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Tuesday, May 26, 2020

From Our Spring Exhibits: Law in Times of Crisis, II

Our current spring exhibits feature several works that were born in moments of crisis (see an earlier post for two of these).  Lawmaking at these moments often calls forth extraordinary legislation and sometimes emergency procedures to enact that legislation.  Sometimes convening in one place can also be difficult.  In the face of the current pandemic, the Supreme Court recently opted to hear arguments remotely and livestreamed them for the benefit of the public.  In the Senate, in-person meetings have continued, while the House has recently moved to allow remote voting.

The earliest national Congresses were no stranger to the problem of convening lawmakers in one place, though due to armed conflict rather than a virus.  The First Continental Congress met in Philadelphia in 1774 to discuss grievances over unpopular British laws and to prepare the colonial American response, which was agreed first to take written form.  The Second Continental Congress convened to conduct national policy amidst the Revolutionary War, a circumstance that forced it to relocate several times in the face of an advancing British army.  Meeting in Philadelphia, Congress was forced to move to Baltimore in 1776 and to flee again in September 1777 as the British prepared to take Philadelphia.  As a result, it met in Lancaster and subsequently in York, Pennsylvania.  The drafting of the Articles of Confederation was completed in York, but its early and most important printing was by Francis Bailey, who quickly printed 300 copies in Lancaster in 1777.  The copy of the Articles in our collection, also from 1777, is the Boston reprint of Bailey's first edition.

In July 1778, Congress moved back to Philadelphia, after the British had abandoned it.  It was here that two brothers of the Lee family of Virginia, Richard Lightfoot Lee and Richard Henry Lee, both signers of the Declaration of Independence, met with the other delegates.  It may be that during this time they also purchased a work from the notable Robert Bell, a Scottish-born printer who set up shop not far from Independence Hall.  Our copy of Cesare Beccaria's famous Essay on Crimes and Punishments, in its first true American printing by Bell in 1778 (we also hold a false Philadelphia imprint of the work from 1766), shows the name of Francis L. Lee on its title page, which may be Francis Lightfoot Lee himself, or his brother Richard Henry Lee's son. Richard Henry Lee and another brother, Arthur Lee, quoted from Beccaria's work and perhaps from this family copy. 

In such times of crisis, the law must still be made (and published), and it's little surprise that lawmakers should need material for reflection, particularly on issues as important as criminal law reform.


   - Ryan Greenwood, Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections

Friday, April 10, 2020

Answers to Our Virtual Rare Books Quiz

Below are the answers to our first virtual rare books quiz.  Thanks to everyone for participating, and congratulations to the winners!

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1.  At first we were looking for Diderot or Montesquieu (the picture is supposed to be Diderot); but we also accepted the wigless Gracchus Babeuf.  It's not for us to argue a likeness!   

Babeuf is the subject of a beautifully illustrated collection item in our current spring exhibit.  He was a radical firebrand journalist and could be considered generally a philosophe.  Perhaps figures like Rousseau, Voltaire, d'Alembert - even Jefferson and Franklin - should not be so exclusive!

2.  This incunable was published on January 8, 1498 in Venice.  (Venice was probably the most famous early center of printing.  The most famous Venetian printer, Aldus Manutius, also has the most famous printer's device, a dolphin entwined with an anchor.  It relates to his motto: "make haste slowly."  The Latin original, festina lente, might be a good motto during our current moment.)

3.  The answer is "D.  Answers A and B only."  Richard Tottel (or variously Tottill, Tothill, Tottle, etc.) had an exclusive royal patent to publish English common law books from 1553.  Some early legislation on unlicensed printing is in acts of 1637, 1649, 1662 and the famous Statute of Anne (copyright).  Roman type is a big thing in the history of typography.

4. Justice O'Conner grew up on Lazy B cattle ranch in Arizona (incidentally, the cow's head also bobbles).  See her great book on growing up (and Majesty of the Law if you have not read it). 


Justice Breyer's five sheep (and a cow, on the bike's other side) are a reference to his opinion in Public Lands Council v. Babbitt: "[T]he Department would issue a permit measuring grazing privileges in terms of 'animal unit months' (AUMs), i.e., the right to obtain the forage needed to sustain one cow (or five sheep) for one month.... [R]egulations in effect from 1938 to the present day made clear that the Department retained the power to modify, fail to renew, or cancel a permit or lease for various reasons." Public Lands Council v. Babbitt, 529 U.S. 728, 735 (2000).

Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Our First Virtual Rare Books Quiz!

Welcome to our first virtual rare books quiz!  Take a break from studies (and incessant news) - allow yourselves a diversion! 

Take a few moments to answer the questions below, and be entered to win prizes from the UMN bookstore (when it reopens).  

The two most correct entries win, drawing in case of (more than two) ties, prizes $25 each.  The prizes are the usual: hats, mugs, keychains, t-shirts, or some combination.  UMN Law School students only are eligible.


1.  Which noted French Enlightenment philosophe is this an image of?  (Several answers accepted; note the figure is wigless!)






The great etching, by artist Thomas Cornell, is from this book, in our current exhibits. 












   

2.  The design at bottom here is the printer's device of Baptista de Tortis.  These were common in early printed books, and offered quick recognition and a proud authenticity.  What year, month, day, and city was this book published in?





This volume of Roman law in the collection is an incunable, printed before 1501. (That's a hint, at least.)


















 



3.  What is significant about the book below? (All that apply.)

A.  It is a copy of the first printed edition of Bracton's De Legibus, considered the greatest treatise on (medieval) English law.
B.  It is an early example of the use of Roman type in English law books.
C.  It is a pirated copy, printed without license.
D.  Answers A and B only.
E.  Answers A, B, and C.






Fun fact: the printer of the book, Richard Tottel, spelled his name about a dozen different ways in his works (thanks to my colleague Mike Widener for this observation)! 











4.  A last one, from our Supreme Court Bobblehead collection.  Why is there a cow at the feet of Justice O'Connor, and why are there sheep at the feet of Justice Breyer?  (Short answer will do.)




Friday, March 27, 2020

From Our Spring Exhibits: Law in Times of Crisis

In times of crisis, governments often produce a succession of orders, legislation, and judgments in response to rapidly changing events. Below are two selections from our spring exhibits that reflect on law in these kinds of situations. One can easily imagine the need for a Massachusetts Act to Prevent Monopoly and Oppression (1777), in response to price gouging during wartime. Eliminating 'public threats' during periods of civil unrest is often more suspect, as arguably in the case of Gracchus Babeuf. In all these cases, governments intervene in extraordinary ways to strengthen authority and maintain order, with various effects. The old Latin legal maxim, necessitas non habet legem ('necessity knows no law'), can perhaps be reinterpreted at these moments as 'necessity makes its own law (necessitas facit suam legem). Of course, laws enacted in times of crisis and under emergency justifications still need analysis and critique from the perspectives of law and justice.  


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In the Year of Our Lord, One Thousand Seven Hundred and Seventy-Seven: An Act to Prevent Monopoly and Oppression (Boston: Printed by B. Edes and Sons, 1777).

During the American Revolution, the Massachusetts legislature passed a law to regulate prices in the face of limited supplies and increasingly “avaricious conduct.” The single act, published for immediate distribution, sets prices for a range of colonial goods named in it. At the back of our copy, in a clear and elegant hand, a selection of the goods and their prices is arranged according to common measures (per bushel, per pound, etc.). The items listed were those used in cooking and maintaining a household: mentioned are things like tallow, women’s shoes, and cloth for spinning. No ownership information tells us who wrote the list; one guess may be a colonial woman who ran a household. The pamphlet provides a direct and vivid window into daily economics in the midst of the Revolutionary War. Despite the crisis, the owner has organized the items with a sense of practical care necessary in the face of adversity.

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The Trial of Gracchus Babeuf before the High Court of Vendome, ed. and trans. by John Anthony Scott (Northhampton, MA: The Gehenna Press, 1964).

François-Noël Babeuf (1760-1797), known as Gracchus Babeuf, was a French revolutionary and reputedly one of the first communists, who advocated the abolition of private property. A prolific writer, he rose to prominence as a new
French government faced economic crisis and widespread suffering, with little effective remedy. He was tried and executed in 1797 for fomenting rebellion. The Defense is a modern translation of Babeuf’s apologia on his own behalf at his trial, where he invoked intellectual fathers of the French Revolution Rousseau and Diderot. 

