Mystery of the Big Book

Over the years, the pH๏τograph above has appeared on numerous blogs and websites, usually captioned as “man with large book at Prague Castle, 1940s” or “c. 1940s: Man with books.” However, bibliophiles and antiquarians have long questioned the image’s description and sought a more accurate attribution. Well, it seems that the only thing that the original captions correctly identified was the location as Prague.

Recently internet sleuths have tracked the first publication of the pH๏τo to a Czech publication Fotorok, Volume 58, Issue 1, published in 1959, page 35. The image was taken by a Prague-based pH๏τographer named Miroslav Peterka who took the picture at the National Library of the Czech Republic at the Clementinum. Originally the image’s caption read “Archivy chystají velkou jarní výstavu československé státní myšlenky na Pražském hradě.” It translates to “The archives are preparing for a large spring exhibition of the Czechoslovak state idea at Prague Castle.”

While the mystery of the actual location of the pH๏τo has been solved, we still don’t know the name of the woman archivist in the image, or if the giant book is still in the beautiful Baroque library, which is a part of The National Library of the Czech Republic.

I would be happy to return to Praha and spend a week or two attempting to solve the remaining mysteries of the big book.

Related Posts

ᴀssyrian Divers and the Leather Underwater Breathing Bag: Decoding an Ancient Technique Through Archaeological Evidence

I. Archaeological Background The two images—a modern reconstruction and an ancient bas-relief—depict an ᴀssyrian technique of underwater navigation using an air-filled leather bag. The relief was discovered…

The Buried Lotus Column Base: A Remarkable Archaeological Discovery from a Middle Eastern River Basin

The object depicted is a large stone column base intricately carved with lotus motifs—an iconic stylistic element of ancient Near Eastern art, especially ᴀssociated with cultures of…

Archaeological Report on the Zoomorphic Pillars of Göbekli Tepe

Discovered on the limestone plateau of southeastern Anatolia, the monumental zoomorphic sculptures ᴀssociated with Göbekli Tepe represent some of the earliest known examples of large-scale symbolic stonework…

Archaeological Report on the Wandjina Rock Art

Discovered within the rugged sandstone overhangs of the Kimberley region in northwestern Australia, the rock paintings known collectively as the Wandjina figures represent one of the most…

A Single Language, Carved in Two Worlds.

In the quiet earth of Tuscany, the Roman stones of Cosa rest, their polygonal forms locked together since the 3rd century BCE. Across the globe, in the…

July 26, 2016: Tiwanaku, Aliens in Ancient Bolivia, and the Ruins of an Old World

Author Charles C. Mann has called Tiwanaku a combination of the Vatican and Disney World, and he may be spot on in that description.  Just check out…