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</A> -Cui Bono?-

http://www.centraleurope.com/frames/frames.php3?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonpost.com%2Fwp-srv%2Faponline%2F20000214%2Faponline172105_000.htm

Copernicus Tempts Thieves Worldwide

            By Sergei Shargorodsky
            Associated Press Writer
            Monday, Feb. 14, 2000; 5:21 p.m. EST

            MOSCOW –– Copies of one of the world's
            rarest and most valuable books have been
            disappearing – a rash of mysterious thefts
            that have perplexed police from the former
            Soviet Union to the United States.

            The first-edition copies of 16th century
            astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus'
            renowned treatise in Latin, "De
            revolutionibus orbium coelestium" (On the
            Revolutions of Heavenly Spheres) have
            vanished from collections across the globe.

            In Poland, a reader said he had to use the
            bathroom – and made off with the
            treasured volume. A thief in Kiev, Ukraine,
            pilfered the book using a fake police ID.
            The latest theft of the book, published in
            1543 and valued at up to $400,000, was
            discovered earlier this month in Russia.

            Russian police say they have appealed to
            Interpol for help in locating that book,
            which disappeared from the Academy of
            Sciences Library in St. Petersburg. Police
            would give no further details.

            At least seven of the 260 known copies of
            the 1543 edition of "De revolutionibus"
            have disappeared in recent years,
            including one copy each from the
            University of Illinois at
            Champaign-Urbana and the Mittag-Leffler
            Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, according
            to Owen Gingerich, a professor at the
            Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
            Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass. Five
            copies remain missing.

            Some police have speculated that a ring of
            thieves and collectors is behind the rash of
            thefts or that the books may have been
            stolen on some collectors' orders.

            However, Gingerich says there is no
            evidence to suggest an international
            conspiracy to steal copies of the treatise,
            which describes Copernicus'
            then-revolutionary theory that the Sun, not
            the Earth, was at the center of the universe.

            Gingerich has worked for a
            quarter-century compiling a list of all
            known copies of the first- and
            second-editions of the work, a quest that
            has taken him to cities and libraries
            worldwide – and has helped him trace at
            least two stolen copies.

            While the book is a tempting target for
            thieves because of its value, it's also "a
            very dangerous title to steal," Gingerich
            said in an Internet interview, noting that
            his census can help identify any known
            copy, making it risky to try to sell a stolen
            copy at auction or on the international
            antique market.

            Still, the disappearances continue.

            The theft in Poland occurred in November
            1998 at the Polish Academy of Sciences'
            library in Krakow, where a man in his 40s
            asked to read a first-edition copy of "De
            Revolutionibus" valued at $320,000.

            Sometime later, the reader said he had to
            visit the toilet – and disappeared. He left
            behind his belongings and the book's
            covers, said Krakow's deputy police head
            Eugeniusz Szczerbak.

            Three months earlier, a man walked out of
            the Ukrainian National Library in Kiev
            carrying a first-edition Copernicus. The
            thief had an apparently fake police ID and
            appeared to be well-acquainted with the
            library's security arrangements.

            Librarians said he requested six books,
            including the Copernicus. He then
            returned the books to secure a receipt, took
            a break and came back to request more
            books, including the Copernicus. The man
            vanished with the rare book just before
            closing time, apparently showing the
            guard the initial receipt to prove he had
            returned it.

            Gingerich has helped trace at least two
            stolen copies. One copy that surfaced on
            the book market in 1997 came from the
            Brno University Library in the Czech
            Republic. It had been returned by the
            library, which kept the book during
            Communist times, to the original owner,
            an Augustinian monastery, from where it
            disappeared.

            Another edition that turned up in
            Germany had come from the Pulkovo
            Observatory Library in St. Petersburg,
            Russia, Gingerich said.

            The library "suffered a disastrous arson
            fire ... and apparently someone thought
            that the inventory of the library was now
            so incomplete that a missing book would
            be presumed lost in the fire," he said.

              © Copyright 2000 The Associated Press


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