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Gervasius Brisacensis
Cursus Theologicus
1706, Koln (Coloniae Agrippinae), Joannis Schlebusch
From the very beginnings of book history, Bibles and sacred texts often bore splendid bindings: their covers, lavishly adorned, emphasized the importance of the content and were meant as acts of devotion.
For this reason, they were preserved in the church treasury rather than the library, considered part of the liturgical apparatus. Even sacred works intended for private use were frequently given elaborate bindings, executed with costly and precious materials. Such is the case of this binding in vellum, richly decorated and with partial clasps - with a curious provenance.
An ex-libris and stamp read Bibliothek des Kapuzinerklosters Eichstätt, tracing the book’s provenance to the Capuchin monastery founded in the seventeenth century. There, the friars assembled a working library to support preaching, pastoral care, and study. Over time, the collection grew into a remarkable repository of theology, philosophy, history, and the natural sciences, reflecting both the order’s intellectual pursuits and the cultural currents of the region. Following the monastery’s closure in the twentieth century, stewardship of the library passed to the Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt.
This volume is probably a survivor of the 2007 “incident” that provoked considerable controversy in Germany: it emerged that the University library had pulped 80 tons of books and journals, including roughly a quarter of the 300,000 volumes of philosophy and theology originally donated by chapuchin monasteries of Bavaria for inclusion in the University library’s collections. An inquiry commissioned by the Government of the Free State of Bavaria eventually concluded that no valuable works had been discarded or destroyed.
The binding and story of trhis book mirror each other: on the outside, a vellum cover tooled with pearls, floral flourishes, and medallions, meant to proclaim devotion as much as to protect the text. On the inside, a provenance that carries it from Capuchin shelves to university vaults, narrowly surviving the great “book pulping scandal” of 2007. It is at once an artifact of faith, artistry, and controversy: a survivor with style.
n/a - sold as binding
Binding in vellum, richly tooled in blind with floral motifs and ornaments, in part designed as strings of pearls. The central panels of both covers display a small decorative medallion.
The binding was originally fitted with two clasps: one is still present and functional, the other is partially damaged. The edges are painted blue.
Dimensions (inches): 6 3/4 x 4 x 1.5
Gervasius Brisacensis (1648–1717), Capuchin theologian from Breisach, author of the Cursus theologicus .