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List of book-burning incidents

Notable book burnings – the public burning of books for ideological reasons – have taken place throughout history.

Antiquity edit

A scroll written by the Hebrew prophet Jeremiah (burnt by King Jehoiakim) edit

About 600 BC, Jeremiah of Anathoth wrote that the King of Babylon would destroy the land of Judah. As recounted in Jeremiah 36, Jeremiah's scroll was read before Jehoiakim, King of Judah, in the presence of important officials; King Jehoiakim destroyed the scroll in a fire, and then sought to have Jeremiah arrested.[1]

Protagoras' "On the Gods" (by Athenian authorities) edit

The Classical Greek philosopher Protagoras (c. 490 – c. 420 BC) was a proponent of agnosticism, writing in a now lost work titled On the Gods: "Concerning the gods, I have no means of knowing whether they exist or not or of what sort they may be, because of the obscurity of the subject, and the brevity of human life. Quotations of his works were embedded in the works of later authors.[2] According to Diogenes Laërtius, the above outspoken agnostic position taken by Protagoras aroused anger, causing the Athenians to expel him from their city, where the authorities ordered all copies of the book to be collected and burned in the marketplace.[3] The same story is also mentioned by Cicero.[4] However, the classicist John Burnet doubts this account, as both Diogenes Laërtius and Cicero wrote hundreds of years later and no such persecution of Protagoras is mentioned by contemporaries who make extensive references to this philosopher. Burnet notes that even if some copies of Protagoras' book were burned, enough of them survived to be known and discussed in the following century.[5]

Democritus' writings (by Plato) edit

The philosopher Plato is said to have greatly disliked fellow-philosopher Democritus and wanted all of Democritus' books burned. Aristoxenus in his Historical Notes affirms that "Plato wished to burn all the writings of Democritus that he could collect".[a] In his own lifetime, Plato was not in a position to destroy all copies of his rival's writings, but Plato's purpose was largely achieved through the choices made by scribes in later Classical times. Plato's own writings were frequently copied, and unlike nearly all of his philosophical contemporaries, Plato's entire work is believed to have survived intact for over 2,400 years.[6] Conversely, none of Democritus' writings have survived, and only fragments are known from his vast body of work.[7] Still, these fragments are enough to let many consider Democritus to be "The Father of Modern Science".[8]

Chinese philosophy books (by Emperor Qin Shi Huang and anti-Qin rebels) edit

 
Killing the Scholars and Burning the Books, anonymous 18th century Chinese painted album leaf; Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris

During the Warring States period, China was divided into various states – each of which had its own historians, writing over centuries their version of the history of their state and its relations with neighbors and rivals. Following Qin's conquest of all the others, Emperor Qin Shi Huang – on the advice of his minister Li Si – ordered the burning of all philosophy books and history books from states other than Qin – beginning in 213 BC. This was followed by the live burial of a large number of intellectuals who did not comply with the state dogma.[citation needed]

Li Si is reported to have said: "I, your servant, propose that all historian's records other than those of Qin's be burned. With the exception of the academics whose duty includes possessing books, if anyone under heaven has copies of the Shi Jing, the Classic of History, or the writings of the hundred schools of philosophy, they shall deliver them [the books] to the governor or the commandant for burning. Anyone who dares to discuss the Shi Jing or the Classic of History shall be publicly executed. Anyone who uses history to criticize the present shall have his family executed. Any official who sees the violations but fails to report them is equally guilty. Anyone who has failed to burn the books after thirty days of this announcement shall be subjected to tattooing and be sent to build the Great Wall. The books that have exemption are those on medicine, divination, agriculture and forestry. Those who have interest in laws shall instead study from officials."[9]

The damage to Chinese culture was compounded during the revolts which ended the short rule of Qin Er Shi, Qin Shi Huang's son. The imperial palace and state archives were burned, destroying many of the remaining written records that had been spared by the father.[citation needed]

Several other large book burnings also occurred in Chinese history.[10] It appears they occurred in every dynasty following the Qin, but it is unknown how often.[11]

Books of pretended prophecies (by Roman authorities) edit

In 186 BC, in an effort to suppress the Bacchanalia practices that had been led in part by Minius Cerrinius, a consul of Rome claimed that the fathers and grandfathers of the Romans had suppressed foreign rites and ceremonies, "seeking out and burning all books of pretended prophecies."[12]

Jewish holy books (by the Seleucid monarch Antiochus IV) edit

In 168 BC the Seleucid monarch Antiochus IV ordered Jewish 'Books of the Law' found in Jerusalem to be 'rent in pieces' and burned[13] – part of the series of persecutions which precipitated the revolt of the Maccabees.[citation needed]

Roman history book (by the aediles) edit

In 25 AD Senator Aulus Cremutius Cordus was forced to commit suicide and his History was burned by the aediles, under the order of the senate. The book's praise of Brutus and Cassius, who had assassinated Julius Caesar, was considered an offence under the lex majestatis. A copy of the book was saved by Cordus' daughter Marcia, and it was published again under Caligula. However, only a few fragments survived to the present.[14][15][16]

Greek and Latin prophetic verse (by the emperor Augustus) edit

Suetonius tells us that, at the death of Marcus Lepidus (about 13 BC), Augustus assumed the office of Chief Priest, and burned over two thousand copies of Greek and Latin prophetic verse then current, the work of anonymous or unrespected authors (preserving the Sibylline Books).[17]

Torah scroll (by a Roman soldier) edit

Flavius Josephus[18] relates that about the year 50 a Roman soldier seized a Torah scroll and, with abusive and mocking language, burned it in public. This incident almost brought on a general Jewish revolt against Roman rule, such as broke out two decades later. However, the Roman procurator Cumanus appeased the Jewish populace by beheading the culprit.[19]

Sorcery scrolls (by early converts to Christianity at Ephesus) edit

About the year 55 according to the New Testament book of Acts, early converts to Christianity in Ephesus who had previously practiced sorcery burned their scrolls: "A number who had practised sorcery brought their scrolls together and burned them publicly. When they calculated the value of the scrolls, the total came to fifty thousand drachmas." (Acts 19:19, NIV)[20]

Rabbi Haninah ben Teradion burned with a Torah scroll (under Hadrian) edit

Under the emperor Hadrian, the teaching of the Jewish Scriptures was forbidden, as, in the wake of the Bar Kochva Rebellion, the Roman authorities regarded such teaching as seditious and tending towards revolt. Haninah ben Teradion, one of the Jewish Ten Martyrs executed for having defied that ban, is reported to have been burned at the stake together with the forbidden Torah scroll which he had been teaching. According to Jewish tradition, when the flame started to burn himself and the scroll he still managed to say to his pupils: "I see the scrolls burning but the letters fly up in the air" – a saying considered to symbolize the superiority of ideas to brute force. While in the original applying to sacred writings only, 20th century Israeli writers also quoted this saying in the context of secular ideals.[21][22]

Burning of the Torah by Apostomus (precise time and circumstances debated) edit

Among five catastrophes said to have overtaken the Jews on the Seventeenth of Tammuz, the Mishnah[23] includes "the burning of the Torah by Apostomus". Since no further details are given and there are no other references to Apostomus in Jewish or non-Jewish sources, the exact time and circumstances of this traumatic event are debated, historians assigning to it different dates in Jewish history under Seleucid or Roman rule, and it might be identical with one of the events noted above.[24]

Epicurus' book (in Paphlagonia) edit

The book Established beliefs of Epicurus was burned in a Paphlagonian marketplace by order of the charlatan Alexander of Abonoteichus, supposed prophet of Glycon, the son of Asclepius ca 160[25]

Manichaean and Christian scriptures (by Diocletian) edit

The Diocletianic Persecution started on March 31, 302, with the Roman Emperor Diocletian, in a rescript from Alexandria, ordering that the leading Manichaeans be burnt alive along with their scriptures.[26][27] On the following year, on February 23, 303, Diocletian ordered that the newly built Christian church at Nicomedia be razed, its scriptures burned, and its treasures seized.[28] Later persecutions included the burning of both the Christians themselves and of their books. As related in later Christian Hagiography, at that time the governor of Valencia offered the deacon who would become known as Saint Vincent of Saragossa to have his life spared in exchange for his consigning Scripture to the fire. Vincent refused and let himself be executed instead. In religious paintings he is often depicted holding the book whose preservation he preferred to his own life (see illustration in Saint Vincent of Saragossa page.)[29] Conversely, many other Christians, less courageous, did save their lives by giving away their Scriptures to be burned. These Christians came to be known as Traditores (literally, "those who give away").

Books of Arianism (after Council of Nicaea) edit

 
Burning of Arian books at Nicaea (illustration from a compendium of canon law, ca. 825, MS. in the Capitular Library, Vercelli)

The books of Arius and his followers, after the first Council of Nicaea (325 C.E.), were burned for heresy by the Roman emperors Constantine, Honorius, and Theodosius I, who published a decree commanding that, "the doctrine of the Trinity should be embraced by those who would be called catholics; that all others should bear the infamous name of heretics".[30][31]

Library of Antioch (by Jovian) edit

In 364, the Roman Catholic Emperor Jovian ordered the entire Library of Antioch to be burnt.[32] It had been heavily stocked by the aid of his non-Christian predecessor, Emperor Julian.[citation needed]

"Unacceptable writings" (by Athanasius) edit

Elaine Pagels is the first to claim that in 367, Athanasius ordered monks in the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria in his role as bishop of Alexandria to destroy all "unacceptable writings" in Egypt, the list of writings to be saved constituting the New Testament.[33] While there is no evidence that Athanasius decreed all unacceptable writings to be burned, this unsubstantiated claim by Pagels is frequently cited as fact on the internet.[citation needed]

The Sibylline books (various times) edit

The Sibylline Books were a collection of oracular sayings. According to myth,[34] the Cumaean sibyl offered Lucius Tarquinius Superbus the books for a high price, and when he refused, burned three. When he refused to buy the remaining six at the same price, she again burned three, finally forcing him to buy the last three at the original price. The quindecimviri sacris faciundis watched over the surviving books in the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus, but could not prevent their being burned when the temple burned down in 83 BC. They were replaced by a similar collection of oracular sayings from around the Mediterranean in 76 BC, along with the sayings of the Tiburtine sibyl, and then checked by priests for perceived accuracy as compared to the burned originals.[35] These remained until for political reasons they were burned by Flavius Stilicho (died 408).[36]

Writings of Priscillian (by Roman authorities) edit

In 385, the theologian Priscillian of Ávila became the first Christian to be executed by fellow-Christians as a heretic. Some (though not all) of his writings were condemned as heretical and burned. For many centuries they were considered irreversibly lost, but surviving copies were discovered in the 19th century.[37]

Etrusca Disciplina (by Roman authorities) edit

Etrusca Disciplina, the Etruscan books of cult and divination, were collected and burned in the 5th century.[38][39]

Books on astrology (by Roman authorities) edit

In 409, the emperors Theodosius II and Honorius ordered that astrologers burn their books on pain of expulsion.[40]

Nestorius' books (by Theodosius II) edit

The books of Nestorius, declared to be heresy, were burned under an edict of Theodosius II(435).[41][42] The Greek originals of most writings were irrevocably destroyed, surviving mainly in Syriac translations.[citation needed]

Middle Ages edit

"Book of the Miracles of Creation" (reportedly destroyed by Saint Brendan) edit

According to the Dutch De Reis van Sinte Brandaen (Mediaeval Dutch for The Voyage of Saint Brendan), one of the earliest accounts of the life of Saint Brendan, the Saint got possession of a "Book of the Miracles of Creation", but disbelieved in its veracity and threw it into a fire. An angel was angry with Brendan for this act, told him that truth has been destroyed, and charged him with traveling for nine years overseas as a penance for his sin. All accounts of Brendan's life were written down hundreds of years after his time, and it is difficult to distinguish fact from legend - including this account of his burning a book. However, since Brendan was a major, highly venerated Irish Saint, there was no obvious reason for posterity to attribute to him a sinful act without any factual basis.[43][44]

Patriarch Eutychius' book (by Emperor Tiberius II Constantine) edit

Patriarch Eutychius of Constantinople published a treatise, on the General Resurrection, maintaining that the resurrected body "will be more subtle than air, and no longer palpable".[45][b] Pope Gregory the Great opposed, citing the palpability of the risen Christ in Luke 24:39. As the dispute could not be settled, the Byzantine emperor, Tiberius II Constantine, undertook to arbitrate. He decided in favor of palpability and ordered Eutychius' book to be burned. Eutychius died soon afterwards, on 5 April 582.[citation needed]

Repeated destruction of Alexandria libraries (multiple people) edit

The so-called "Daughter Library"[46] of the Serapeum of Alexandria was reportedly looted and burned (along with the rest of the Serapeum) in 391/392 AD by the decree of Theophilus of Alexandria, who was ordered to do so by Theodosius I. However, contemporary accounts do not mention the destruction of a library, or speak of its collection of books in the past tense, indicating that by the time of its destruction the Serapeum may have been relegated mostly to a pagan place of worship.[47] One of the largest destructions of books occurred at the Library of Alexandria, traditionally held to be in 640; however, the precise years are unknown, as is whether the fires were intentional or accidental.[48][49]

Iconoclast writings (by Byzantine authorities) edit

Following the "Triumph of Orthodoxy" in 843, when the Byzantine Iconoclasts were decisively defeated and the worship of Icons formally restored, the Byzantine secular and religious authorities destroyed almost all Iconoclast writings – making it difficult for modern researchers to determine what exactly were the Iconoclasts' reasons to oppose the use of Icons in Christian worship.[citation needed]

Qur'anic texts with varying wording (ordered by the 3rd Caliph, Uthman) edit

Uthman ibn 'Affan, the third Caliph of Islam after Muhammad, who is credited with overseeing the collection of the verses of the Qur'an, ordered the destruction of any other remaining text containing verses of the Quran after the Quran has been fully collected, circa 650. This was done to ensure that the collected and authenticated Quranic copy that Uthman collected became the primary source for others to follow, thereby ensuring that Uthman's version of the Quran remained authentic. Although the Qur'an had mainly been propagated through oral transmission, it also had already been recorded in at least three codices, most importantly the codex of Abdullah ibn Mas'ud in Kufa, and the codex of Ubayy ibn Ka'b in Syria. Sometime between 650 and 656, a committee appointed by Uthman is believed to have produced a singular version in seven copies, and Uthman is said to have "sent to every Muslim province one copy of what they had copied, and ordered any other Qur'anic materials, whether written in fragmentary manuscripts or whole copies, be burnt."[50]

Competing prayer books (at Toledo) edit

After the conquest of Toledo, Spain (1085) by the king of Castile, whether Iberian Christians should follow the foreign Roman rite or the traditional Mozarabic rite became a subject of dispute. After other ordeals, the dispute was submitted to the trial by fire: One book for each rite was thrown into a fire. The Toledan book was little damaged after the Roman one was consumed. Henry Jenner comments in the Catholic Encyclopedia: "No one who has seen a Mozarabic manuscript with its extraordinarily solid vellum, will adopt any hypothesis of Divine Interposition here."[51]

