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Posts Tagged ‘Divine Comedy’

Gems of the Haverford Library

Monday, June 6th, 2011

As I mentioned in a previous post, a few weekends ago was alumni weekend. On that Friday, an alumnus came in and asked to see an item that caused most work in the library to stop. All of the student interns came to see the book the alumnus requested, namely a copy of Shakespeare’s first folio.
Shakespeare First Folio

Oooh. Ahhh. I was really surprised that we had something as rare and precious as a first edition Shakespeare work. There are 228 still in existence of the approximately 1,000 originally printed. A copy stolen from Durham University was valued at 15 million pounds or approximately 25 million U.S. dollars. I was astounded that I could read through this book just for fun.

Then John Anderies, the Head of Special Collections, told me that this was only one of a few astounding works that we had in special collections. Apparently we also have a 1472 Foligno edition of Dante’s Divine Comedy. This astounding book is even rarer than Shakespeare’s first folio; there are only 14 copies of the Foligno edition in the world, and it is the first printed edition of the book. It is so old that the book still has illuminations, ornate pictures or letters done in gold leaf and painted.
Foligno Dante
I and a few other students came to the archives the next day to study the Foligno copy.
'Fords Reading
I was thrilled and astounded to be able to handle amazing manuscripts like the Foligno Dante and Shakespeare’s first folio. These pieces are part of the William Pyle Philips collection. Philips was the class of 1902, and donated a number of priceless artifacts to the library including a first edition of Paradise Lost, the famed Descartes letter, and a copy of Copernicus’ De Revolutionibus Orbium Caelestium. Seeing and leafing through these pieces reminded me of the amazing hidden resources that our library holds, and wish that more students availed themselves of the absolutely unique opportunities that Special Collections provides.

Tags: Alumni Weekend, Dante Alighieri, Divine Comedy, First Folio, William Pyle Phillips, William Shakespeare
Posted in Announcements, Events, Rare Books, Students, Treasures | Comments Off

Family and Friends Weekend in Special Collections

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Special Collections was open on Saturday, October 24th, and we had about 35 visitors for Family and Friends Weekend.  Some came with very specific interests, including viewing the 1711 charter of the William Penn Charter School signed by Penn and with his great seal, but others came in as family clusters and were drawn to the displays we made available for them.  There was a good bit of ooh-ing and ahh-ing, as they inspected:

  • The 1711 King James Bible and its miniature version
  • A 1683 plat survey of Philadelphia by William Penn’s surveyor, Thomas Holme (see illustration), which is essentially the  lay-out of Philadelphia even today

holme

  • Amos Nattini’s lithographic illustrations of all 100 cantos of Dant’e Divine Comedy, along with a miniature version of the famous text
  • The Germantown Quaker Protest Against Slavery, 1688, the first such protest in North America
  • Maxims by William Penn published in the Select Works of William Penn, 1771, along with a miniature of the maxim on Time
  • A photograph of a dorm in Barclay with army gear in evidence in the 1940s when a percentage of the students were army men
  • A pointed letter by Supreme Court Justice, William O. Douglas to his friend Fred Rodell, class of 1926, indicating dismay at a meeting of the other justices while he (Douglas) was away that overturned his vote for a stay of execution in the Rosenberg spy case
  • And last, but by no means least, the extraordinary illustrated chemistry notebook of Maxfield Parrish while a student at Haverford in 1890.

The event by all counts was most satisfactory.

Tags: Barclay Hall, Divine Comedy, Family Weekend, Germantown, King James Bible, Maxfield Parrish, Philadelphia, William Penn, William Penn Charter School
Posted in Events, Treasures | Comments Off

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