Bernd > 11-03-2026, 12:42 PM
Koen G > 11-03-2026, 02:24 PM
Fabrizio Salani > 11-03-2026, 03:21 PM
(11-03-2026, 02:24 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Fabrizio, is this summary of the provenance correct?Yes the steps are correct. I met this seller because I have been collecting antique prints as a hobby for 30 years, (among the most important finds: The parchment print of Raphael's "Madonna of the Fish" of which there are only two copies in the world, mine included, and the one from the English collection was exhibited at Yale Univ. during the exhibition of Marcantonio Raimondi's parchment engravings, the "Salani sheet" so defined by the MIBACT, the only known copy of "The Rescue of Moses" taken from a work by Paolo Caliari known as "Il Veronese" is the oldest known print of the subject; a gold-ground illuminated initial, dating back to the second half of the 14th century, which represents St. Michael in the ancient Byzantine connotation, without archangel wings but with court dignitary's clothes and the scales for weighing souls (psychostasy), with his feet on a grotesque representing the devil, the very rare woodcut by A. Durer "Cain killing Abel", I cite (Just a few of the most important ones). I frequent art fairs, museums, and antiquarian bookshops throughout Italy and France, and by doing so I meet many people—collectors, antique dealers, booksellers, etc.—who contact me when they have something they think might interest me.
- A buyer of antique furniture buys a wardrobe at an antiques fair in Narni.
- The wardrobe contains a mix of old documents.
- The buyer contacts you spontaneously to ask if you are interested in any of the documents.
- You buy the parchment and he sends it to you.
- You had the pigments tested and they contain some components that might be modern (not sure about this, Rene wrote this on the forum 10 years ago).
I am curious about this fascinating object, and like Rene I am convinced that you are honest and genuinely believe in it. Might I ask how you knew the seller? Why did he decide to contact you - were you known as a collector? Were you interested in the Voynich manuscript before, or manuscripts in general? Do you think the seller's story of the wardrobe is 100% reliable?
Rafal > 11-03-2026, 03:39 PM
Quote:[*]A buyer of antique furniture buys a wardrobe at an antiques fair in Narni.
The wardrobe contains a mix of old documents.
Koen G > 11-03-2026, 03:43 PM
Fabrizio Salani > 11-03-2026, 03:59 PM
Fabrizio Salani > 11-03-2026, 04:12 PM
(11-03-2026, 03:39 PM)Rafal Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The seller, whom I had known for years, was an elderly gentleman with a great knowledge of antique furniture and a restorer, who passed away years ago. The parchment was mixed in with what I thought was a collection of paper documents and parchments spanning the 16th to 18th centuries (notarial deeds, property transfers, inheritances, boundaries, various letters, many with seals of various types), and it seemed to me that the whole thing had been collected more for the seals than for the information on the sheets. I didn't ask to see the piece of furniture because I have absolutely no knowledge of antique furniture, ceramics, ivory, silver, or carpets.Quote:[*]A buyer of antique furniture buys a wardrobe at an antiques fair in Narni.
The wardrobe contains a mix of old documents.
Fabrizio, and did you see that wardrobe and another documents? Do you know who was the last owner of the wardrobe?
I wonder if your seller wasn't building some legend
Fabrizio Salani > 11-03-2026, 04:18 PM
(11-03-2026, 03:43 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Thanks! Do you think there is any chance that someone, perhaps through a third party, might intentionally "plant" this parchment with you? That your reputation made you a target as someone who would be (rightfully so) interested in this object, be able to connect it to the VM, and raise awareness about it?Honestly, I have no enemies, and I don't know who would do this to me, or why. If one day it turns out to be a modern copy, that's fine, no problem. It was a wonderful adventure to tell my grandchildren about.
MarcoP > 11-03-2026, 05:17 PM
(11-03-2026, 03:59 PM)Fabrizio Salani Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.This document was put up for auction, but I only learned about it years later. I'm posting it in the hope that someone can provide me with information, as I haven't found anything online. It would be interesting to know its content. I think it could be of great importance for my parchment, too.
I tried to contact the auction house in 2019 to have more information about, but never received a response (the auction was in June 2013)
Quote:Quale cultore degli pseudobiblia anni fa creai, con l’amicale collaborazione di Fabio Massimo Bertolo, direttore allora della casa d’aste Minerva Auctions di Roma, un ‘falso’ storico in forma di opuscolo attribuito a Kircher, nel quale era presente una lettera da lui inviata appunto a Marcus Marci, nella quale gli indicava le proprie considerazioni in merito al codice ricevuto, compresa una sua teoria ermeneutica.
È noto, al contrario, che il celebre gesuita non rispose mai alle richieste che gli giunsero da Praga in merito al codice. Il nostro ‘falso’ aveva il chilometrico titolo Ad dominum Marcus Marci Cronolandensem Epistula de manuscripto notis arcanis exarato ab eodem misso, in qua secreta illius scriptionis usque ad praenses tempus inviolata omnibusque investigationibus elapsa aperire atque in lucem proferre conatus est Athanasius Kircher, Roma, Typis S. Congr. de propag. Fide, 1669. Minerva Auctions 2013; Gatta 2008; Gatta 2009; Gatta 2010; Gatta 2013;
Gatta 2015.
eggyk > 11-03-2026, 06:03 PM
(11-03-2026, 12:42 PM)Bernd Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.As mentioned, the copy is smaller (how much in percent?) than the original.