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The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits

(1 of 33)
The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Jun 2, 2012 09:43 PM

.

 

Quoted directly:

 

"Dear Colleagues,


Please read the following message carefully: it concerns a massive theft from an important library in Italy. As soon as more information becomes available we will inform you. Committee member Norbert Donhofer and Italian President Fabrizio Govi are working very hard to get all the necessary information, but in the meantime we must advise everyone to be careful and cautious:


Massive Thefts at the Girolamini Library in Naples


Shortly after the reopening of the Girolamini Library in Naples  in April of 2012 the Director, Marino Massimo de Caro, announced that 1500 books were missing (April 17). On April 20 the Library was  closed by the Naples Public Prosecutor. Marino Massimo de Caro has been suspended and was investigated for embezzlement. On May 18, 1000 books, 240 of which have ownership stamps from the Girolamini Library were found in storage in Massimo Marino de Caro’s home city of Verona, and on May 24 Mr. de Caro was arrested on the charge of embezzlement along with four others; a search warrant is out for a fifth. In the meantime Massimo Marino de Caro has confessed to the theft of thousands of books from the library and is cooperating with police in tracing them.

A number of stolen items from the library have been confiscated by the authorities in Munich (16 items), London (28 items), New York and Tokyo(uncertain numbers).


According to what is currently known and what Massimo Marino de Caro has confessed so far, it is very likely that the number of stolen books from the Girolamini Library is higher than 1500 but no definitive list of missing items has been published by Italian authorities so far. It appears also to be clear that the stolen books were spread out via the trade in several countries, in both Europe and elsewhere.


A number of the books can be recognized by a red library stamp (with a Madonna in the center) but not all books bear this stamp.


Italian authorities have requested assistance from the public prosecutor’s offices in several countries so far. They have also asked Interpol headquarters atLyon, France, for assistance.

We would therefore strongly advise our members to check their purchases of – mostly – Italian books from the 15th to the 17th centuries if these volumes were purchased  in the time period between  January to May of 2012.


We will provide our members with a list of stolen books from the Girolamini Library as soon as Italian authorities have published such a document. We hope to be able to provide you with a name and address within a short time that you can contact in case you have recently purchased books you have reason to believe may originate from this massive theft.

 

June 2, 2012

 

Arnoud Gerits

ILAB President"

 

.

Frank Spellman has graciously provided an image of the library stamp for reference:

 

 

 

I'll add one more note: if you've purchased any early books recently which were wanting the title leaves, make a close examination of the last leaf for any sign of the library's ownership stamp having been eradicated.

 

As soon as the Italian authorities release the list, I'll be hosting a mirror site to the Stolen Books Database so titles can be checked by non-ABAA members.

 

.

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The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits

(32 Replies / 3,315 Views)
The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Jun 2, 2012 09:43 PM

.

 

Quoted directly:

 

"Dear Colleagues,


Please read the following message carefully: it concerns a massive theft from an important library in Italy. As soon as more information becomes available we will inform you. Committee member Norbert Donhofer and Italian President Fabrizio Govi are working very hard to get all the necessary information, but in the meantime we must advise everyone to be careful and cautious:


Massive Thefts at the Girolamini Library in Naples


Shortly after the reopening of the Girolamini Library in Naples  in April of 2012 the Director, Marino Massimo de Caro, announced that 1500 books were missing (April 17). On April 20 the Library was  closed by the Naples Public Prosecutor. Marino Massimo de Caro has been suspended and was investigated for embezzlement. On May 18, 1000 books, 240 of which have ownership stamps from the Girolamini Library were found in storage in Massimo Marino de Caro’s home city of Verona, and on May 24 Mr. de Caro was arrested on the charge of embezzlement along with four others; a search warrant is out for a fifth. In the meantime Massimo Marino de Caro has confessed to the theft of thousands of books from the library and is cooperating with police in tracing them.

A number of stolen items from the library have been confiscated by the authorities in Munich (16 items), London (28 items), New York and Tokyo(uncertain numbers).