Abelard forced to burn his own book (at Soissons) edit

The provincial synod held at Soissons (in France) in 1121 condemned the teachings of the famous theologian Peter Abelard as heresy; he was forced to burn his own book before being shut up inside the convent of St. Medard at Soissons.[52]

The writings of Arnold of Brescia (in France and Rome) edit

The rebellious monk Arnold of Brescia – Abelard's pupil and colleague – refused to abjure his views after they were condemned at the Synod of Sens in 1141, and went on to lead the Commune of Rome in direct opposition to the Pope, until he was executed in 1155.[citation needed]

The Church ordered the burning of all his writings; this was done so thoroughly than none of them survives and it is unknown even what they were – except for what can be inferred from polemics against him.[c] Nevertheless, though no written word of Arnold's has survived, his teachings on apostolic poverty retained their influence after his death, among "Arnoldists" and more widely among Waldensians and the Spiritual Franciscans.[citation needed]

Nalanda University (by Bakhtiyar Khilji) edit

The library of Nalanda, known as Dharma Gunj (Mountain of Truth) or Dharmagañja (Treasury of Truth), was the most renowned repository of Hindu and Buddhist knowledge in the world at the time. Its collection was said to comprise hundreds of thousands of volumes, so extensive that it burned for months when set aflame by Muslim invaders in 1193.[53]

Samanid dynasty library (by Turks) edit

The Royal Library of the Samanid dynasty was burned at the turn of the 11th century during the Turkic invasion from the east. Avicenna was said to have tried to save the precious manuscripts from the fire as the flames engulfed the collection.[54][55][56]

Buddhist writings in the Maldives (by royal dynasty converted to Islam) edit

Following the conversion of the Maldives to Islam in 1153 (or by some accounts in 1193), the Buddhist religion – hitherto state religion for more than a thousand years – was suppressed. The copper-plate document known as Dhanbidhū Lōmāfānu gives information about events in the southern Haddhunmathi Atoll, which had been a major center of Buddhism – where monks were beheaded, and statues of Vairocana, the transcendent Buddha, were destroyed. At that time, also the wealth of Buddhist manuscripts written on screwpine leaves by Maldivian monks in their Buddhist monasteries was either burnt or otherwise so thoroughly eliminated that it has disappeared without leaving any trace.[57]

Buddhist writings in the Gangetic plains region of India (by Turk-Mongol raiders) edit

According to William Johnston, as part of the Muslim conquest of the Indian subcontinent there was a persecution of the Buddhist religion, considered idolatrous from the Muslim point of view. During the 12th and 13th centuries, Buddhist texts were burnt by the Muslim armies in the Gangetic plains region, which also destroyed hundreds of Buddhist monasteries and shrines and killed monks and nuns.[58][59]

Alamut Castle (by Mongols) edit

The famous library of the Alamut Castle, the main stronghold of the order of the Nizari Ismailis, was burned after the invading Mongols captured it. Primary sources on the thoughts of the Ismailis of this period are therefore lacking today.[citation needed]

Ismaili Shite writings at Al-Azhar (by Saladin) edit

Between 120,000 and 2,000,000 were destroyed under Saladin when he converted the Al-Azhar madrassah from Ismaili Shiism to Sunni Islam.[60]

Destruction of Cathar texts (Languedoc region of France, by the Catholic Church) edit

 
Detail of a Pedro Berruguete painting of a disputation between Saint Dominic of Guzman and the Albigensians (Cathars) in which the books of both were thrown on a fire, with St. Dominic's books miraculously preserved from the flames. See the whole picture.

During the 13th century, the Catholic Church waged a brutal campaign against the Cathars of Languedoc (smaller numbers also lived elsewhere in Europe), culminating in the Albigensian Crusade. Nearly every Cathar text that could be found was destroyed, in an effort to completely extirpate their heretical beliefs; only a few are known to have survived.[61] Historians researching the Cathar religious principles are forced to largely rely on information provided by the manifestly hostile writings of their sworn opponents.[citation needed]

Maimonides' philosophy (at Montpellier) edit

Maimonides' major philosophical and theological work, "Guide for the Perplexed", got highly mixed reactions from fellow-Jews of his and later times – some revering it and viewing it as a triumph, while others deemed many of its ideas heretical, banning it and on some occasions burning copies of it.[d] One such burning took place at Montpellier, Southern France, in 1233.[62]

The Talmud (at Paris), first of many such burnings over the next centuries (by Royal and Church authorities) edit

In 1242, The French crown burned all copies of the Talmud in Paris, about 12,000, after the book was "charged" and "found guilty" in the Disputation of Paris, sometimes called "the Paris debate" or the "Trial of the Talmud."[63] These burnings of Jewish books were initiated by Pope Gregory IX, who persuaded Louis IX of France to undertake it. This particular book burning was commemorated by the German Rabbi and poet Meir of Rothenburg in the elegy (kinna) called "Ask, O you who are burned in fire" (שאלי שרופה באש), which is recited to this day by Ashkenazi Jews on the fast of Tisha B'av.[citation needed]

The Church's original stance alleged that the Talmud contained blasphemous writings towards Jesus Christ and his mother Mary, attacks against the Church and other offensive pronouncements against non-Jews,[64] which led subsequent popes to organize public burnings of Jewish books. The best known of these were Innocent IV (1243–1254), Clement IV (1256–1268), John XXII (1316–1334), Paul IV (1555–1559), Pius V (1566–1572) and Clement VIII (1592–1605).[citation needed]

Once the printing press was invented, the Church found it impossible to destroy entire printed editions of the Talmud and other sacred books. Johann Gutenberg, the German who invented the printing press around 1450, certainly helped stamp out the effectiveness of further book burnings. The tolerant (for its time) policies of Venice made it a center for the printing of Jewish books (and of books in general), yet the Talmud was publicly burned in 1553[65] and there was a lesser-known burning of Jewish books in 1568.[66]

Rabbi Nachmanides' account of the Disputation of Barcelona (by Dominicans) edit

In 1263 the Disputation of Barcelona was held before King James I of Aragon between the monk Pablo Christiani (a convert from Judaism) and Rabbi Moses ben Nachman (also known as Nachmanides). At the end of disputation, king awarded Nachmanides a monetary prize and declared that never before had he heard "an unjust cause so nobly defended."[67] Since the Dominicans nevertheless claimed the victory, Nahmanides felt compelled to publish the controversy. The Dominicans asserted that this account was blasphemies against Christianity. Nahmanides admitted that he had stated many things against Christianity, but he had written nothing which he had not used in his disputation in the presence of the King, who had granted him freedom of speech. The justice of his defense was recognized by the King and the commission, but to satisfy the Dominicans Nahmanides was exiled and his pamphlet was condemned to be burned.[citation needed]

The House of Wisdom library (By Mongols) edit

The House of Wisdom was destroyed during the Mongol invasion of Baghdad in 1258, along with all other libraries in Baghdad. It was said that the waters of the Tigris ran black for six months with ink from the enormous quantities of books flung into the river.[68][69] Some modern historians have begun to doubt the actual extent of these damages.[70][71]

Lollard books and writings (by English law) edit

The De heretico comburendo ("On the Burning of Heretics"), a law passed by the English Parliament under King Henry IV of England in 1401, was intended to stamp out "heresy" and in particular the Lollard movement, followers of John Wycliffe. The law stated that "...divers false and perverse people of a certain new sect ...make and write books, [and] do wickedly instruct and inform people". The law's purpose was to "utterly destroy" all "preachings, doctrines, and opinions of this wicked sect". Therefore, all persons in possession of "such books or writings of such wicked doctrine and opinions" were ordered to deliver all such books and writings to the diocesan authorities, within forty days of the law being enacted, so as to let them be burned and destroyed. Those failing to give up their heretical books would face the prospect of being arrested and having their bodies as well as their books burned.[citation needed]

Wycliffe's books (at Prague) edit

On 20 December 1409, Pope Alexander V (later declared an anti-Pope) issued a papal bull that empowered the illiterate Prague Archbishop Zbyněk Zajíc z Házmburka to proceed against Wycliffism in Prague. All copies of Wycliffe's writings were to be surrendered and his doctrines repudiated, and free preaching discontinued. After the publication of the bull in 1410, the Czech Wycliffite leader Jan Hus appealed to Alexander V, but in vain. The Wycliffe books and valuable manuscripts were burned in the court of the Archbishop's palace in the Lesser Town of Prague,[72] and Hus and his adherents were excommunicated by Alexander V. Archbishop Zajíc died in 1411, and with his death there was an upsurge of the Bohemian Reformation. Some of Hus' followers, led by Vok Voksa z Valdštejna, burnt the Papal bulls. Hus, they said, should be obeyed rather than the Church, which they considered a fraudulent mob of adulterers and simonists.[73] In January 1413, a general council in Rome condemned the writings of Wycliffe and ordered them to be burned, though at the time the Church was unable to enforce this in Prague.[74][self-published source?] However, Jan Hus - tricked into arriving at the Council of Constance by a false safe conduct - was seized and burned at the stake. The Council reiterated the order for Wycliffe's books to be burned, and since Wycliffe himself was already dead, it ordered that his body be exhumed and burned – which was duly done. However, the Church never managed to completely extirpate his writings, enough unburned copies survived for these writings to be known up to the present.[citation needed]

Villena's books (in Castile) edit

Henry of Villena, a scion of Aragon's old dynasty, was a scholar, surgeon, and translator who was persecuted by the kings of Castile and Aragon as a sorcerer and necromancer. Upon his death in prison, John II of Castile ordered his confessor Bishop Barrientos to burn Villena's library[75] The poet Juan de Mena skewered the bishop for this destruction in his Labyrinth of Fortune[76] and others accused him of plundering it for the purpose of later plagiarizing the works himself, but Barrientos portrayed himself as bound by his king's orders and as having done what he could to preserve the library's most important works:[citation needed]

Your Majesty, after the death of Don Enrique de Villena, as a Christian king, you sent me, your devoted follower, to burn his books, which I executed in the presence of your servants. These actions, and other ones, are a testament to your Majesty's devotion to Christianity. While this is praiseworthy, on the other hand, it is useful to entrust some books to reliable people who would use them solely with the goal of educating themselves to better defend the Christian religion and faith and to bedevil idolaters and practitioners of necromancy.[77]

Codices of the peoples conquered by the Aztecs (by Itzcoatl) edit

According to the Madrid Codex, the fourth tlatoani Itzcoatl (ruling from 1427 (or 1428) to 1440) ordered the burning of all historical codices because it was "not wise that all the people should know the paintings".[78][e] Among other purposes, this allowed the Aztec state to develop a state-sanctioned history and mythos that venerated the Aztec god Huitzilopochtli.[citation needed]

Gemistus Plethon's Nómoi (by Patriarch Gennadius II) edit

After the death of the prominent late Byzantine scholar Gemistus Plethon, there was discovered among his papers a major work called Nómōn syngrafí (Νόμων συγγραφή; book of laws) or Nómoi (Νόμοι; laws). He had been compiling it throughout most of his adult life, but never published it. It contained his most esoteric beliefs, including an objection to some of the basic tenets of Christianity and an explicit advocacy of a restoration (in modified form) of the worship of gods of the Classical Greek mythology – obviously heretical as the Orthodox Church understood the term. The manuscript came into the possession of Princess Theodora, wife of Demetrios, despot of Morea. Theodora sent the manuscript to Gennadius II, Patriarch of Constantinople, asking for his advice on what to do with it; he returned it, advising her to destroy it. Morea was under invasion from Sultan Mehmet II, and Theodora escaped with Demetrios to Constantinople where she gave the manuscript back to Gennadius, reluctant to herself destroy the only copy of such a distinguished scholar's work. Gennadius finally burnt it in 1460. However, in a letter to the Exarch Joseph (which still survives) Gennadius details the book, providing chapter headings and brief summaries of the contents. Plethon's own summary of the Nómoi, titled Summary of the Doctrines of Zoroaster and Plato, also survived among manuscripts held by his former student Bessarion – though the full detailed text was lost with Gennadius' burning.[citation needed]

Early Modern Period (from 1492 to 1650) edit

Decameron, Ovid and other "lewd" books (by Savonarola) edit

In 1497, followers of the Italian priest Girolamo Savonarola collected and publicly burned books and objects which were deemed to be "immoral", some – but by no means all – of which might fit modern criteria of pornography or "lewd pictures", as well as pagan books, gaming tables, cosmetics, copies of Boccaccio's Decameron, and all the works of Ovid which could be found in Florence.[79]

Arabic and Hebrew books (in Andalucía) edit

In 1490, a number of Hebrew Bibles and a number of other Jewish books were burned at the behest of the Spanish Inquisition. In 1499 or in early 1500, about 5000 Arabic manuscripts, including a school library—all that could be found in the city—were consumed by flames in a public square in Granada, Spain, on the orders of Cardenal Ximénez de Cisneros, the Archbishop of Toledo and the head of the Spanish Inquisition,[80][81] excepting only those on medicine, which are conserved in the library of El Escorial.[82]

Arabic books and archives in Oran (by Spanish conquerors) edit

In 1509 Spanish forces commanded by Count Pedro Navarro, on the orders of Cardinal Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros, conquered the city of Oran in North Africa. Thereupon, the occupying forces set fire to the books and archives of the town – a direct continuation of Cardenal Cisneros' book destruction in Granada, a few years before (see above).[83]

Catholic theological works (by Martin Luther) edit

At the instruction of Reformer Martin Luther, a public burning of books was held in the public square outside Wittenberg's Elster Gate on December 10, 1520. Together with the papal bull of Excommunication Exsurge Domine, issued against Luther himself, were burned works which Luther considered as symbols of Catholic orthodoxy – including the Code of Canon Law, the Summa Theologica of St. Thomas Aquinas and the Summa Angelica, Angelo Carletti's work on Scotist theology.[84]

Lutheran and other Protestant writings (in the Habsburg Netherlands) edit

In March 1521 Emperor Charles V published in Flanders a ban prohibiting the "books, sermons and writings of the said Luther and all his followers and adherents" and ordering all such materials to be burnt. This was followed by a stream of local bans throughout the Habsburg Netherlands and in neighboring states, particularly the ecclesiastical principalities of Liège, Utrecht, Cologne and Munster. Implementation was intensive in the southern part of the Habsburg Netherlands (present-day Belgium). At Leuven eighty copies of Luther's works were burned in October 1520 (even before publication of the official ban). At Antwerp no less than 400 Lutheran works – 300 of them confiscated from booksellers – were destroyed in the Emperor's presence in July 1521. In the same month 300 Lutheran works were destroyed at Ghent. More public book burnings followed in 1522, at Bruges and twice more at Antwerp. Implementation of the Emperor's ban was less swift in the northern part (present day Netherlands). In 1522 the authorities at Leiden ordered confiscation of all Lutheran works in the town, but apparently did not burn them. The first mass book burning in the North was in 1521 in the ecclesiastical territory of Utrecht. The first mass book burning in Amsterdam took place later, in 1526. Thereafter, public book burning remained part of life in the Habsburg Netherlands for much of the 16th century, Anabaptist and Calvinist writings later joining the Lutheran ones in the flames. Yet despite this relentless campaign, Protestant writings continued to proliferate. As well as the books being burned, many of the printers and booksellers involved in disseminating them were themselves burned at the stake by the Inquisition.[85]

