight to the details, see the list of posts below.
For those who prefer a summary:
As far as I was able to discover* nobody in Voynich studies had ever heard of Guglielmo until I began writing up a few posts in 2015, not only because he was in the right place at the right time to give or to return books to the Jesuits, via Fr.Beckx, but because if Beckx had gained the manuscript from Libri, then all bets are off about where it had been kept between the last quarter of the seventeenth century and 1910-12.
_* some people don't think it necessary to acknowledge precedents, and don't like to pass on such information.
Libri was a member of the minor nobility in Italy, apparently a bit of a social climber, and his great friend was a certain nobleman named Manzoni, whose own library at his death was counted as 300, 000 volumes (yes, hree hundred thousand).
Both men lived in Florence and both - I think - had smaller villas in Fiesole.
Guglielmo Libri developed a habit of helping himself to other libraries, perhaps as a way to increase his own social standing, and have something to talk about to the man he so admired, Count Manzoni.
When the Napoleonic wars resulted in the contents of many libraries in Italy being stolen or confiscated, or simply claimed as French in areas taken by Napoleon, our dear Guglielmo wangled his own appointment as "overseer of French libraries". including also an office as Administrator of the “ecclesiastical patrimony of Prato” [ref: Maria Fubini Leuzzi, ‘Guglielmo Libri amministratore …];
Prato links to a certain Datini - but don't you dare! I'm still working on that topic and already published a "Statement of Intention'.

Once he had obtained that official position, Libri's thefts became more numerous and finally more obvious - ito the point where he had to leave France. He aarrived in England with trunks and trunks of rare medieval monastic and secular manuscripts, some certainly as old as the seventh and eighth centuries (i.e. before Charlemagne)
So that is could be why, when Wilfrid arrived in England a couple of decades later - another continental aristocrat with trunks and trunks of medieval manuscripts, one expects that the English might feel a little wary of any very unusual elements in his collection.
By 1868 Libri sensed his death imminent and returned to Florence with what books he'd not sold in England, soon moving up to the small hilltop village and nobles' place of retreat 10 kilometers away, in Fiesole.
According to the Jesuits' offiical history, Fr. Beckx had gone direct from Rome to Fiesole in the 1860s, as Jesuits were being expelled from Rome. He apparently remained there in a former 'Hieronymite' house that had been built by Cosimo de medici on the hill behind the Medici villa.
This old hermitic centre the Jesuits bought. So they inherited anything in it, too. (Interesting..)
Guglielmo passed on most of his remaining collection (not all stolen) to his friend, Count Manzoni, who also had a house in Fiesole. So we can suppose Fiesole held about 350,000 collectable MSS by now.
Guglielmo then died, around the middle of 1869.
Fr. Beckx didn't return to Rome until 1873.
In the meantime, the late Guglielmo's manuscript collection seems to have shrunk, or vanished from the house of Manzoni.
I suppose it's possible that Manzoni took some, but the historical record doesn't suggest he did that.
So Perhaps on his deathbed, Guglielmo had wished to see the most important Jesuit in Italy, who was just up the road, and ask him to organise the return of any illegally-acquired books he still had, to leave this life with a clear conscience. Who knows?
And then finaly... as postscript, a thread recently published here led Rene and Ellie V to mention that Fr. Strickland - who served as middleman between the Jesuits in Rome, and Wilfrid Voynich - once wrote to Wilfrid telling him that for the convenience of the current Provincial, Wilfrid should send the "1,000 books" that Wilfrid had selected to the Jesuit house in florence, where the current Provincial would be able to check them over before they were sent on to Rome.
So what do you think? "The castle" an Italian "palazzo"? The Jesuit Villa, or Count Manzoni's house in Fiesole? The Medici villa?
So the story so far is that we have Fr. Strickland and "1,000 volumes" and Wilfrid Voynich all in the vicinity of Florence - and perhaps ten kilometers from Fiesole, or in Fiesole and ten kilometers from Florence.
(On Wilfrid's own warehouse in Italy - see the original research by Rich Santacoloma, published on his blog. You don't have to accept his theory of a conspiracy).
But wait! There's more.
When Kraus donated the Voynich MS to Yale, he donated *at the same time* works certainly ones earlier "acquired" by Guglielmo Libri.
English collections also contain works that were acquired from a notable English bibliophile, and who in turn had purchased both from Libri and from Wilfrid.
So.. that's the introduction.
----
More details in the posts I put out while researching this previously untouched topic. (I expect that the usual suspects have filched the basic material and neglected to mention whose research they were helping themselves to... lots of Guglielmos around. Not so many Manzonis.
'You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (March 19th., 2015)
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (March 20th., 2015).
'You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.', (March 23rd., 2015)
'You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.' (April 4th., 2015);
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.'. (April 23, 2015);
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (30th., April 2015)
'... You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.' (April 30th., 2015);
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. (October 6th., 2015)
'You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.' (March 5th., 2016)