According to what is currently known and what Massimo Marino de Caro has confessed so far, it is very likely that the number of stolen books from the Girolamini Library is higher than 1500 but no definitive list of missing items has been published by Italian authorities so far. It appears also to be clear that the stolen books were spread out via the trade in several countries, in both Europe and elsewhere.


A number of the books can be recognized by a red library stamp (with a Madonna in the center) but not all books bear this stamp.


Italian authorities have requested assistance from the public prosecutor’s offices in several countries so far. They have also asked Interpol headquarters atLyon, France, for assistance.

We would therefore strongly advise our members to check their purchases of – mostly – Italian books from the 15th to the 17th centuries if these volumes were purchased  in the time period between  January to May of 2012.


We will provide our members with a list of stolen books from the Girolamini Library as soon as Italian authorities have published such a document. We hope to be able to provide you with a name and address within a short time that you can contact in case you have recently purchased books you have reason to believe may originate from this massive theft.

 

June 2, 2012

 

Arnoud Gerits

ILAB President"

 

.

Frank Spellman has graciously provided an image of the library stamp for reference:

 

 

 

I'll add one more note: if you've purchased any early books recently which were wanting the title leaves, make a close examination of the last leaf for any sign of the library's ownership stamp having been eradicated.

 

As soon as the Italian authorities release the list, I'll be hosting a mirror site to the Stolen Books Database so titles can be checked by non-ABAA members.

 

.

Page: 2 of 2
 
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by fine.books (1137 ) View Listings
(24 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 18, 2012 08:38 AM

Whatever the definition of SCHMUCK is, this guy is one of the club.

 

(a gentle aside on the above comment)

 

although a common english usage, and I commonly use it myself, the word that you capitalized refers to a male body part in Yiddish.  I once manage to have an Amazon feedback thrown out based on its profanity for the same word.

 

Just so you do understand the definition.

 

 

 


. ------f-j------

(25 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 18, 2012 09:12 AM

Isn't it a reference to the ex-bit of a male body part left over from a minor bit of 'cosmetic' surgery?

 

.

 


A preoccupation with the next world is a clear indication of an inability to cope credibly with this one. .

(26 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 18, 2012 10:50 AM

OMG -- I'll never say "schmuck" again!  :-p

(27 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 18, 2012 10:52 AM

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schmuck_%28pejorative%29

 

OK, I guess I can still call some guys Dick.  ]:)

(28 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 18, 2012 12:54 PM

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schmuck_%28pejorative%29

 

OK, I guess I can still call some guys Dick.  ]:)

 

 

i have a better idea - 'buchschmuck' !

 

It is area-specific and completely unoffensive. ;)

 

.
(29 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 18, 2012 03:55 PM

buchschmuck -- I like it; sounds bad, but isn't!

(30 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 18, 2012 04:20 PM

.

 

We already have an English word for that - "furniture."  "Schmuck," in German, essentially means "bling."  The brasswork (furniture) in early books might well be called "bookbling" - "buchschmuck" in German, ja?

 

.

 

.

(31 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 19, 2012 02:11 PM

Thank you for the input in regard to my comment.  I am now re-evaluating my useful vocabulary. 

 

In high school, being on the very naive side, I heard the girls using a word not familiar to me that refers to an inanimate body part.  "What a d...," the girls would say.  Off I went to work one day at the restaurant and when something happened, wanting to be "cool" and "in," I used the sentence in the same manner as I had heard at school.  My boss, a young married man, looked at me and asked me if I knew what it meant.  So I went home and looked it up in our HUGE Random House everything-you-ever-wanted-to-know dictionary.

 

After which, I re-evaluated my useful vocabulary.  It must have been related to those mass-market paperbacks they were passing around but never was 'in' enough to join in the chain of recipients.

 


If half the USA population performed one act of kindness daily that would be over 150,000,000 kindly acts every 24 hours, just over a billion each week.

(32 of 32)
Re: The Girolamini Library Thefts: a message from ILAB President Arnoud Gerits
Aug 19, 2012 02:47 PM

an inanimate body part.

 

 

We usually call those "prostheses."

 

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