The works of Galen and Avicenna (by Paracelsus) edit

In 1527, the innovative physician Paracelsus was licensed to practice in Basel, with the privilege of lecturing at the University of Basel. He published harsh criticism of the Basel physicians and apothecaries, creating political turmoil to the point of his life being threatened. He was prone to many outbursts of abusive language, abhorred untested theory, and ridiculed anybody who placed more importance on traditional medical texts than on practice ('The patients are your textbook, the sickbed is your study. If disease put us to the test, all our splendor, title, ring, and name will be as much help as a horse's tail').[86] In a display of his contempt for conventional medicine, Paracelsus publicly burned editions of the works of Galen and Avicenna – two of the most highly respected traditional medical texts, which established physicians tended to trust without reservations, but which according to Paracelsus contained many serious medical errors.[citation needed]

Books and papers of the Portuguese Order of Christ (By Fra António of Lisbon) edit

In 1523, Fra António (also known as Antonius of Lisbon) a Spanish-born Jerome friar, was given the authority and responsibility to "reform" the Order of Christ in Portugal. His reform included the burning of part of the Order's papers and books, as well as instigating the burning of human beings - he ordered two autos-da-fés, the first and only ones ever held in the Order's headquarters in Tomar, with a total of four people burned at the stake.[citation needed]

Servetus' writings (burned with their author at Geneva, and also burned at Vienne) edit

In 1553, Servetus was burned as a heretic at the order of the city council of Geneva, dominated by Calvin – because a remark in his translation of Ptolemy's Geographia was considered an intolerable heresy. As he was placed on the stake, "around [Servetus'] waist were tied a large bundle of manuscript and a thick octavo printed book", his Christianismi Restitutio. In the same year the Catholic authorities at Vienne also burned Servetus in effigy together with whatever of his writings fell into their hands, in token of the fact that Catholics and Protestants – mutually hostile in this time – were united in regarding Servetus as a heretic and seeking to extirpate his works. At the time it was considered that they succeeded, but three copies were later found to have survived, from which all later editions were printed.[87]

The Historie of Italie (In England) edit

The Historie of Italie (1549), a scholarly and in itself not particularly controversial book by William Thomas, was in 1554 "suppressed and publicly burnt" by order of Queen Mary I of England – after its author was executed on charges of treason. Enough copies survived for new editions to be published in 1561 and 1562, after Elizabeth I came to power.[88]

Religious and other writings of the Saint Thomas Christians (by the Portuguese Church in India) edit

On June 20, 1599 Aleixo de Menezes, Latin Catholic Archbishop of Goa, convened the Synod of Diamper at Udayamperoor (known as Diamper in non-vernacular sources). This diocesan synod or council was aimed at forcing the ancient Saint Thomas Christians of the Malabar Coast (modern Kerala state, India) to abandon their practices, customs and doctrines - the result of centuries of living their own Christian lives in an Indian environment - and force upon them instead the full doctrines and practices of 16th century European Catholic Christianity, at the time involved in a titanic struggle with the rising tide of European Protestantism. Among other things, the Synod of Diamper condemned as heretical numerous religious and other books current among the Saint Thomas Christians, which differed on numerous points from Catholic doctrine. All these were to be handed over to the Church, to be burned. Some of the books which are said to have been burnt at the Synod of Diamper are: 1.The book of the Infancy of the Saviour (History of Our Lord) 2. Book of John Braldon 3. The Pearl of Faith 4. The Book of the Fathers 5. The Life of the Abbot Isaias 6. The Book of Sunday 7. Maclamatas 8. Uguarda or the Rose 9. Comiz 10. The Epistle of Mernaceal 11. Menra 12. Of Orders 13. Homilies (in which the Eucharist is said to be the image of Christ) 14. Exposition of Gospels. 15. The Book of Rubban Hormisda 16. The Flowers of the Saints 17. The Book of Lots 18. The Parsimon or Persian Medicines. Dr Istvan Perczel, a Hungarian scholar researching Syrian Christians in India, found that certain texts survived the destruction of Syriac religious writings by the Portuguese missionaries.[89] Manuscripts were either kept hidden by the Saint Thomas Christians or carried away by those of them who escaped from the area of Portuguese rule and sought refuge with Indian rulers. However, a systematic research is yet to be conducted, to determine which of the books listed as heretical at Diamper still exist and which are gone forever.[citation needed]

Maya codices (by Spanish Bishop of Yucatan) edit

July 12, 1562, Fray Diego de Landa, acting Bishop of Yucatán – then recently conquered by the Spanish – threw into the fires the books of the Maya.[90] The number of destroyed books is greatly disputed. De Landa himself admitted to 27, other sources claim "99 times as many"[91][92] – the later being disputed as an exaggeration motivated by anti-Spanish feeling, the so-called Black Legend. Only three Maya codices and a fragment of a fourth survive. Approximately 5,000 Maya cult images were also burned at the same time. The burning of books and images alike were part of de Landa's effort to eradicate the Maya "idol worship", which he considered "diabolical". As narrated by de Landa himself, he had gained access to the sacred books, transcribed on deerskin, by previously gaining the natives' trust and showing a considerable interest in their culture and language:[93][94] "We found a large number of books in these characters and, as they contained nothing in which were not to be seen as superstition and lies of the devil, we burned them all, which they [the Maya] lamented to an amazing degree, and which caused them much affliction."[82][95] De Landa was later recalled to Spain and accused of having acted illegally in Yucatán, though eventually found not guilty of these charges. Present-day apologists for de Landa assert that, while he had destroyed the Maya books, his own Relación de las cosas de Yucatán is a major source for the Mayan language and culture. Allen Wells calls his work an "ethnographic masterpiece",[96] while William J. Folan, Laraine A. Fletcher and Ellen R. Kintz have written that Landa's account of Maya social organization and towns before conquest is a "gem.[97]"

Arabic books in Spain (owners ordered to destroy their own books by King Philip II) edit

In 1567, Philip II of Spain issued a royal decree in Spain forbidding Moriscos (Muslims who had been converted to Christianity but remained living in distinct communities) from the use of Arabic on all occasions, formal and informal, speaking and writing. Using Arabic in any sense of the word would be regarded as a crime. They were given three years to learn a "Christian" language, after which they would have to get rid of all Arabic written material. It is unknown how many of the Moriscos complied with the decree and destroyed their own Arabic books and how many kept them in defiance of the King's decree; the decree is known to have triggered one of the largest Morisco Revolts[98]

"Obscene" Maltese poetry (by the Inquisition) edit

In 1584 Pasquale Vassallo, a Maltese Dominican friar, wrote a collection of songs, of the kind known as "canczuni", in Italian and Maltese. The poems fell into the hands of other Dominican friars who denounced him for writing "obscene literature". At the order of the Inquisition in 1585 the poems were burned for this allegedly 'obscene' content.[99]

Arwi books (by Portuguese in India and Ceylon) edit

With the 16th-century extension of the Portuguese Empire to India and Ceylon, the staunchly Catholic colonizers were hostile to Muslims they found living there. An aspect of this was a Portuguese hostility to and destruction of writings in the Arwi language, a type of Tamil with many Arabic words, written in a variety of the Arabic script and used by local Muslims. Much of Arwi cultural heritage was thus destroyed, though the precise extent of the destruction might never be known.[citation needed]

Luther's Bible translation (by German Catholics) edit

Martin Luther's 1534 German translation of the Bible was burned in Catholic-dominated parts of Germany in 1624, by order of the Pope.[100]

Uriel da Costa's book (by Jewish community and city authorities in Amsterdam) edit

The 1624 book An Examination of the Traditions of the Pharisees, written by the dissident Jewish intellectual Uriel da Costa, was burned in public by joint action of the Amsterdam Jewish Community and the city's Protestant-dominated City Council. The book, which questioned the fundamental idea of the immortality of the soul, was considered heretical by the Jewish community, which excommunicated him, and was arrested by the Dutch authorities as a public enemy to religion.[101]

Marco Antonio de Dominis' writings (in Rome) edit

The theologian and scientist Marco Antonio de Dominis came in 1624 into conflict with the Inquisition in Rome and was declared "a relapsed heretic". He died in prison, which did not end his trial. On December 21, 1624, his body was burned together with his works.[102][103]

Early Modern Period (1650 to 1800) edit

Books burned by civil, military and ecclesiastical authorities between 1640 and 1660 (in Cromwell's England) edit

Sixty identified printed books, pamphlets and broadsheets and 3 newsbooks were ordered to be burned during this turbulent period, spanning the English Civil War and Oliver Cromwell's rule.[104]

Socinian and Anti-Trinitarian books (by secular and church authorities in the Dutch Republic) edit

As noted by Jonathan Israel, the Dutch Republic was more tolerant than other 17th century states, allowing a wide range of religious groups to practise more or less freely and openly disseminate their views. However, the dominant Calvinist Church drew the line at Socinian and Anti-Trinitarian doctrines which were deemed to "undermine the very foundations of Christianity". In the late 1640s and 1650s, Polish and German holders of such views arrived in the Netherlands as refugees from persecution in Poland and Brandenburg. Dutch authorities made an effort to stop them spreading their theological writings, by arrests and fines as well as book-burning. For example, in 1645, the burgomasters at Rotterdam discovered a stock of 100 books by Cellius and destroyed them. In 1659 Lancelot van Brederode published anonymously 900 copies of a 563-page book assailing the dominant Calvinist Church and the doctrine of the Trinity. The writer's identity was discovered and he was arrested and heavily fined, and the authorities made an effort to hunt down and destroy all copies of the book – but since it had already been distributed, many of the copies survived. The book Bescherming der Waerheyt Godts by Foeke Floris, a liberal Anabaptist preacher, was in 1687 banned by authorities in Friesland which deemed it to be Socinian, and all copies were ordered to be burned. In 1669 the Hof (high court) of Holland ordered the Amsterdam municipal authorities to raid booksellers in the city, seize and destroy Socinian books – especially the Biblioteca fratrum Polonorum ("Book of the Polish Brethren"), at the time known to be widely circulating in Amsterdam. The Amsterdam burgomasters felt obliged to go along with this, at least formally – but in fact some of them mitigated the practical effect by warning booksellers of impending raids.[105]

Book criticising Puritanism (in Boston) edit

The first book burning incident in the Thirteen Colonies occurred in Boston in 1651 when William Pynchon, founder of Springfield, Massachusetts, published The Meritorious Price of Our Redemption, which criticised the Puritans, who were then in power in Massachusetts. The book became the first banned book in North America, and subsequently all known copies were publicly burned. Pynchon left for England prior to a scheduled appearance in court, and never returned.[106][107][108]

Manuscripts of John Amos Comenius (by anti-Swedish Polish partisans) edit

During the Northern Wars in 1655, the well-known Bohemian Protestant theologian and educator John Amos Comenius, then living in exile at the city of Leszno in Poland, declared his support for the Protestant Swedish side. In retaliation, Polish partisans burned his house, his manuscripts, and his school's printing press. Notably, the original manuscript of Comenius' Pansophiæ Prodromus was destroyed in the fire; fortunately, the text had already been printed and thus survived.[citation needed]

Quaker books (in Boston) edit

In 1656 the authorities at Boston imprisoned the Quaker women preachers Ann Austin and Mary Fisher, who had arrived on a ship from Barbados. Among other things they were charged with "bringing with them and spreading here sundry books, wherein are contained most corrupt, heretical, and blasphemous doctrines contrary to the truth of the gospel here professed amongst us" as the colonial gazette put it. The books in question, about a hundred, were publicly burned in Boston's Market Square.[109]

Pascal's "Lettres provinciales" (by King Louis XIV) edit

As part of his intensive campaign against the Jansenists, King Louis XIV of France in 1660 ordered the book "Lettres provinciales" by Blaise Pascal – which contained a fierce defense of the Jansenist doctrines – to be shredded and burnt. Despite Louis XIV absolute power in France, this decree proved ineffective. "Lettres provinciales" continued to be clandestinely printed and disseminated, eventually outliving the Jansenist controversy which gave it birth and becoming recognized as a masterpiece of French prose.[citation needed]

Hobbes books (at Oxford University) edit

In 1683 several books by Thomas Hobbes and other authors were burnt in Oxford University.[110]

Mythical (and/or mystical) writings of Moshe Chaim Luzzatto (by rabbis) edit

During the 1720s rabbis in Italy and Germany ordered the burning of the kabbalist writings of the then young Moshe Chaim Luzzatto. The Messianic messages which Luzzatto claimed to have gotten from a being called "The Maggid" were considered heretical and potentially highly disruptive of the Jewish communities' daily life, and Luzzatto was ordered to cease disseminating them. Though Luzzatto in later life got considerable renown among Jews and his later books were highly esteemed, most of the early writings were considered irrevocably lost until some of them turned up in 1958 in a manuscript preserved in the Library of Oxford.[111][112][113]

Protestant books and Bibles (by Archbishop of Salzburg) edit

In 1731 Count Leopold Anton von Firmian – Archbishop of Salzburg as well as its temporal ruler – embarked on a savage persecution of the Lutherans living in the rural regions of Salzburg. As well expelling tens of thousands of Protestant Salzburgers, the Archbishop ordered the wholesale seizure and burning of all Protestant books and Bibles.[114]

Amalasunta (by Carlo Goldoni) edit

In 1733, Venetian playwright Carlo Goldoni burned his tragedy Amalasunta due to negative reception by his audiences.[115]

The writings of Johann Christian Edelmann (by Imperial authorities in Frankfurt) edit

In 1750, the Imperial Book Commission of the Holy Roman Empire at Frankfurt/Main ordered the wholesale burning of the works of Johann Christian Edelmann, a radical disciple of Spinoza who had outraged the Lutheran and Calvinist clergies by his Deism, his championing of sexual freedom and his asserting that Jesus had been a human being and not the Son of God. In addition, Edelmann was also an outspoken opponent of royal absolutism. With Frankfurt's entire magistracy and municipal government in attendance and seventy guards to hold back the crowds, nearly a thousand copies of Edelmann's writings were tossed on to a tower of flaming birch wood. Edelmann himself was granted refuge in Berlin by Friedrich the Great, but on condition that he stop publishing his views.[116]

Works of Voltaire edit

At first, the French philosopher Voltaire's arrival at the court of King Frederick the Great was a great success. However, in late 1751, king and philosopher quarreled over Voltaire's pamphlet Doctor Akakia (French: Histoire du Docteur Akakia et du Natif de St Malo), a satirical essay of a very biting nature directed against Maupertuis, the president of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Berlin - whom Voltaire considered a pretentious pedant. It so excited the anger of King Frederick, the patron of the academy, that he ordered all copies to be seized and burnt by the common hangman. The order was effective in Prussia, but the King could not prevent some 30,000 copies being sold in Paris. In the aftermath, Voltaire had to leave Prussia, though he and King Frederick were later reconciled.[citation needed]

Voltaire's works were burnt several times in pre-revolutionary France. In his Lettres philosophique, published in Rouen in 1734, he described British attitudes toward government, literature, and religion, and clearly implied that the British constitutional monarchy was better than the French absolute one – which led to the book being burned.[citation needed]

