The Numismatic Bibliomania Society

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The E-Sylum: Volume 28, Number 42, 2025, Article 32

THE BIBLIOMANIA

For biblophiles (and those who make fun of us), Andy Newman passed along this excellent 2016 Atlas Obscura article on Bibliomania, "the Dark Desire For Books That Infected Europe in the 1800s." -Editor

Bibliomanie Dr. Alois Pichler was almost always surrounded by books. In 1869, Pichler, originally from Bavaria, became the so-called "extraordinary librarian" of the Imperial Public Library in St. Petersburg, Russia, a prestigious position that gave him a salary three times higher than the average librarian: 3,000 rubles.

While many librarians have a deep appreciation for books, Pichler was afflicted with a specific irrepressible illness. A few months after Pichler took his position at the library, the staff discovered that an alarming number of books were disappearing from the collection. They suspected theft. Guards noticed that Pichler had been acting strangely—dropping books by the exit and hurriedly returning them to the shelves, refusing to remove his large overcoat, leaving the library several times within a day—and started paying close attention to him.

On March, 1871, over 4,500 stolen library books on everything from perfume making to theology were found in his possession, Pichler committing the largest known library theft on record.

Pichler was put on trial, where his lawyer alleged that the librarian was not in control of his behavior, explains Mary Stuart in the journal Libraries & Culture. He was influenced by a "peculiar mental condition, a mania not in the legal or medical sense, but in the ordinary sense of a violent, irresistible, unconquerable passion," writes Stuart. This defense was designed to mitigate his punishment, but it didn"t work.

Pichler, who was found guilty and exiled to Siberia, was a victim of "bibliomania," a dark pseudo-psychological illness that swept through the upper classes in Europe and England during the 1800s. Symptoms included a frenzy for culling and hunting down first editions, rare copies, books of certain sizes or printed on specific paper.

Any obsession can become real disease, says David Fernández, rare book librarian at Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library at the University of Toronto. One of the aspects that can really be an issue is the financial aspect, even back then.

  The Bibliomania title page

While it was never medically classified, people in the 1800s truly feared bibliomania. There are several written accounts, fictional and real, of bibliomania, but the most famous and bizarre documentation is by Reverend Thomas Frognell Dibdin, an English book lover and victim of the neurosis. In 1809 he published Bibliomania; or Book Madness, a series of strange, rambling fictional dialogues based on conversations and real collectors Dibdin had encountered.

"I think a very good word to describe the book is that it"s very bizarre," says Fernández, who has studied his library"s preserved copy of the 1809 first edition. "It"s a product of the generation in which it appears."

In Bibliomania; or Book Madness, Dibdin describes the symptoms of bibliomania, dramatizing a rather convincing make-believe pathology. He even uses medical language as if it were an actual malady. Dibdin points out eight particular types of books that collectors obsessed over: first editions, true editions, black letter printed books, large paper copies; uncut books with edges that are not sheared by binder"s tools; illustrated copies; unique copies with morocco binding or silk lining; and copies printed on vellum.

To read the complete article, see:
Bibliomania, the Dark Desire For Books That Infected Europe in the 1800s (https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/bibliomania-the-dark-desire-for-books-that-infected-europe-in-the-1800s)



Wayne Homren, Editor

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