Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Vatican Library goes hi-tech with £7.5m refit

The Vatican Library is to reopen to scholars after a three year, 7.5 million pound renovation, with 21st century technology enlisted to safeguard books and manuscripts dating back nearly 2,000 years.

Each book in the library has now been tagged to prevent people removing them.

Each one of the library's 70,000 books, which are stored in a bombproof bunker, has been fitted with a computer chip capable of emitting radio signals in order to prevent loss and theft.

The undertaking was in part motivated by an attempted theft by an American art history professor, who smuggled pages torn from a 14th century manuscript that once belonged to Petrarch.

He was sentenced in 1996 to 14 months in prison after admitting that he took the pages during a research visit in 1987.

The electronic chips are also designed to ensure that each priceless document remains in its proper place in the vast repository beneath the Vatican.

"In this kind of library, if a book is misplaced, it is as good as lost," said Ambrogio Piazzoni, the library's vice-prefect.

"But with this new radio frequency system of identification, it will be much easier to locate a lost book and return it to its rightful place."

The books and manuscripts in the library were the product of the "thought, passion and faith" of centuries of religious scholarship, he said.

"It's not just the heritage of the Vatican Library but of the whole of humanity."

The renovation also involved the installation of closed-circuit cameras, fireproof walls, automated entry and exit gates and climate-controlled rooms.

The library, started by Pope Nicholas V in the 1450s, includes the world's oldest known complete Bible, dating from around 325 and believed to have been commissioned by Emperor Constantine, the first Roman emperor to embrace Christianity.

The library's frescoed reading and research rooms will officially reopen on Sept 20.

Around 5,000 scholars are given permission to conduct research each year but only the Pope is allowed to take a book out of the library.

SIC: TG/UK