Later, Voltaire's Dictionnaire philosophique, which was originally called the Dictionnaire philosophique portatif, had its first volume, consisting of 73 articles in 344 pages, burnt upon release in June 1764.[117]

An "economic pamphlet", Man With Forty Crowns, was ordered to be burnt by the Parlement of Paris, and a bookseller who had sold a copy was pilloried. It is said that one of the magistrates on the case exclaimed, "Is it only his books we shall burn?"[118]

Books that offended Qianlong Emperor edit

China's Qianlong Emperor (1711–1799) embarked on an ambitious program – the Complete Library of the Four Treasuries (or Siku Quanshu), largest compilation of books in Chinese history (possibly in human history in general). The enterprise included, however, also the systematic banning and burning of books considered "unfitting" to be included – especially those critical, even by subtle hints, of the ruling Qing dynasty. During this Emperor's nearly sixty years on the throne, the destruction of about 3000 "evil" titles (books, poems, and plays) was decreed, the number of individual copies confiscated and destroyed is variously estimated at tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands. As well as systematically destroying the written works, 53 authors of such works were executed, in some cases by lingering torture or along with their family members. A famous earlier Chinese encyclopedia, Tiangong Kaiwu (Chinese: 天工開物) was included among the works banned and destroyed at this time, and was long considered to be lost forever – but some original copies were discovered, preserved intact, in Japan.[119] The Qianlong Emperor's own masterpiece – the Complete Library of the Four Treasuries, produced only in seven hand-written copies – was itself the target of later book burnings: the copies kept in Zhenjiang and Yangzhou were destroyed during the Taiping Rebellion, and in 1860, during the Second Opium War an Anglo-French expedition force burned most of the copy kept at Beijing's Old Summer Palace. The four remaining copies, though suffering some damage during World War II, are still preserved at four Chinese museums and libraries.[citation needed]

Anti-Wilhelm Tell tract (Canton of Uri) edit

The 1760 tract by Simeon Uriel Freudenberger from Luzern, arguing that Wilhelm Tell was a myth and the acts attributed to him had not happened in reality, was publicly burnt in Altdorf, capital of the Swiss canton of Uri – where, according to the legend, William Tell shot the apple from his son's head.[120]

Vernacular Catholic hymn books (at Mainz) edit

In 1787, an attempt by the Catholic authorities at Mainz to introduce vernacular hymn books encountered strong resistance from conservative Catholics, who refused to abandon the old Latin books and who seized and burned copies of the new German language books.[121]

The Libro d'Oro (in the French-ruled Ionian Islands) edit

With the Treaty of Leoben and the Treaty of Campo Formio in 1797, the French Republic gained the Ionian Islands, hitherto ruled by the Venetian Republic. France proceeded to annex the islands, organize them as the départements of Mer-Égée, Ithaque and Corcyre, and introduce there the principles and institutions of the French Revolution – initially getting great enthusiasm among the islands' inhabitants. The abolition of aristocratic privileges was accompanied by the public burning of the Libro d'Oro – formal directory of nobles in the Republic of Venice which included those of the Ionian Islands.[citation needed]

Industrial Revolution period edit

"The Burned Book" (by Rabbi Nachman of Breslov) edit

In 1808, Rabbi Nachman of Breslov burned the only copy or copies of one of his own books for an unknown reason. Many Hasidic Jews continue to search for "The Burned Book," as they call it, by looking for clues in his other writings.[122]

Records of the Goa Inquisition (by Portuguese colonial authorities) edit

In 1812 the Goa Inquisition was suppressed, after hundreds of years in which it had been enacting various kinds of religious persecution in the Portuguese colony of Goa, India. In the aftermath, most of the Goa Inquisition's records were destroyed – a great loss to historians, making it is impossible to know the exact number of the Inquisition's victims.[123]

The Code Napoléon (by German Nationalist students) edit

On October 18, 1817, about 450 students, members of the newly founded German Burschenschaften ("fraternities"), came together at Wartburg Castle to celebrate the German victory over Napoleon two years before, condemn conservatism and call for German unity. The Code Napoléon as well as the writings of German conservatives were ceremoniously burned 'in effigy': instead of the costly volumes, scraps of parchment with the titles of the books were placed on the bonfire. Among these was August von Kotzebue's History of the German Empires. Karl Ludwig Sand, one of the students participating in this gathering, would assassinate Kotzebue two years later.[124]

William Blake manuscripts (by Frederick Tatham) edit

The poet William Blake died in 1827, and his manuscripts were left with his wife Catherine. After her death in 1831, the manuscripts were inherited by Frederick Tatham, who burned some that he deemed heretical or politically radical. Tatham was an Irvingite, member of one of the many fundamentalist movements of the 19th century, and opposed to any work that smacked of "blasphemy".[125] At the time, Blake was nearly forgotten, and Tatham could act with impunity. When Blake was re-discovered some decades later and recognized as a major English poet, the damage was already done.[citation needed]

Count István Széchenyi's book (by conservative Hungarian nobles) edit

In 1825 Count István Széchenyi came to the fore as a major Hungarian reformer. Though himself a noble, a magnate from one of Hungary's most powerful families, Szechenyi published Hitel (Credit), a book arguing that the nobles' privileges were both morally indefensible and economically detrimental to the nobles themselves. In 1831, angry conservative nobles publicly burned copies of Széchenyi's book.[citation needed]

Early braille books (in Paris) edit

In 1842, officials at the school for the blind in Paris were ordered by its new director, Armand Dufau, to burn books written in the new braille code. After every braille book at the institute that could be found was burned, supporters of the code's inventor, Louis Braille, rebelled against Dufau by continuing to use the code, and braille was eventually restored at the school.[126]

Libraries of Buddhist monasteries (during the Taiping Rebellion) edit

The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, established by rebels in South China in 1854, sought to replace Confucianism, Buddhism and Chinese folk religion with the Taiping's version of Christianity, God Worshipping, which held that the Taiping leader Hong Xiuquan was the younger brother of Jesus Christ. As part of this policy, the libraries of the Buddhist monasteries were destroyed, almost completely in the case of the Yangtze Delta area.[127] Temples of Daoism, Confucianism, and other traditional beliefs were often defaced.[128]

Following the suppression of the Taiping Rebellion, the victorious forces of the Qing dynasty engaged in their own extensive destruction of books and records. It is thought that only a tenth of Taiping-published records survive to this day, as they were mostly destroyed by the Qing in an attempt to rewrite the history of the conflict.[129]

"The Bonnie Blue Flag" (by Union General Benjamin Butler) edit

During the American Civil War, when Union Major General Benjamin Butler captured New Orleans he ordered the destruction of all copies of the music for the popular Confederate song "The Bonnie Blue Flag", as well as imposing a $500 fine on A. E. Blackmar who published this music.[citation needed]

On the Ancient Cypriots (by Ottoman Authorities) edit

Following its publication in 1869, the book On the Ancient Cypriots by Greek Cypriot priest and scholar Ieronymos Myriantheus was banned by the Ottoman Empire, due to its Greek Nationalist tendencies, and 460 copies of it were burned. In a punitive measure towards Myriantheus the Ottomans refused to recognize him as Bishop of Kyrenia.[130]

"Lewd" books (by Anthony Comstock and the NYSSV) edit

Anthony Comstock founded the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice (NYSSV) in 1873 and over the years burned 15 tons of books, 284,000 pounds of plate, and almost 4 million pictures. The NYSSV was financed by wealthy and influential New York philanthropists. Lobbying the United States Congress also led to the enactment of the Comstock laws.[citation needed]

Pedigrees and books of Muslim law and theology (By the Mahdi in Sudan) edit

After establishing his rule over Sudan in 1885, Muhammad Ahmad, known as the Mahdi, authorized the burning of lists of pedigrees – which, in his view, accentuated tribalism at the expense of religious unity – as well as books of Muslim law and theology because of their association with the old order which the Mahdi had overthrown.[citation needed]

Emily Dickinson's correspondence (on her orders) edit

Following the death of noted American poet Emily Dickinson in 1890, her sister Lavinia Dickinson burned almost all of her correspondences in keeping with Emily's wishes, but as it was unclear whether the forty notebooks and loose sheets all filled with almost 1800 poems were to be included in this, Lavinia saved these and began to publish the poems that year.[131][132] When Dickinson's work gained prominence, scholars greatly regretted the loss of the papers which Lavinia Dickinson did burn, and which might have helped elucidate some puzzling references in the poems.[citation needed]

Ivan Bloch's research on Russian Jews (by Tsarist Russian government) edit

In 1901 the Russian Council of Ministers banned a five-volume work on the socio-economic conditions of Jews in the Russian Empire, the result of a decade-long comprehensive statistical research commissioned by Ivan Bloch. (It was entitled "Comparison of the material and moral levels in the Western Great-Russian and Polish Regions"). The research's conclusions – that Jewish economic activity was beneficial to the Empire – refuted antisemitic demagoguery and were disliked by the government, which ordered all copies to be seized and burned. Only a few survived, circulating as great rarities.[133]

Italian Nationalist literature (by Austrian authorities in Trieste) edit

In the tense period following the Bosnian crisis of 1908–09, the Austrian authorities in Trieste cracked down on the Italian Irredentists in the city, who were seeking to end Austrian rule there and annex Trieste to Italy (which would actually happen ten years later, at the end of World War I). A very large quantity of Italian-language books and periodicals whose contents were deemed "subversive" were confiscated and consigned to destruction. The authorities had the condemned material meticulously weighted, it was found to measure no less than 4.7 metric tons. Thereupon, on February 13, 1909, the books and periodicals were officially burned at the Servola blast furnaces.[f] The site of the book burnings was very near the home of the writer Italo Svevo, though Svevo's own works were spared. (Servola is a suburb of Trieste.)[citation needed]

World War I and interwar era edit

Books in Serbian (by World War I Bulgarian Army) edit

In the aftermath of the Serbian defeat in the Serbian Campaign of World War I, the region of Old Serbia came under the control of Bulgarian occupational authorities. Bulgaria engaged in a campaign of cultural genocide. Serbian priests, professors, teachers and public officials were deported into prison camps in pre–war Bulgaria or executed; they were later replaced by their Bulgarian counterparts. The use of the Serbian language was banned. Books in Serbian were confiscated from libraries, schools and private collections to be burned publicly. Books deemed to be of particular value were selected by Bulgarian ethnographers and sent back into Bulgaria.[134]

Valley of the Squinting Windows (at Delvin, Ireland) edit

In 1918 the Valley of the Squinting Windows, by Brinsley MacNamara, was burned in Delvin, Ireland. MacNamara never returned to the area, his father James MacNamara was boycotted and subsequently emigrated, and a court case was even sought. The book criticised the village's inhabitants for being overly concerned with their image towards neighbours, and although it called the town "Garradrimna," geographical details made it clear that Delvin was meant.[135]

George Grosz's cartoons (by court order in Weimar Germany) edit

In June 1920 the left-wing German cartoonist George Grosz produced a lithographic collection in three editions entitled Gott mit uns. A satire on German society and the counterrevolution, the collection was swiftly banned. Grosz was charged with insulting the army, which resulted in a court order to have the collection destroyed. The artist also had to pay a 300 German Mark fine.[136]

Margaret Sanger's Family Limitation (by British court order) edit

In 1923 the anarchist Guy Aldred and his partner and co-worker Rose Witcop, a birth control activist, published together a British edition of Margaret Sanger's Family Limitation – a key pioneering work on the subject. They were denounced by a London magistrate for this "indiscriminate" publication.[137] The two lodged an appeal, strongly supported in their legal struggle by Dora Russell – who, with her husband Bertrand Russell and John Maynard Keynes, paid the legal costs.[138] However, it was to no avail. Despite expert testimony from a consultant to Guy's Hospital and evidence at the appeal that the book had only been sold to those aged over twenty-one, the court ordered the entire stock to be destroyed.[139]

Theodore Dreiser's works (at Warsaw, Indiana) edit

Trustees of Warsaw, Indiana, ordered the burning of all the library's works by local author Theodore Dreiser in 1935.[140]

Works of Goethe, Shaw, and Freud (by Metaxas dictatorship in Greece) edit

Ioannis Metaxas, who held dictatorial power in Greece between 1936 and 1941, conducted an intensive campaign against what he considered Anti-Greek literature and viewed as dangerous to the national interest. Targeted under this definition and put to the fire were not only the writings of dissident Greek writers, but even works by such authors as Goethe, Shaw, and Freud.[141]

Books, pamphlets and pictures (by Soviet authorities) edit

In his Open Letter to Stalin Old Bolshevik and former Soviet diplomat Fyodor Raskolnikov alleges that Soviet libraries began circulating long lists of books, pamphlets and pictures to be burnt on sight, following Joseph Stalin's ascension to power. Those lists include the names of authors whose works were deemed undesirable. Raskolnikov was surprised to find his work on the October Revolution in one of those lists.[142] The lists contained numerous books from the West which were deemed decadent.[143]

Pompeu Fabra's library (by Franco's troops) edit

In 1939, shortly after the surrender of Barcelona, Franco's troops burned the entire library of Pompeu Fabra, the main author of the normative reform of contemporary Catalan language, while shouting "¡Abajo la inteligencia!" (Down with the intelligentsia!)[144]

World War II edit

Jewish, anti-Nazi and "degenerate" books (by the Nazis) edit

 
In 1933, Nazis burned works of Jewish authors, and other works considered "un-German", at the library of the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft in Berlin.

The works of some Jewish authors and other so-called "degenerate" books were burnt by the Nazis in the 1930s and 1940s. Richard Euringer, director of the libraries in Essen, identified 18,000 works deemed not to correspond with Nazi ideology, which were publicly burned.[citation needed]

On May 10, 1933, on the Opernplatz in Berlin, SA and Nazi youth groups burned around 25,000 books from the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft and the Humboldt University, including works by Albert Einstein, Vicki Baum, Bertolt Brecht, Heinrich Heine, Helen Keller, Thomas Mann, Karl Marx, Erich Maria Remarque, Frank Wedekind, Ernest Hemingway and H. G. Wells. Student groups throughout Germany in 34 towns also carried out their own book burnings on that day and in the following weeks. Erich Kästner wrote an ironic account (published only after the fall of Nazism) of having witnessed the burning of his own books on that occasion. Radio broadcasts of the burnings were played in Berlin and elsewhere, and 40,000 turned up to hear Joseph Goebbels make a speech about the acts. See here for a partial list of authors whose books were burned.[145]

As well as destroying the published works of Lion Feuchtwanger, Nazis at the same time broke into his home, stole and destroyed several manuscripts of his works in progress. Luckily for Feuchtwanger, he and his wife were at the time in America, and he survived to continue writing in exile.[citation needed]

In May 1995,[146] Micha Ullman's underground "Bibliotek" memorial [de] was inaugurated on Bebelplatz square in Berlin, where the Nazi book burnings began. The memorial consists of a window on the surface of the plaza, under which vacant bookshelves are lit and visible. A bronze plaque bears a quote by Heinrich Heine: "Where books are burned in the end people will burn."[147]

Jewish books in Alessandria (by pro-Nazi mob) edit

On December 13, 1943, in Alessandria, Italy, a mob of supporters of the German-imposed Italian Social Republic attacked the synagogue of the city's small Jewish community, on Via Milano. Books and manuscripts were taken out of the synagogue and set on fire at Piazza Rattazzi. The burning of the Jewish books was a prelude to a mass arrest and deportation of the Jews themselves. A total of 48 Jews were deported from Alessandria, many of whom were murdered in Auschwitz.[148]

André Malraux's manuscript (by the Gestapo) edit

During World War II the French writer and anti-Nazi resistance fighter André Malraux worked on a long novel, The Struggle Against the Angel, the manuscript of which was destroyed by the Gestapo upon his capture in 1944. The name was apparently inspired by the Jacob story in the Bible. A surviving opening part named The Walnut Trees of Altenburg, was published after the war.[149]

Manuscripts and books in Warsaw, Poland (by the Nazis) edit

 
Works of Macrobius, ca. 1470 is one of the books burned by the Germans during the Planned destruction of Warsaw.[150]

The Nazis destroyed much of Warsaw during World War II: an estimated 16 million books, and about 85% of the city's buildings.[g] The libraries of the University of Warsaw and of the Warsaw Institute of Technology were razed. 14 other libraries were completely burned to the ground. German Verbrennungskommandos (Burning detachments) were responsible for much of the targeted attacks on libraries and other centers of knowledge and learning.[citation needed]

In October 1944, the manuscript collection of the National Library of Poland was burned to erase Polish national history.

