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Ancient texts on show at World of the Book at the State Library of Victoria offer a portal to the past
Ancient texts on show at World of the Book at the State Library of Victoria offer a portal to the past

ABC News

time10-08-2025

  • General
  • ABC News

Ancient texts on show at World of the Book at the State Library of Victoria offer a portal to the past

In the presence of a tightly rolled, yellowed scroll in the State Library of Victoria, it is hard not to feel a bit awe-struck. Inside a glass cabinet in the centre of the library sits the oldest known mass-printed text in the world, the Hyakumantō Darani. The finger-length item is a Buddhist prayer scroll that circulated more than 700 years before the invention of the Gutenberg press. Its name translates as "1 million pagodas and Dharani prayers", explains Dr Anna Welch, principal curator at the library. The Hyakumantō Darani is a surviving example of what are thought to have been 1 million woodblock-printed scrolls and mini wooden pagodas originally commissioned by the Japanese empress Shōtoku in 764 to send to Japan's 10 major temples. And it is the centrepiece of the library's 20th anniversary World of the Book exhibition. The flat version of the scroll on display in the cabinet is a facsimile, but Dr Welch was there when the original was unfurled. "It was extremely moving," she says. "We all held our breath. "What a privilege to be around something that tells us the beginnings of the story of printed text and has survived 1,300 years. "There are so many cultures immersed in the production of this Buddhist scroll in medieval Japan, printed using Chinese characters. It's an extraordinary fusion. That's the history of the book. It is a global history." In the World of the Book, this global history spans 4,000 years of technological development in recorded writing, beginning with the oldest object in the library's collection: a cuneiform tablet. The matchbook-sized stone piece from Southern Mesopotamia (now Iraq), dated at 2050 BC, is a proto-tax receipt. "It's the script that's used to record the Epic of Gilgamesh, which is the oldest surviving work of literature … in the world," Dr Welch says. New to the library's collection and also on display for the first time is a medieval scribe's knife. Thought to have been made in Germany or the Netherlands in the 15th century, the knife was used to hold down the vellum, a post-papyrus parchment invented by the Romans and made of animal skin. "Because it's a skin, it reacts to humidity and it'll curl up in the air," Dr Welch says. As well as being used to hold down parchment using one hand — while writing with a quill and ink with the other — the knife is also "a correction tool". "It's kind of a white-out of its day, in that you could use it to scrape off a mistake that you'd written," Dr Welch says. It is from an era when scribes, artists and skilled craftspeople painstakingly made books by hand. As is the oldest book in Australia, the De Institutione Musica (Principles of Music), dated at 1100 AD, which is also on display. Set next to the book, with its ornate leather binding, yellowed pages with precise script and richly illustrated borders, the practical — yet beautiful — scribe's tool seems to bring the world of these books to life. You can almost smell the vellum, hear the scrape of the ink-dipped quill against the parchment. This, Dr Welch says, is one of the intentions of the exhibition: to get people to think about the materiality of the book and what it signifies. "Not just what's in the book, but how is it made? What does its form tell us about its cultural context, its meaning and about our own assumptions of it?" The Darani was the curatorial inspiration for a section within the exhibition that explores cross-cultural connections and differing perspectives of Japan's influence on the West (and vice versa) — particularly after the 17th century. The mini exhibition showcases some of the pre-Gutenberg history of mass printing and the artistry of Japanese woodblock prints, from Hokusai to Kawanabe Kyōsai. Seeing Japanese editions of popular Western books, and Westernised versions of Japanese art, in context with the original is a little like peering through Alice's looking glass: culture reflected, refracted and reframed. A manga version of Les Misérables sits next to an English translation of Astro Boy. Beneath lies a series of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles books — heroes in half-shells with nunchaku and ninja stars. The World of the Book circumnavigates one of the upper galleries of the State Library's striking domed reading room, presenting more than 300 works from its collection across five thematic areas. Some particular beauties include a 1688 edition of the first science fiction novel written by a woman, The Blazing World by Margaret Cavendish; illustrated editions of Oscar Wilde's novels by Aubrey Beardsley and André Derain; the collection of surrealist and Dada art books, with illustrations by Salvador Dalí, Joan Miró and Max Ernst; and the section on colour theory, featuring an essay with hand-painted watercolours by Mary Gartside, a French edition of Leonardo da Vinci's A Treatise on Painting and print works from Bauhaus artist Josef Albers's Interaction of Color. The exhibition showcases a diverse range of printing and book manufacturing technologies — most of which must be carefully protected from the fading effects of light by controlling how frequently they are handled and displayed. With one peculiar exception: a large codex art book by Lebanese Australian artist Deanna Hitti, featuring the figure of a woman hidden in a wash of blue. "This is a cyanotype," Dr Welch says. "It's a non-camera form of photography that was developed in the 19th century. What's really amazing about cyanotypes is that they're light-sensitive. When you display them like this, they fade quite quickly. But if you close the book, it recharges." Might this collection of precious, ancient books talk to each other, after dark, Night at the Museum-style? "Oh, they have lives," Dr Welch says. "They absolutely have lives, these books … They're like magic books to me. "There's an intangible quality to them that transcends their material form, but comes from it. "It is a kind of time machine." The World of the Book is free and running at the State Library of Victoria until May 17, 2026.

