Return
of Devil's Bible to Prague draws crowds
PRAGUE,
Czech Republic (AP) Codex Gigas, also known as the Devil's Bible
a medieval manuscript said to have been written 800 years ago with the devil's
help has returned to Prague after an absence of 359 years.
And Czechs
were eager to see it, officials said Friday.
The
priceless piece, considered the biggest medieval book, was taken from the Prague
Castle by Swedish troops at the end of the Thirty Years' War in 1648. It is in
Prague on loan from Sweden's Royal Library in Stockholm. It was put on display
under high security at the Czech National Library.
Its
return to Prague for Sept 20 Jan 6 exhibition was made possible after years
of negotiations between Czech and Swedish diplomats, National Library spokeswoman
Katerina Novakova said.
"We
expected big interest from the public," Novakova said. "Now, we are
100% full."
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Only 60 people per hour
can enter an air-conditioned room in the library's medieval complex in downtown
Prague for a 10-minutes look at the manuscript, which is inside a specially designed,
unbreakable case, she said.
According
to myth, a Benedictine monk promised to write the book overnight to atone for
his sins. When he realized the task was impossible, he asked the devil for help.
The page with the illustration of the devil the one visitors see.
The
manuscript was likely written by one monk from the Benedictine monastery in Podlazice
located some 100 kilometers (65 miles) east of Prague sometime at the beginning
of the 13th century, said Zdenek Uhlir, a specialist on medieval manuscripts at
the National Library.
It
contains "a sum of the Benedictine order's knowledge" of the time, including
the Old and New Testament, "The War of the Jews" by the first-century
historian Josephus Flavius, a list of saints, or a guideline how to determine
the date of Easter, Uhlir said.
"I
would estimate it took him between 10 and 12 years to write," he said about
the piece, which weighs 75 kilograms (165 pounds). Originally, it had 640 pages,
of which 624 survived in relatively good condition, he said.
The
book was transported to the Czech Republic in a military plane. Authorities would
not give any details about security measures adopted at the library. It has previously
been displayed in New York and Berlin.