Part of the Krasiński Library's building was destroyed in September 1939, leading to its collections, which had almost all survived, being moved in 1941. In September 1944, an original collection of 250,000 items was shelled by German artillery, although many books were saved by being thrown out the windows by library staff. In October, what had survived was deliberately burned by the authorities, including 26,000 manuscripts, 2,500 incunables (printed before 1501), 80,000 early printed books, 100,000 drawings and printmakings, 50,000 note and theatre manuscripts, and many maps and atlases.[citation needed]

The Załuski Library – established in 1747 and thus the oldest public library in Poland and one of the oldest and most important libraries in Europe – was burned down during the Uprising in October 1944. Out of about 400,000 printed items, maps and manuscripts, only some 1800 manuscripts and 30,000 printed materials survived. Unlike earlier Nazi book burnings where specific books were deliberately targeted, the burning of this library was part of the general setting on fire of a large part of the city of Warsaw.[citation needed]

The extensive library of the Polish Museum, Rapperswil, founded in 1870 in Rapperswil, Switzerland, had been created when Poland was not a country and was thus moved to Warsaw in 1927. In September 1939, the National Polish Museum in Rapperswil along with the Polish School at Batignolles, lost almost their entire collection during the German bombardment of Warsaw.[151]

Books in the National Library of Serbia (by World War II German bomber planes) edit

On April 6, 1941, during World War II, German bomber planes under orders by Nazi Germany specifically targeted the National Library of Serbia in Belgrade. The entire collection was destroyed, including 1,300 ancient Cyrillic manuscripts[152] and 300,000 books.[153]

Cold War era and 1990s edit

The books of Knut Hamsun (in post-World War II Norway) edit

Following the liberation of Norway from Nazi occupation in 1945, angry crowds burned the books of Knut Hamsun in public in major Norwegian cities, due to Hamsun's having collaborated with the Nazis.[154]

Post-World War II Germany edit

On May 13, 1946, the Allied Control Council issued a directive for the confiscation of all media that could supposedly contribute to Nazism or militarism. As a consequence a list was drawn up of over 30,000 titles, ranging from school textbooks to poetry, which were then banned. All copies of books on the list were to be confiscated and destroyed; the possession of a book on the list was made a punishable offence. All the millions of copies of these books were to be confiscated and destroyed. The representative of the Military Directorate admitted that the order was no different in intent or execution from Nazi book burnings.[155] All confiscated literature was reduced to pulp instead of burning. In August 1946 the order was amended so that "In the interest of research and scholarship, the Zone Commanders (in Berlin the Komendantura) may preserve a limited number of documents prohibited in paragraph 1. These documents will be kept in special accommodation where they may be used by German scholars and other German persons who have received permission to do so from the Allies only under strict supervision by the Allied Control Authority.[citation needed]

Books in Kurdish (in north Iran) edit

Following the suppression of the pro-Soviet Kurdish Republic of Mahabad in north Iran in December 1946 and January 1947, members of the victorious Iranian Army burned all Kurdish-language books that they could find, as well as closing down the Kurdish printing press and banning the teaching of Kurdish.[156]

Comic book burnings, 1948 edit

In 1948, children – overseen by priests, teachers, and parents – publicly burned several hundred comic books in both Spencer, West Virginia, and Binghamton, New York. Once these stories were picked up by the national press wire services, similar events followed in many other cities.[157]

Books by Shen Congwen (by Chinese booksellers) edit

Around 1949, the books that Shen Congwen (pseudonym of Shen Yuehuan) had written in the period 1922–1949 were banned in the Republic of China and both banned and subsequently burned by booksellers in the People's Republic of China.[158]

Judaica collection at Birobidzhan (by Stalin) edit

As part of Joseph Stalin's efforts to stamp out Jewish culture in the Soviet Union in the late 1940s and early 1950s, the Judaica collection in the library of Birobidzhan, capital of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast on the Chinese border, was burned.[159][160][161]

Romanian literature (by the Romanian Workers' Party) edit

In the 1950s, the Romanian Workers' Party had started purging the libraries of the Romanian People's Republic (Romanian: Republica Populară Romînă, RPR), by burning any books mentioning Bessarabia or the Bukovina and German and Italian translations of Romanian literature. The entire contents of the Casa Școalelor had been emptied, with books on national popular culture and religious works were burned. A librarian of the Academy, Barbu Lăzăreanu, was put in charge of maps, documents, photographs, the unique lexicographical file of the Romanian language, which all were proving the Latin origin of Romanian. Displeasing the Slavic committee that had passed on them, they were burned. 762 Romanian literary works were withdrawn from circulation, including those of Liviu Rebreanu, Ioan Alexandru Brătescu-Voinești and Octavian Goga. The purged books and treasures were replaced with millions of books and pamphlets. Cartea Rusă alone issued 3,701,300 copies of Romanian translations of 174 Russian books, with additional 329,050 copies translated in Hungarian, German, Serbian and Turkish. The purging of the books was led by Petre Constantinescu-Iași, Mihai Roller, Barbu Lăzăreanu and Emil Petrovici.[162]

Mordecai Kaplan's publications (by Union of Orthodox Rabbis) edit

In 1954, the rabbi Mordecai Kaplan was excommunicated from Orthodox Judaism in the United States, and his works were publicly burned at the annual gathering of the Union of Orthodox Rabbis.[163][164][165]

Hungarian Revolution of 1956 edit

Communist books were burned by the revolutionaries during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, when 122 communities reported book burnings.[166][167]

Memoirs of Yrjö Leino (by Finnish government, under Soviet pressure) edit

Yrjö Leino, a Communist activist, was Finnish Minister of the Interior in the crucial 1945–1948 period. In 1948 he suddenly resigned for reasons which remain unclear and went into retirement. Leino returned to the public eye in 1958 with his memoirs of his time as Minister of the Interior. The manuscript was prepared in secret – even most of the staff of the publishing company Tammi were kept in ignorance – but the project was revealed by Leino because of an indiscretion just before the planned publication. It turned out the Soviet Union was very strongly opposed to publication of the memoirs. The Soviet Union's Chargé d'affaires in Finland Ivan Filippov (Ambassador Viktor Lebedev had suddenly departed from Finland a few weeks earlier on October 21, 1958) demanded that Prime Minister Karl-August Fagerholm's government prevent the release of Leino's memoirs. Fagerholm said that the government could legally do nothing, because the work had not yet been released nor was there censorship in Finland. Filippov advised that if Leino's book was published, the Soviet Union would draw "serious conclusions". Later the same day Fagerholm called the publisher, Untamo Utrio, and it was decided that the January launch of the book was to be cancelled. Eventually, the entire print run of the book was destroyed at the Soviet Union's request. Almost all of the books – some 12,500 copies – were burned in August 1962 with the exception of a few volumes which were furtively sent to political activists. Deputy director of Tammi Jarl Hellemann later argued that the fuss about the book was completely disproportionate to its substance, describing the incident as the first instance of Finnish self-censorship motivated by concerns about relations to the Soviet Union.[168] The book was finally published in 1991, when interest in it had largely dissipated.[citation needed]

Brazil, military coup, 1964 edit

Following the 1964 Brazilian coup d'état, General Justino Alves Bastos, commander of the Third Army, ordered, in Rio Grande do Sul, the burning of all "subversive books". Among the books he branded as subversive was Stendhal's The Red and the Black.[169] Stendhal's was written in criticism of the situation in France under the reactionary regime of the Restored Bourbon monarchy (1815-1830). Evidently, General Bastos felt some of this could also apply to life in Brazil under the right-wing military junta.[citation needed]

Religious, anti-Communist and genealogy books (in the Cultural Revolution) edit

It is the Chinese tradition to record family members in a book, including every male born in the family, who they are married to, etc. Traditionally, only males' names are recorded in the books. During the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), many such books were forcibly destroyed or burned to ashes, because they were considered by the Chinese Communist Party as among the Four Old Things to be eschewed.[170]

Also many copies of classical works of Chinese literature were destroyed, though – unlike the genealogy books – these usually existed in many copies, some of which survived. Many copies of the Buddhist, Taoist and Confucian books were destroyed, thought to be promoting the "old" thinking.[171][172]

Siné's Massacre (during power struggle in "Penguin Books") edit

In 1965, the British publishing house Penguin Books was torn by an intense power struggle, with chief editor Tony Godwin and the board of directors attempting to remove the company founder Allen Lane. One of the acts taken by Lane in an effort to retain his position was to steal and burn the entire print run of the English edition of Massacre by the French cartoonist Siné, whose content was reportedly "deeply offensive".[173][174]

Beatles burnings – Southern United States, 1966 edit

John Lennon, member of the popular music group The Beatles, sparked outrage from religious conservatives in the Southern 'Bible Belt' states due to his quote 'The Beatles are more popular than Jesus' from an interview he had done in England five months previous to the Beatles' 1966 US Tour (their final tour as a group). Disc Jockeys, evangelists, and the Ku Klux Klan implored the local public to bring their Beatles records, books, magazines, posters and memorabilia to Beatles bonfire burning events.[citation needed]

Leftist books in Chile during the Pinochet dictatorship edit

 
Burning left-wing books during the early days of the Chilean military dictatorship, 1974

After the victory of Augusto Pinochet's forces in the Chilean coup of 1973, bookburnings of Marxist and other works ensued. Journalist Carlos Rama reported in February 1974 that up to that point, destroyed works included: the handwritten Chilean Declaration of Independence by Bernardo O'Higgins, thousands of books of Editora Nacional Quimantú including the Complete Works of Che Guevara, thousands of books in the party headquarters of the Chilean Socialist Party and MAPU, personal copies of works by Marx, Lenin, and anti-fascist thinkers, and thousands of copies of newspapers and magazines favorable to Salvador Allende including Chile Today.[175] In some instances, even books on Cubism were burned because ignorant soldiers thought it had to do with the Cuban Revolution.[176][177]

Books burned by at order of school board in Drake, North Dakota, USA edit

On November 8, 1973, the custodian at Drake's elementary/high school used the school's furnace to burn 32 copies of Kurt Vonnegut's Slaugherhouse Five, at the order of the school board after they "deemed the novel profane and therefore unsuitable for use in class."[178] Other books reported to have been burned were Deliverance by James Dickey, and a short story anthology with stories from Joseph Conrad, William Faulkner, and John Steinbeck.[179]

Book burning caused by Viet Cong in South Vietnam edit

Following The Fall of Saigon, Viet Cong gained nominal authority in South Vietnam and conducted several book burnings along with eliminating any cultural forms of South Vietnam. This act of destruction was made since the Vietnamese Communists condemned those values were corruptible ones shaped by "puppet government" (derogatory words to indicate Republic of Vietnam) and American Imperialism.[180]

From the Noble Savage to the Noble Revolutionary (Venezuela, 1976) edit

In 1976 detractors of Venezuelan liberal writer Carlos Rangel publicly burned copies of his book From the Noble Savage to the Noble Revolutionary in the year of its publication at the Central University of Venezuela.[181][182]

New Testament (Jerusalem, 1980) edit

On 23 March 1980, Yad L'Achim, an Orthodox Jewish counter-missionary organisation that was at the time a beneficiary of subsidies from the Israeli Ministry of Religion, ceremonially incinerated hundreds of copies of the New Testament publicly in Jerusalem. Some people including Israel Shahak protested against this public burning of Christian books.[183]

The Burning of Jaffna Library edit

Took place on the night of June 1, 1981, when an organized mob of Sinhalese individuals went on a rampage, burning the library to destroy Tamil language Literary works against Tamils. It was one of the most violent examples of ethnic biblioclasm of the 20th century. At the time of its destruction, the library was one of the biggest in Asia, containing over 97,000 books and manuscripts.[citation needed]

Sikh Reference Library (Amritsar, 1984) edit

The Sikh Reference Library in Amritsar, a collection of newspapers, and other literary works related sedition, incinerated by Indian troops during the 1984 Operation Blue Star. The missing literature has not been recovered to this day and are presumbed to be lost.[184][185][186][187][188][1] The library hosted a vast collection of an estimated 20,000 literary works just before the destruction, including 11,107 books, 2,500 manuscripts, newspaper archives, historical letters, documents/files, and others.[3] Most of the literature was written in the Punjabi-language and related to Sikhism, but there were also Hindi, Assamese, Bengali, Sindhi, English, and French works touching upon various topics.