The copy in our collection is a modern, beautifully illustrated edition featuring twenty-one etched portraits, including French Enlightenment figures and Babeuf himself. The outstanding illustrations are by Thomas Cornell (1937-2012), who signed each image in pencil in the lower right. The etchings were printed by Emiliano Sorini in New York, on loose blue Fabriano paper that has been laid in; the text is gathered in unbound quires. The noted illustrator and artist Leonard Baskin, who founded the Gehenna Press, designed the book. Our copy is number 87 from a limited edition of 300, signed again at the back by Cornell. Our copy is a gift of Christa Cornell, the artist's wife.

   - Ryan Greenwood, Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections











Monday, March 2, 2020

Wednesday, March 4: Rare Books Open House!

Come out to the Riesenfeld Center's first rare books open house of the semester, this Wednesday, 12 p.m. to 3 p.m.!

Enjoy snacks and drinks, and see new treasures from the library's rare books and special collections:

When: Wednesday, March 4, 12 p.m - 3 p.m.
Where: Riesenfeld Rare Books Research Center
What: Rare books, snacks and refreshments!


(*The Center is in N30, on the subplaza past Sullivan Cafe and N20.)






Monday, February 10, 2020

Wednesday, Feb. 12: Spring Exhibits Open House!

Come out to an open house for our new exhibits in the Riesenfeld Rare Books Center this Wednesday, February 12, from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.:

Noted and Notable: Treasures of the Riesenfeld Rare Books Research Center

and

‘Böcker Har Sina Öden’ (Books Have Their Destinies): Treasures of the Swedish Law Collection at the Riesenfeld Center

Open House: Wednesday, February 12, 2020
                         12 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
                         Riesenfeld Rare Books Center (N30, Sub-plaza)

                         Cookies, snacks and refreshments served.


What makes a rare book valuable?  What makes it into a treasure?  Two new exhibits featuring treasures from the Riesenfeld Center and treasures from the Center's rare Swedish law collection explore these questions.

The history of books is not only a history of more and less significant texts, or even more and less valuable editions. It is also a history of printers and engravers, of book binders and former owners, who have shaped the book as a historical object that is worthy of study. These individuals have left their marks on books, over time adding to and even changing our understanding of the texts themselves. It is no surprise, then, that the unique physical forms in which we find these texts can make individual copies into significant and singular treasures.

The Riesenfeld Center's current exhibits feature treasures that are made so by individual owners and their annotations, by beautiful illustrations, bindings and other physical features that make this material unique and valuable.

   - Ryan Greenwood, Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections



Thursday, February 6, 2020

Spring Exhibits Reception and New Donation

We recently held an opening reception for faculty and special guests in the Riesenfeld Center, to celebrate our new spring exhibits. The new exhibits highlight treasures in our collections, with a focus on items that have special value as historical objects worthy of study. The first exhibit, "Noted and Notable: Treasures of the Riesenfeld Rare Books Research Center," showcases material from across our rich collections. The second exhibit, "'Böcker Har Sina Öden' (Books Have Their Destinies): Treasures of the Swedish Law Collection at the Riesenfeld Center," highlights items in our rare Swedish collection. The latter exhibit is curated by Professor Eric Bylander, Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Law, Uppsala University. Professor Bylander and Professor Marie Linton, the Deputy Head of the Department of Law, Uppsala University, traveled from Sweden to attend the opening reception. At the reception, Eric discussed the rare Swedish law exhibit, and Law School Dean Garry Jenkins, Associate Dean Joan Howland, and I also made remarks. For more about the exhibits, please see a recent blog post about them.


At a dinner hosted by Professors Bylander and Linton, Eric presented the Law Library with a terrific Swedish law book for donation to our collections. We are very grateful for the new acquisition. The book, Kongl. Stadgar, Förordningar, Bref och Resolutioner, ifrÃ¥n Ã¥hr 1528, in til 1701 (Stockholm, 1706), is a collection of Swedish statutes, regulations, and other laws promulgated between 1528 and 1701. It is rare in North America and Europe, with only a few copies available in libraries, and also beautiful, featuring several magnificent engravings. 

   - Ryan Greenwood, Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections