Book curse

A bookplate of Malcolm Ferguson (1920–2011)
A bookplate of Malcolm Ferguson (1920–2011), example of a modern book curse

A book curse was a widely employed method of discouraging the theft of manuscripts during the medieval period in Europe. The use of book curses dates back much further, to pre-Christian times, when the wrath of gods was invoked to protect books and scrolls.

Usually invoking threat of excommunication, or anathema, the more creative and dramatic detail the better. Generally located in the first or last page of a volume as part of the colophon, these curses were often considered the only defense in protection of highly coveted books and manuscripts. This was notably a time in which people believed in curses, which was critical to its effect, thus believing that, if a person stole or ripped out a page, they were destined to die an agonizing death.[1] With the introduction of the printing press, these curses instead became "bookplates [which] enabled users to declare ownership through a combination of visual, verbal, and textual resources. For the first time, warning, threatening, and cursing had become multimodal."[2]

A book curse might read, for example, "If anyone take away this book, let him die the death; let him be fried in a pan; let the falling sickness and fever seize him; let him be broken on the wheel, and hanged. Amen."[1]

  1. ^ a b Drogin, Marc (1983). Anathema!: Medieval Scribes and the History of Book Curses. United States: Allanheld & Schram. ISBN 0839003013.
  2. ^ O'Hagan, L.A. (2020). Steal not this book my honest friend: Threats, Warnings, and Curses in the Edwardian Book. Textual Cultures : Text, Contexts, Interpretation, 13(2), 244–274. https://doi.org/10.14434/textual.v13i2.31604