The Satanic Verses (worldwide) edit

The 1988 publication of the novel The Satanic Verses, by Salman Rushdie, was followed by angry demonstrations and riots around the world by followers of political Islam who considered it blasphemous. In the United Kingdom, book burnings were staged in the cities of Bolton and Bradford.[189] In addition, five UK bookstores selling the novel were the target of bombings, and two bookstores in Berkeley, California, were firebombed.[190][191] The author was condemned to death by various Islamist clerics and lives in hiding.[citation needed]

Central University Library (Bucharest, 1989) edit

During the Romanian Revolution of December 1989, the Central University Library of Bucharest was burned down in uncertain circumstances and over 500,000 books, along with about 3,700 manuscripts, were destroyed.[192][193]

Oriental Institute in Sarajevo (Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1992) edit

On 17 May 1992, the Oriental Institute in besieged city of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, was targeted by JNA and Serb nationalists artillery, and repeatedly hit with a barrages of incendiary ammunition fired from positions on the hills overlooking the city center. The Institute occupied the top floors of a large, four-storey office block squeezed between other buildings in a densely built neighborhood, with no other buildings being hit. After catching the fire, the institute was completely burned out and most of its collections destroyed by blaze. The collections of the institute were among the richest of its kind, containing Oriental manuscripts centuries old and written about the subjects in wide varieties of fields, in Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Hebrew and local arebica (native Bosnian language written in Arabic script), other languages and many different scripts and in many different geographical location around the world. The losses included 5,263 bound manuscripts, as well as tens of thousands of Ottoman-era documents of various kind. Only about 1% of Institute materials was saved.[194][195][196][197][198]

National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992) edit

On August 25, 1992, the National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina was firebombed and destroyed by Serbian nationalists. Almost all the contents of the library were destroyed, including more than 1.5 million books that included 4,000 rare books, 700 manuscripts, and 100 years of Bosnian newspapers and journals.[199]

Abkhazian Research Institute of History, Language and Literature and National Library of Abkhazia (by Georgian troops) edit

Georgian troops entered Abkhazia on August 14, 1992, sparking a 14-month war. At the end of October, the Abkhazian Research Institute of History, Language and Literature named after Dmitry Gulia, which housed an important library and archive, was torched by Georgian troops; also targeted was the capital's public library. It seems to have been a deliberate attempt by the Georgian paramilitary soldiers to wipe out the region's historical record.[200]

The Nasir-i Khusraw Foundation in Kabul (by the Taliban regime) edit

In 1987, the Nasir-i Khusraw Foundation was established in Kabul, Afghanistan due to the collaborative efforts of several civil society and academic institutions, leading scholars and members of the Ismaili community. This site included video and book publishing facilities, a museum, and a library.[201] The library was a marvel in its extensive collection of fifty-five thousand books, available to all students and researchers, in the languages of Arabic, English, and Pashto. In addition, its Persian collection was unparalleled – including an extremely rare 12th-century manuscript of Firdawsi's epic masterpiece The Book of Kings (Shāhnāma). The Ismaili collection of the library housed works from Hasan-i Sabbah and Nasir-i Khusraw, and the seals of the first Aga Khan. With the withdrawal of the Soviet forces from Afghanistan in the late 1980s and the strengthening of the Taliban forces, the library collection was relocated to the valley of Kayan. However, on August 12, 1998, the Taliban fighters ransacked the press, the museum, the video facilities and the library, destroying some books in the fire and throwing others in a nearby river. Not a single book was spared, including a thousand-year-old Quran.[202]

Morgh-e Amin publication house in Tehran (by Islamic extremists) edit

Some days after publishing a novel entitled The Gods Laugh on Mondays by Iranian novelist Reza Khoshnazar, men came at night saying they are Islamic building inspectors and torched the publisher's book shop on or around August 22[203] or 23, 1995.[204][205]

21st century edit

Abu Nuwas poetry (by Egyptian Ministry of Culture) edit

In January 2001, the Egyptian Ministry of Culture ordered the burning of some 6,000 books of homoerotic poetry by the well-known 8th century Persian-Arab poet Abu Nuwas, even though his writings are considered classics of Arab literature.[206][207]

Iraq's national library, Baghdad 2003 edit

Following the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Iraq's national library and the Islamic library in central Baghdad were burned and destroyed by looters.[208] The national library housed rare volumes and documents from as far back as the 16th century, including entire royal court records and files from the period when Iraq was part of the Ottoman Empire. The destroyed Islamic library of Baghdad included one of the oldest surviving copies of the Qur'an.[209]

United Talmund Torah School Library, Montreal 2004 edit

On the morning of April 5, 2004, 18-year-old Sleiman El-Merhebi firebombed a school library of the United Talmud Torahs of Montreal, burning its 10,000 volume collection. Reconstruction and other indirect costs amounted to 600,000 Canadian dollars.[210]

Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code, Italy 2006 edit

On May 20, 2006, at noon, two communal Italian councillors, Stefano Gizzi and Massimo Ruspandini [it], staged a burning of a copy of The Da Vinci Code after the film of the same name premiered, in the square of Italian town Ceccano.[211][212][213]

The Diary of Anne Frank during a midsummer's party, Germany 2006 edit

On June 24, 2006, a group of men, aged between 24 and 28,[214] threw a United States flag and a copy of The Diary of Anne Frank into a bonfire, first the flag, then the book,[215] during a midsummer's party in German village Pretzien.[216] They were supposedly members of a far-right group called Heimat Bund Ostelbien (East Elbian Homeland Federation),[216] who also organized the party.[214]

Harry Potter books edit

There have been several incidents of Harry Potter books being burned, including those directed by churches at Alamogordo, New Mexico, and Charleston, South Carolina, in 2006.[217] More recently books have been burnt in response to J.K. Rowling's comments on Donald Trump,[218] and to protest her gender-critical beliefs.[219][220]

Inventory of Prospero's Books (by proprietors Tom Wayne and W.E. Leathem) edit

On May 27, 2007, Tom Wayne and W.E. Leathem, the proprietors of Prospero's Books, a used book store in Kansas City, Missouri, publicly burned a portion of their inventory to protest what they perceived as society's increasing indifference to the printed word. The protest was interrupted by the Kansas City Fire Department on the grounds that Wayne and Leathem had failed to obtain the required permits.[221]

New Testaments in city of Or Yehuda, Israel edit

In May 2008, a "fairly large" number of New Testaments were burned in Or Yehuda, Israel. Conflicting accounts have the deputy mayor of Or Yehuda, Uzi Aharon (of Haredi party Shas), claiming to have organized the burnings or to have stopped them. He admitted involvement in collecting New Testaments and "Messianic propaganda" that had been distributed in the city. The burning apparently violated Israeli laws about destroying religious items.[222]

Non-approved Bibles, books and music in Canton, North Carolina edit

The Amazing Grace Baptist Church of Canton, North Carolina, headed by Pastor Marc Grizzard, intended to hold a book burning on Halloween 2009.[223][224] The church, being a King James Version exclusive church, held all other translations of the Bible to be heretical, and also considered both the writings of Christian writers and preachers such as Billy Graham and T.D. Jakes and most musical genres to be heretical expressions. However, a confluence of rain, oppositional protesters[225] and a state environmental protection law against open burning resulted in the church having to retreat into the edifice to ceremoniously tear apart and dump the media into a trash can (as recorded on video which was submitted to People For the American Way's Right Wing Watch blog);[226] nevertheless, the church claimed that the book "burning" was a success.[227]

Bagram Bibles edit

In 2009 the US military burned Bibles in Pashto and Dari that were part of an unauthorized program to proselytize Christianity in Afghanistan.[228]

2010–11 Florida Qur'an burning and related burnings edit

On September 11, 2010:

Operation Dark Heart, memoir by Anthony Shaffer (by the U. S. Dept. of Defense) edit

On September 20, 2010, the Pentagon bought[235] and burned[236] 9,500 copies of Operation Dark Heart, nearly all the first run copies for supposedly containing classified information.[citation needed]

Gaddafi's Green Book edit

During the Libyan Civil War, copies of Muammar Gaddafi's Green Book were burned by anti-Gaddafi demonstrators.[237]

Suspected Colorado City incident edit

Sometime during the weekend of April 15–17, 2011, books and other items designated for a new public library in the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints polygamous community Colorado City, Arizona, were removed from the facility where they had been stored and burned nearby.[238][239] A lawyer for some FLDS members has stated that the burning was the result of a cleanup of the property and that no political or religious statement was intended, however the burned items were under lock and key and were not the property of those who burned them.[240]

Lawrence Hill books covers in Amsterdam 2011 edit

On June 22, 2011, a group of Dutch activists torched the cover of Lawrence Hill's The Book of Negroes (translated as Het negerboek in Dutch) in front of the National Slavery Monument (Dutch: Slavernijmonument) of Amsterdam[241] over the use of the term negro in the title, which they found to be offensive.[242] On the same day, Greg Hollingshead, chair of the Writers' Union of Canada called the act "censorship at its worst", while recognizing the sensitivity over the use of the word "negro" in book titles.[243]

Qur'ans in Afghanistan edit

On February 22, 2012, four copies of the Qur'an were burned at Bagram Airfield due to being among 1,652 books slated for destruction. The remaining books, which officials claimed were being used for communication among extremists, were saved and put into storage.[244]

Akram Aylisli’s novels in Azerbaijan edit

The writings of the Azerbaijani novelist Akram Aylisli were burned on Feb. 9, 2013. He was officially stripped of his "People's Writer" title and his presidentially-awarded pension. He wrote about the Armenian Holocaust in ways that were offensive to Azerbaijan. [245][246] [247] [248]

Anti-climate change book at San Jose State University edit

In May 2013, two San Jose State University professors, department chair Alison Bridger, PhD and associate professor Craig Clements, PhD, were photographed holding a match to a book they disagreed with, The Mad, Mad, Mad World of Climatism, by Steve Goreham. The university initially posted it on their website, but then took it down.[249][250][251]

Theology library purge in North Carolina edit

Traditionalist Catholic seminarians purged a Boone, North Carolina, theology library in 2017 of works they considered heretical, including the writing of Henri Nouwen and Thomas Merton. The books were burned. Parishioners uncomfortable with the radical behavior of local church officials celebrate Catholic mass in an automobile repair shop instead of the church building.[252]

Southwestern Ontario schools book burning edit

The Conseil scolaire catholique Providence that oversees elementary and secondary schools in Southwestern Ontario held a "flame purification" ceremony in 2019, burning and burying 5,000 books from 30 Southwestern Ontario French-language schools for depicting racist stereotypes of Indigenous peoples of the Americas. Tintin in America and Asterix and the Great Crossing were among the burned books.[253][254]

Harry Potter and other books edit

On March 31, 2019, a Catholic priest in Gdańsk, Poland, burned books such as Harry Potter and novels in the Twilight series. The other objects were an umbrella with a Hello Kitty pattern, an elephant figurine, a tribal mask and a figurine of a Hindu god.[255][256][257]

Zhenyuan, China edit

In October 2019, officials at a library in the Gansu Province reportedly burned 65 books that were banned by the regime.[258]

Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine by an Iranian cleric edit

In January 2020, a video of Abbas Tabrizian's ceremony went viral on social media, in which he set a copy of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine on fire with lighter. Tabrizian is an Iranian Shia cleric rejecting medicine and promoting instead "Islamic medicine". Iranian officials and authorities of Shia seminaries condemned the act.[259][260]

Tennessee Global Vision Bible Church book burning and subsequent Bible burning edit

On February 2, 2022, Pastor Greg Locke of the Global Vision Bible Church in Mount Juliet, Tennessee, led a book burning event with attendees also throwing books and other media into the fire. The burning was livestreamed on Facebook.[261] The burn pile was fed partially with dozens of wood forklift pallets. At one point Locke claimed that the fire department was trying to put the fire out but his security team was successfully blocking their access. Along with contributions from the crowd, a dumpster full of books was unveiled and burned by Locke and attendees.[262] Locke claimed it was his and the churches "biblical right" to "burn....cultic materials that they deem are a threat to their religious rights and freedoms and belief systems." On Instagram, Locke wrote that "anything tied to the Masonic Lodge needs to be destroyed."[263]

On Easter Sunday, March 31, 2024, a trailer with about 200 Bibles was set on fire blocking the entrance to the church.[264]

Russian-Ukrainian war edit

In Mariupol, Russians burned all the books from the library of the church of Petro Mohyla.[265] In the temporarily occupied Mariupol, Russian invaders threw away books from the library collections of the Pryazovskyi State Technical University.[266] In 2023 the Ukrainian government removed 19 million Russian and Soviet-era books from libraries.[267]

Quran burnings in Sweden edit

After a series of Quran burnings in Sweden by right-wing nationalist Rasmus Paludan,[268] more individuals started emulating him (including in the Netherlands),[269] leading to further Quran burnings under police protection. These incidents attracted international attention and ignited a global debate on freedom of expression.<ref name="nyt"/

See also edit

References edit

Informational notes

  1. ^ Aristoxenus' book is lost, but the Plato reference survives in a quote in Diogenes Laërtius' Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, ix. 40
  2. ^ The dictionary account is apparently based on Bede, Book II, Chapter 1, who used the expression "...impalpable, of finer texture than wind and air."
  3. ^ Arnold's life depends for its sources on Otto of Freising and a chapter in John of Salisbury's Historia Pontificalis.
  4. ^ See the entry "Maimonidean Controversy, under Maimonides, in volume 11 of the Encyclopaedia Judaica, Keter Publishing, and Dogma in Medieval Jewish Thought by Menachem Kellner.
  5. ^ Note that León-Portilla finds Tlacaelel to be the instigator of this burning, despite lack of specific historical evidence.[citation needed]
  6. ^ The Trieste book burnings are referenced in John Gatt-Rutter's comprehensive biographical work, Italo Svevo, A Double Life (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1988, Ch. 47, p.242).
  7. ^ 85% of buildings lost: 10% were destroyed in the 1939 Invasion of Poland that ignited World War II, 15% in the reorganization of Warsaw and the Warsaw Ghetto uprising (1943), 25% in the 1944 Uprising, and 35% due to systematic German actions after the second Uprising.

Citations

  1. ^ a b "Bible Gateway passage: Jeremiah 36 - New International Version". Bible Gateway. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  2. ^ "Protagoras (fl. 5th c. B.C.E.)". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. from the original on February 24, 2004. Retrieved September 9, 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, BOOK IX, Chapter 8. PROTAGORAS (481-411 b.c.)". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
  4. ^ Cicero. De Natura Deorum. p. 1.23.6.
  5. ^ Burnet, John (1914). Greek Philosophy: Part I., Thales to Plato. London: Macmillan and Co. OCLC 697902275.[page needed]
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list, book, burning, incidents, notable, book, burnings, public, burning, books, ideological, reasons, have, taken, place, throughout, history, contents, antiquity, scroll, written, hebrew, prophet, jeremiah, burnt, king, jehoiakim, protagoras, gods, athenian,. Notable book burnings the public burning of books for ideological reasons have taken place throughout history Contents 1 Antiquity 1 1 A scroll written by the Hebrew prophet Jeremiah burnt by King Jehoiakim 1 2 Protagoras On the Gods by Athenian authorities 1 3 Democritus writings by Plato 1 4 Chinese philosophy books by Emperor Qin Shi Huang and anti Qin rebels 1 5 Books of pretended prophecies by Roman authorities 1 6 Jewish holy books by the Seleucid monarch Antiochus IV 1 7 Roman history book by the aediles 1 8 Greek and Latin prophetic verse by the emperor Augustus 1 9 Torah scroll by a Roman soldier 1 10 Sorcery scrolls by early converts to Christianity at Ephesus 1 11 Rabbi Haninah ben Teradion burned with a Torah scroll under Hadrian 1 12 Burning of the Torah by Apostomus precise time and circumstances debated 1 13 Epicurus book in Paphlagonia 1 14 Manichaean and Christian scriptures by Diocletian 1 15 Books of Arianism after Council of Nicaea 1 16 Library of Antioch by Jovian 1 17 Unacceptable writings by Athanasius 1 18 The Sibylline books various times 1 19 Writings of Priscillian by Roman authorities 1 20 Etrusca Disciplina by Roman authorities 1 21 Books on astrology by Roman authorities 1 22 Nestorius books by Theodosius II 2 Middle Ages 2 1 Book of the Miracles of Creation reportedly destroyed by Saint Brendan 2 2 Patriarch Eutychius book by Emperor Tiberius II Constantine 2 3 Repeated destruction of Alexandria libraries multiple people 2 4 Iconoclast writings by Byzantine authorities 2 5 Qur anic texts with varying wording ordered by the 3rd Caliph Uthman 2 6 Competing prayer books at Toledo 2 7 Abelard forced to burn his own book at Soissons 2 8 The writings of Arnold of Brescia in France and Rome 2 9 Nalanda University by Bakhtiyar Khilji 2 10 Samanid dynasty library by Turks 2 11 Buddhist writings in the Maldives by royal dynasty converted to Islam 2 12 Buddhist writings in the Gangetic plains region of India by Turk Mongol raiders 2 13 Alamut Castle by Mongols 2 14 Ismaili Shite writings at Al Azhar by Saladin 2 15 Destruction of Cathar texts Languedoc region of France by the Catholic Church 2 16 Maimonides philosophy at Montpellier 2 17 The Talmud at Paris first of many such burnings over the next centuries by Royal and Church authorities 2 18 Rabbi Nachmanides account of the Disputation of Barcelona by Dominicans 2 19 The House of Wisdom library By Mongols 2 20 Lollard books and writings by English law 2 21 Wycliffe s books at Prague 2 22 Villena s books in Castile 2 23 Codices of the peoples conquered by the Aztecs by Itzcoatl 2 24 Gemistus Plethon s Nomoi by Patriarch Gennadius II 3 Early Modern Period from 1492 to 1650 3 1 Decameron Ovid and other lewd books by Savonarola 3 2 Arabic and Hebrew books in Andalucia 3 3 Arabic books and archives in Oran by Spanish conquerors 3 4 Catholic theological works by Martin Luther 3 5 Lutheran and other Protestant writings in the Habsburg Netherlands 3 6 The works of Galen and Avicenna by Paracelsus 3 7 Books and papers of the Portuguese Order of Christ By Fra Antonio of Lisbon 3 8 Servetus writings burned with their author at Geneva and also burned at Vienne 3 9 The Historie of Italie In England 3 10 Religious and other writings of the Saint Thomas Christians by the Portuguese Church in India 3 11 Maya codices by Spanish Bishop of Yucatan 3 12 Arabic books in Spain owners ordered to destroy their own books by King Philip II 3 13 Obscene Maltese poetry by the Inquisition 3 14 Arwi books by Portuguese in India and Ceylon 3 15 Luther s Bible translation by German Catholics 3 16 Uriel da Costa s book by Jewish community and city authorities in Amsterdam 3 17 Marco Antonio de Dominis writings in Rome 4 Early Modern Period 1650 to 1800 4 1 Books burned by civil military and ecclesiastical authorities between 1640 and 1660 in Cromwell s England 4 2 Socinian and Anti Trinitarian books by secular and church authorities in the Dutch Republic 4 3 Book criticising Puritanism in Boston 4 4 Manuscripts of John Amos Comenius by anti Swedish Polish partisans 4 5 Quaker books in Boston 4 6 Pascal s Lettres provinciales by King Louis XIV 4 7 Hobbes books at Oxford University 4 8 Mythical and or mystical writings of Moshe Chaim Luzzatto by rabbis 4 9 Protestant books and Bibles by Archbishop of Salzburg 4 10 Amalasunta by Carlo Goldoni 4 11 The writings of Johann Christian Edelmann by Imperial authorities in Frankfurt 4 12 Works of Voltaire 4 13 Books that offended Qianlong Emperor 4 14 Anti Wilhelm Tell tract Canton of Uri 4 15 Vernacular Catholic hymn books at Mainz 4 16 The Libro d Oro in the French ruled Ionian Islands 5 Industrial Revolution period 5 1 The Burned Book by Rabbi Nachman of Breslov 5 2 Records of the Goa Inquisition by Portuguese colonial authorities 5 3 The Code Napoleon by German Nationalist students 5 4 William Blake manuscripts by Frederick Tatham 5 5 Count Istvan Szechenyi s book by conservative Hungarian nobles 5 6 Early braille books in Paris 5 7 Libraries of Buddhist monasteries during the Taiping Rebellion 5 8 The Bonnie Blue Flag by Union General Benjamin Butler 5 9 On the Ancient Cypriots by Ottoman Authorities 5 10 Lewd books by Anthony Comstock and the NYSSV 5 11 Pedigrees and books of Muslim law and theology By the Mahdi in Sudan 5 12 Emily Dickinson s correspondence on her orders 5 13 Ivan Bloch s research on Russian Jews by Tsarist Russian government 5 14 Italian Nationalist literature by Austrian authorities in Trieste 6 World War I and interwar era 6 1 Books in Serbian by World War I Bulgarian Army 6 2 Valley of the Squinting Windows at Delvin Ireland 6 3 George Grosz s cartoons by court order in Weimar Germany 6 4 Margaret Sanger s Family Limitation by British court order 6 5 Theodore Dreiser s works at Warsaw Indiana 6 6 Works of Goethe Shaw and Freud by Metaxas dictatorship in Greece 6 7 Books pamphlets and pictures by Soviet authorities 6 8 Pompeu Fabra s library by Franco s troops 7 World War II 7 1 Jewish anti Nazi and degenerate books by the Nazis 7 2 Jewish books in Alessandria by pro Nazi mob 7 3 Andre Malraux s manuscript by the Gestapo 7 4 Manuscripts and books in Warsaw Poland by the Nazis 7 5 Books in the National Library of Serbia by World War II German bomber planes 8 Cold War era and 1990s 8 1 The books of Knut Hamsun in post World War II Norway 8 2 Post World War II Germany 8 3 Books in Kurdish in north Iran 8 4 Comic book burnings 1948 8 5 Books by Shen Congwen by Chinese booksellers 8 6 Judaica collection at Birobidzhan by Stalin 8 7 Romanian literature by the Romanian Workers Party 8 8 Mordecai Kaplan s publications by Union of Orthodox Rabbis 8 9 Hungarian Revolution of 1956 8 10 Memoirs of Yrjo Leino by Finnish government under Soviet pressure 8 11 Brazil military coup 1964 8 12 Religious anti Communist and genealogy books in the Cultural Revolution 8 13 Sine s Massacre during power struggle in Penguin Books 8 14 Beatles burnings Southern United States 1966 8 15 Leftist books in Chile during the Pinochet dictatorship 8 16 Books burned by at order of school board in Drake North Dakota USA 8 17 Book burning caused by Viet Cong in South Vietnam 8 18 From the Noble Savage to the Noble Revolutionary Venezuela 1976 8 19 New Testament Jerusalem 1980 8 20 The Burning of Jaffna Library 8 21 Sikh Reference Library Amritsar 1984 8 22 The Satanic Verses worldwide 8 23 Central University Library Bucharest 1989 8 24 Oriental Institute in Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina 1992 8 25 National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina 1992 8 26 Abkhazian Research Institute of History Language and Literature and National Library of Abkhazia by Georgian troops 8 27 The Nasir i Khusraw Foundation in Kabul by the Taliban regime 8 28 Morgh e Amin publication house in Tehran by Islamic extremists 9 21st century 9 1 Abu Nuwas poetry by Egyptian Ministry of Culture 9 2 Iraq s national library Baghdad 2003 9 3 United Talmund Torah School Library Montreal 2004 9 4 Dan Brown s The Da Vinci Code Italy 2006 9 5 The Diary of Anne Frank during a midsummer s party Germany 2006 9 6 Harry Potter books 9 7 Inventory of Prospero s Books by proprietors Tom Wayne and W E Leathem 9 8 New Testaments in city of Or Yehuda Israel 9 9 Non approved Bibles books and music in Canton North Carolina 9 10 Bagram Bibles 9 11 2010 11 Florida Qur an burning and related burnings 9 12 Operation Dark Heart memoir by Anthony Shaffer by the U S Dept of Defense 9 13 Gaddafi s Green Book 9 14 Suspected Colorado City incident 9 15 Lawrence Hill books covers in Amsterdam 2011 9 16 Qur ans in Afghanistan 9 17 Akram Aylisli s novels in Azerbaijan 9 18 Anti climate change book at San Jose State University 9 19 Theology library purge in North Carolina 9 20 Southwestern Ontario schools book burning 9 21 Harry Potter and other books 9 22 Zhenyuan China 9 23 Harrison s Principles of Internal Medicine by an Iranian cleric 9 24 Tennessee Global Vision Bible Church book burning and subsequent Bible burning 9 25 Russian Ukrainian war 9 26 Quran burnings in Sweden 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksAntiquity editA scroll written by the Hebrew prophet Jeremiah burnt by King Jehoiakim edit About 600 BC Jeremiah of Anathoth wrote that the King of Babylon would destroy the land of Judah As recounted in Jeremiah 36 Jeremiah s scroll was read before Jehoiakim King of Judah in the presence of important officials King Jehoiakim destroyed the scroll in a fire and then sought to have Jeremiah arrested 1 Protagoras On the Gods by Athenian authorities edit The Classical Greek philosopher Protagoras c 490 c 420 BC was a proponent of agnosticism writing in a now lost work titled On the Gods Concerning the gods I have no means of knowing whether they exist or not or of what sort they may be because of the obscurity of the subject and the brevity of human life Quotations of his works were embedded in the works of later authors 2 According to Diogenes Laertius the above outspoken agnostic position taken by Protagoras aroused anger causing the Athenians to expel him from their city where the authorities ordered all copies of the book to be collected and burned in the marketplace 3 The same story is also mentioned by Cicero 4 However the classicist John Burnet doubts this account as both Diogenes Laertius and Cicero wrote hundreds of years later and no such persecution of Protagoras is mentioned by contemporaries who make extensive references to this philosopher Burnet notes that even if some copies of Protagoras book were burned enough of them survived to be known and discussed in the following century 5 Democritus writings by Plato edit The philosopher Plato is said to have greatly disliked fellow philosopher Democritus and wanted all of Democritus books burned Aristoxenus in his Historical Notes affirms that Plato wished to burn all the writings of Democritus that he could collect a In his own lifetime Plato was not in a position to destroy all copies of his rival s writings but Plato s purpose was largely achieved through the choices made by scribes in later Classical times Plato s own writings were frequently copied and unlike nearly all of his philosophical contemporaries Plato s entire work is believed to have survived intact for over 2 400 years 6 Conversely none of Democritus writings have survived and only fragments are known from his vast body of work 7 Still these fragments are enough to let many consider Democritus to be The Father of Modern Science 8 Chinese philosophy books by Emperor Qin Shi Huang and anti Qin rebels edit Main article Burning of books and burying of scholars nbsp Killing the Scholars and Burning the Books anonymous 18th century Chinese painted album leaf Bibliotheque nationale de France Paris During the Warring States period China was divided into various states each of which had its own historians writing over centuries their version of the history of their state and its relations with neighbors and rivals Following Qin s conquest of all the others Emperor Qin Shi Huang on the advice of his minister Li Si ordered the burning of all philosophy books and history books from states other than Qin beginning in 213 BC This was followed by the live burial of a large number of intellectuals who did not comply with the state dogma citation needed Li Si is reported to have said I your servant propose that all historian s records other than those of Qin s be burned With the exception of the academics whose duty includes possessing books if anyone under heaven has copies of the Shi Jing the Classic of History or the writings of the hundred schools of philosophy they shall deliver them the books to the governor or the commandant for burning Anyone who dares to discuss the Shi Jing or the Classic of History shall be publicly executed Anyone who uses history to criticize the present shall have his family executed Any official who sees the violations but fails to report them is equally guilty Anyone who has failed to burn the books after thirty days of this announcement shall be subjected to tattooing and be sent to build the Great Wall The books that have exemption are those on medicine divination agriculture and forestry Those who have interest in laws shall instead study from officials 9 The damage to Chinese culture was compounded during the revolts which ended the short rule of Qin Er Shi Qin Shi Huang s son The imperial palace and state archives were burned destroying many of the remaining written records that had been spared by the father citation needed Several other large book burnings also occurred in Chinese history 10 It appears they occurred in every dynasty following the Qin but it is unknown how often 11 Books of pretended prophecies by Roman authorities edit In 186 BC in an effort to suppress the Bacchanalia practices that had been led in part by Minius Cerrinius a consul of Rome claimed that the fathers and grandfathers of the Romans had suppressed foreign rites and ceremonies seeking out and burning all books of pretended prophecies 12 Jewish holy books by the Seleucid monarch Antiochus IV edit In 168 BC the Seleucid monarch Antiochus IV ordered Jewish Books of the Law found in Jerusalem to be rent in pieces and burned 13 part of the series of persecutions which precipitated the revolt of the Maccabees citation needed Roman history book by the aediles edit In 25 AD Senator Aulus Cremutius Cordus was forced to commit suicide and his History was burned by the aediles under the order of the senate The book s praise of Brutus and Cassius who had assassinated Julius Caesar was considered an offence under the lex majestatis A copy of the book was saved by Cordus daughter Marcia and it was published again under Caligula However only a few fragments survived to the present 14 15 16 Greek and Latin prophetic verse by the emperor Augustus edit Suetonius tells us that at the death of Marcus Lepidus about 13 BC Augustus assumed the office of Chief Priest and burned over two thousand copies of Greek and Latin prophetic verse then current the work of anonymous or unrespected authors preserving the Sibylline Books 17 Torah scroll by a Roman soldier edit Flavius Josephus 18 relates that about the year 50 a Roman soldier seized a Torah scroll and with abusive and mocking language burned it in public This incident almost brought on a general Jewish revolt against Roman rule such as broke out two decades later However the Roman procurator Cumanus appeased the Jewish populace by beheading the culprit 19 Sorcery scrolls by early converts to Christianity at Ephesus edit Main article Book burning at Ephesus About the year 55 according to the New Testament book of Acts early converts to Christianity in Ephesus who had previously practiced sorcery burned their scrolls A number who had practised sorcery brought their scrolls together and burned them publicly When they calculated the value of the scrolls the total came to fifty thousand drachmas Acts 19 19 NIV 20 Rabbi Haninah ben Teradion burned with a Torah scroll under Hadrian edit Under the emperor Hadrian the teaching of the Jewish Scriptures was forbidden as in the wake of the Bar Kochva Rebellion the Roman authorities regarded such teaching as seditious and tending towards revolt Haninah ben Teradion one of the Jewish Ten Martyrs executed for having defied that ban is reported to have been burned at the stake together with the forbidden Torah scroll which he had been teaching According to Jewish tradition when the flame started to burn himself and the scroll he still managed to say to his pupils I see the scrolls burning but the letters fly up in the air a saying considered to symbolize the superiority of ideas to brute force While in the original applying to sacred writings only 20th century Israeli writers also quoted this saying in the context of secular ideals 21 22 Burning of the Torah by Apostomus precise time and circumstances debated edit Further information Apostomus Among five catastrophes said to have overtaken the Jews on the Seventeenth of Tammuz the Mishnah 23 includes the burning of the Torah by Apostomus Since no further details are given and there are no other references to Apostomus in Jewish or non Jewish sources the exact time and circumstances of this traumatic event are debated historians assigning to it different dates in Jewish history under Seleucid or Roman rule and it might be identical with one of the events noted above 24 Epicurus book in Paphlagonia