Ancient example of printed text to be displayed in Melbourne: ‘It unites us all'
Ancient example of printed text to be displayed in Melbourne: ‘It unites us all'

The Guardian

time12-05-2025

  • General
  • The Guardian

Ancient example of printed text to be displayed in Melbourne: ‘It unites us all'

One of the world's earliest recorded examples of printed text will go on display in Melbourne this month, to mark the 20th anniversary of a long-running exhibition celebrating the evolution of the book. The historical printed matter – known as the Hyakumantō Darani – dates back more than 1,250 years, when the most powerful woman in Japan, the Empress Shōtoku, ordered the creation of one million paper scrolls bearing Buddhist prayers. Each was to be encased in its own miniature wooden pagoda, though it is unclear if the ambitious decree ever reached its target. Today, about 44,000 of the Hyakumantō Darani are thought to be in existence, including one acquired by the State Library of Victoria last year. It's part of the institution's blockbuster World of the Book exhibition, which has so far attracted five million visitors over two decades. The acquisition of the Hyakumantō Darani marks a rare example of printed text's origins in Asia, about 700 years before the Gutenberg printing press democratised literacy across Europe. 'I would say it's the most exciting acquisition that's been made in the library in my time,' said Dr Anna Welch, the library's principal collection curator. Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning The history of the book is global and unites us all as humans, she said, and the Hyakumantō Darani is the epitome of that ideal: it is a Buddhist Sanskrit text, originating in India, printed in Japan, in Chinese characters. Small and extremely fragile, the scroll has been protected in its ornamental casing for the past millennium. Library curators unrolled it briefly to digitise it and make a facsimile, which will go on display next to the pagoda, with the original remains shielded from modern lighting which would cause it to deteriorate rapidly. Significantly more robust in nature is another ancient object in the library's rare book collection: a 4000-year-old cuneiform tablet dated circa 2050 BC. 'It's a remarkably solid and stable form of data carrier, and a great way … to show the beginnings of the story of the written word,' said Welch, of the clay tablet hailing from the Sumerian empire in southern Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq and parts of Iran). The ancient symbols of its cuneiform script – used by people from multiple language groups throughout the bronze age and into the dawn of the common era – are surprisingly prosaic. Sign up to Saved for Later Catch up on the fun stuff with Guardian Australia's culture and lifestyle rundown of pop culture, trends and tips after newsletter promotion 'You might have hoped that it says something very beautiful and poetic – a remnant of the ancient past, or voice reaching out to us,' said Welch. It is, in fact, a receipt: a record of taxes paid for the purchase of sheep and goats. 'But that's where writing began – as a tool for government bureaucracy.' Along with the Hyakumantō Darani, another recent acquisition will go on public display for the first time in the rolling exhibition. An ancient precursor to correction fluid, the medieval scribe's knife is thought to have originated in the 15th century. It was used to scrape typos from prepared animal skins known as vellum – the material most books were made from before the printing press ushered in the era of paper in Europe. 'What's really beautiful about it, apart from the rarity of having an object like this in Australia, is that its handle … is carved into the shape of a book,' said Welch. 'It was a tool for a scribe who obviously very much loved their job.' The new edition of the State Library of Victoria's World of the Book exhibition opens on Saturday 31 May at its Dome Galleries

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