edit The book Established beliefs of Epicurus was burned in a Paphlagonian marketplace by order of the charlatan Alexander of Abonoteichus supposed prophet of Glycon the son of Asclepius ca 160 25 Manichaean and Christian scriptures by Diocletian edit The Diocletianic Persecution started on March 31 302 with the Roman Emperor Diocletian in a rescript from Alexandria ordering that the leading Manichaeans be burnt alive along with their scriptures 26 27 On the following year on February 23 303 Diocletian ordered that the newly built Christian church at Nicomedia be razed its scriptures burned and its treasures seized 28 Later persecutions included the burning of both the Christians themselves and of their books As related in later Christian Hagiography at that time the governor of Valencia offered the deacon who would become known as Saint Vincent of Saragossa to have his life spared in exchange for his consigning Scripture to the fire Vincent refused and let himself be executed instead In religious paintings he is often depicted holding the book whose preservation he preferred to his own life see illustration in Saint Vincent of Saragossa page 29 Conversely many other Christians less courageous did save their lives by giving away their Scriptures to be burned These Christians came to be known as Traditores literally those who give away Books of Arianism after Council of Nicaea edit nbsp Burning of Arian books at Nicaea illustration from a compendium of canon law ca 825 MS in the Capitular Library Vercelli The books of Arius and his followers after the first Council of Nicaea 325 C E were burned for heresy by the Roman emperors Constantine Honorius and Theodosius I who published a decree commanding that the doctrine of the Trinity should be embraced by those who would be called catholics that all others should bear the infamous name of heretics 30 31 Library of Antioch by Jovian edit In 364 the Roman Catholic Emperor Jovian ordered the entire Library of Antioch to be burnt 32 It had been heavily stocked by the aid of his non Christian predecessor Emperor Julian citation needed Unacceptable writings by Athanasius edit Elaine Pagels is the first to claim that in 367 Athanasius ordered monks in the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria in his role as bishop of Alexandria to destroy all unacceptable writings in Egypt the list of writings to be saved constituting the New Testament 33 While there is no evidence that Athanasius decreed all unacceptable writings to be burned this unsubstantiated claim by Pagels is frequently cited as fact on the internet citation needed The Sibylline books various times edit The Sibylline Books were a collection of oracular sayings According to myth 34 the Cumaean sibyl offered Lucius Tarquinius Superbus the books for a high price and when he refused burned three When he refused to buy the remaining six at the same price she again burned three finally forcing him to buy the last three at the original price The quindecimviri sacris faciundis watched over the surviving books in the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus but could not prevent their being burned when the temple burned down in 83 BC They were replaced by a similar collection of oracular sayings from around the Mediterranean in 76 BC along with the sayings of the Tiburtine sibyl and then checked by priests for perceived accuracy as compared to the burned originals 35 These remained until for political reasons they were burned by Flavius Stilicho died 408 36 Writings of Priscillian by Roman authorities edit In 385 the theologian Priscillian of Avila became the first Christian to be executed by fellow Christians as a heretic Some though not all of his writings were condemned as heretical and burned For many centuries they were considered irreversibly lost but surviving copies were discovered in the 19th century 37 Etrusca Disciplina by Roman authorities edit Etrusca Disciplina the Etruscan books of cult and divination were collected and burned in the 5th century 38 39 Books on astrology by Roman authorities edit In 409 the emperors Theodosius II and Honorius ordered that astrologers burn their books on pain of expulsion 40 Nestorius books by Theodosius II edit The books of Nestorius declared to be heresy were burned under an edict of Theodosius II 435 41 42 The Greek originals of most writings were irrevocably destroyed surviving mainly in Syriac translations citation needed Middle Ages edit Book of the Miracles of Creation reportedly destroyed by Saint Brendan edit According to the Dutch De Reis van Sinte Brandaen Mediaeval Dutch for The Voyage of Saint Brendan one of the earliest accounts of the life of Saint Brendan the Saint got possession of a Book of the Miracles of Creation but disbelieved in its veracity and threw it into a fire An angel was angry with Brendan for this act told him that truth has been destroyed and charged him with traveling for nine years overseas as a penance for his sin All accounts of Brendan s life were written down hundreds of years after his time and it is difficult to distinguish fact from legend including this account of his burning a book However since Brendan was a major highly venerated Irish Saint there was no obvious reason for posterity to attribute to him a sinful act without any factual basis 43 44 Patriarch Eutychius book by Emperor Tiberius II Constantine edit Patriarch Eutychius of Constantinople published a treatise on the General Resurrection maintaining that the resurrected body will be more subtle than air and no longer palpable 45 b Pope Gregory the Great opposed citing the palpability of the risen Christ in Luke 24 39 As the dispute could not be settled the Byzantine emperor Tiberius II Constantine undertook to arbitrate He decided in favor of palpability and ordered Eutychius book to be burned Eutychius died soon afterwards on 5 April 582 citation needed Repeated destruction of Alexandria libraries multiple people edit Main article Library of Alexandria Destruction of the library The so called Daughter Library 46 of the Serapeum of Alexandria was reportedly looted and burned along with the rest of the Serapeum in 391 392 AD by the decree of Theophilus of Alexandria who was ordered to do so by Theodosius I However contemporary accounts do not mention the destruction of a library or speak of its collection of books in the past tense indicating that by the time of its destruction the Serapeum may have been relegated mostly to a pagan place of worship 47 One of the largest destructions of books occurred at the Library of Alexandria traditionally held to be in 640 however the precise years are unknown as is whether the fires were intentional or accidental 48 49 Iconoclast writings by Byzantine authorities edit Following the Triumph of Orthodoxy in 843 when the Byzantine Iconoclasts were decisively defeated and the worship of Icons formally restored the Byzantine secular and religious authorities destroyed almost all Iconoclast writings making it difficult for modern researchers to determine what exactly were the Iconoclasts reasons to oppose the use of Icons in Christian worship citation needed Qur anic texts with varying wording ordered by the 3rd Caliph Uthman edit Main article Origin and development of the Qur an First standardization of Qur an Uthman ibn Affan the third Caliph of Islam after Muhammad who is credited with overseeing the collection of the verses of the Qur an ordered the destruction of any other remaining text containing verses of the Quran after the Quran has been fully collected circa 650 This was done to ensure that the collected and authenticated Quranic copy that Uthman collected became the primary source for others to follow thereby ensuring that Uthman s version of the Quran remained authentic Although the Qur an had mainly been propagated through oral transmission it also had already been recorded in at least three codices most importantly the codex of Abdullah ibn Mas ud in Kufa and the codex of Ubayy ibn Ka b in Syria Sometime between 650 and 656 a committee appointed by Uthman is believed to have produced a singular version in seven copies and Uthman is said to have sent to every Muslim province one copy of what they had copied and ordered any other Qur anic materials whether written in fragmentary manuscripts or whole copies be burnt 50 Competing prayer books at Toledo edit After the conquest of Toledo Spain 1085 by the king of Castile whether Iberian Christians should follow the foreign Roman rite or the traditional Mozarabic rite became a subject of dispute After other ordeals the dispute was submitted to the trial by fire One book for each rite was thrown into a fire The Toledan book was little damaged after the Roman one was consumed Henry Jenner comments in the Catholic Encyclopedia No one who has seen a Mozarabic manuscript with its extraordinarily solid vellum will adopt any hypothesis of Divine Interposition here 51 Abelard forced to burn his own book at Soissons edit The provincial synod held at Soissons in France in 1121 condemned the teachings of the famous theologian Peter Abelard as heresy he was forced to burn his own book before being shut up inside the convent of St Medard at Soissons 52 The writings of Arnold of Brescia in France and Rome edit The rebellious monk Arnold of Brescia Abelard s pupil and colleague refused to abjure his views after they were condemned at the Synod of Sens in 1141 and went on to lead the Commune of Rome in direct opposition to the Pope until he was executed in 1155 citation needed The Church ordered the burning of all his writings this was done so thoroughly than none of them survives and it is unknown even what they were except for what can be inferred from polemics against him c Nevertheless though no written word of Arnold s has survived his teachings on apostolic poverty retained their influence after his death among Arnoldists and more widely among Waldensians and the Spiritual Franciscans citation needed Nalanda University by Bakhtiyar Khilji edit The library of Nalanda known as Dharma Gunj Mountain of Truth or Dharmaganja Treasury of Truth was the most renowned repository of Hindu and Buddhist knowledge in the world at the time Its collection was said to comprise hundreds of thousands of volumes so extensive that it burned for months when set aflame by Muslim invaders in 1193 53 Samanid dynasty library by Turks edit The Royal Library of the Samanid dynasty was burned at the turn of the 11th century during the Turkic invasion from the east Avicenna was said to have tried to save the precious manuscripts from the fire as the flames engulfed the collection 54 55 56 Buddhist writings in the Maldives by royal dynasty converted to Islam edit Following the conversion of the Maldives to Islam in 1153 or by some accounts in 1193 the Buddhist religion hitherto state religion for more than a thousand years was suppressed The copper plate document known as Dhanbidhu Lōmafanu gives information about events in the southern Haddhunmathi Atoll which had been a major center of Buddhism where monks were beheaded and statues of Vairocana the transcendent Buddha were destroyed At that time also the wealth of Buddhist manuscripts written on screwpine leaves by Maldivian monks in their Buddhist monasteries was either burnt or otherwise so thoroughly eliminated that it has disappeared without leaving any trace 57 Buddhist writings in the Gangetic plains region of India by Turk Mongol raiders edit Further information Decline of Buddhism in India According to William Johnston as part of the Muslim conquest of the Indian subcontinent there was a persecution of the Buddhist religion considered idolatrous from the Muslim point of view During the 12th and 13th centuries Buddhist texts were burnt by the Muslim armies in the Gangetic plains region which also destroyed hundreds of Buddhist monasteries and shrines and killed monks and nuns 58 59 Alamut Castle by Mongols edit The famous library of the Alamut Castle the main stronghold of the order of the Nizari Ismailis was burned after the invading Mongols captured it Primary sources on the thoughts of the Ismailis of this period are therefore lacking today citation needed Ismaili Shite writings at Al Azhar by Saladin edit Main article Al Azhar University Conversion to Sunniism under Saladin Between 120 000 and 2 000 000 were destroyed under Saladin when he converted the Al Azhar madrassah from Ismaili Shiism to Sunni Islam 60 Destruction of Cathar texts Languedoc region of France by the Catholic Church edit nbsp Detail of a Pedro Berruguete painting of a disputation between Saint Dominic of Guzman and the Albigensians Cathars in which the books of both were thrown on a fire with St Dominic s books miraculously preserved from the flames See the whole picture During the 13th century the Catholic Church waged a brutal campaign against the Cathars of Languedoc smaller numbers also lived elsewhere in Europe culminating in the Albigensian Crusade Nearly every Cathar text that could be found was destroyed in an effort to completely extirpate their heretical beliefs only a few are known to have survived 61 Historians researching the Cathar religious principles are forced to largely rely on information provided by the manifestly hostile writings of their sworn opponents citation needed Maimonides philosophy at Montpellier edit Maimonides major philosophical and theological work Guide for the Perplexed got highly mixed reactions from fellow Jews of his and later times some revering it and viewing it as a triumph while others deemed many of its ideas heretical banning it and on some occasions burning copies of it d One such burning took place at Montpellier Southern France in 1233 62 The Talmud at Paris first of many such burnings over the next centuries by Royal and Church authorities edit In 1242 The French crown burned all copies of the Talmud in Paris about 12 000 after the book was charged and found guilty in the Disputation of Paris sometimes called the Paris debate or the Trial of the Talmud 63 These burnings of Jewish books were initiated by Pope Gregory IX who persuaded Louis IX of France to undertake it This particular book burning was commemorated by the German Rabbi and poet Meir of Rothenburg in the elegy kinna called Ask O you who are burned in fire שאלי שרופה באש which is recited to this day by Ashkenazi Jews on the fast of Tisha B av citation needed The Church s original stance alleged that the Talmud contained blasphemous writings towards Jesus Christ and his mother Mary attacks against the Church and other offensive pronouncements against non Jews 64 which led subsequent popes to organize public burnings of Jewish books The best known of these were Innocent IV 1243 1254 Clement IV 1256 1268 John XXII 1316 1334 Paul IV 1555 1559 Pius V 1566 1572 and Clement VIII 1592 1605 citation needed Once the printing press was invented the Church found it impossible to destroy entire printed editions of the Talmud and other sacred books Johann Gutenberg the German who invented the printing press around 1450 certainly helped stamp out the effectiveness of further book burnings The tolerant for its time policies of Venice made it a center for the printing of Jewish books and of books in general yet the Talmud was publicly burned in 1553 65 and there was a lesser known burning of Jewish books in 1568 66 Rabbi Nachmanides account of the Disputation of Barcelona by Dominicans edit In 1263 the Disputation of Barcelona was held before King James I of Aragon between the monk Pablo Christiani a convert from Judaism and Rabbi Moses ben Nachman also known as Nachmanides At the end of disputation king awarded Nachmanides a monetary prize and declared that never before had he heard an unjust cause so nobly defended 67 Since the Dominicans nevertheless claimed the victory Nahmanides felt compelled to publish the controversy The Dominicans asserted that this account was blasphemies against Christianity Nahmanides admitted that he had stated many things against Christianity but he had written nothing which he had not used in his disputation in the presence of the King who had granted him freedom of speech The justice of his defense was recognized by the King and the commission but to satisfy the Dominicans Nahmanides was exiled and his pamphlet was condemned to be burned citation needed The House of Wisdom library By Mongols edit The House of Wisdom was destroyed during the Mongol invasion of Baghdad in 1258 along with all other libraries in Baghdad It was said that the waters of the Tigris ran black for six months with ink from the enormous quantities of books flung into the river 68 69 Some modern historians have begun to doubt the actual extent of these damages 70 71 Lollard books and writings by English law edit The De heretico comburendo On the Burning of Heretics a law passed by the English Parliament under King Henry IV of England in 1401 was intended to stamp out heresy and in particular the Lollard movement followers of John Wycliffe The law stated that divers false and perverse people of a certain new sect make and write books and do wickedly instruct and inform people The law s purpose was to utterly destroy all preachings doctrines and opinions of this wicked sect Therefore all persons in possession of such books or writings of such wicked doctrine and opinions were ordered to deliver all such books and writings to the diocesan authorities within forty days of the law being enacted so as to let them be burned and destroyed Those failing to give up their heretical books would face the prospect of being arrested and having their bodies as well as their books burned citation needed Wycliffe s books at Prague edit On 20 December 1409 Pope Alexander V later declared an anti Pope issued a papal bull that empowered the illiterate Prague Archbishop Zbynek Zajic z Hazmburka to proceed against Wycliffism in Prague All copies of Wycliffe s writings were to be surrendered and his doctrines repudiated and free preaching discontinued After the publication of the bull in 1410 the Czech Wycliffite leader Jan Hus appealed to Alexander V but in vain The Wycliffe books and valuable manuscripts were burned in the court of the Archbishop s palace in the Lesser Town of Prague 72 and Hus and his adherents were excommunicated by Alexander V Archbishop Zajic died in 1411 and with his death there was an upsurge of the Bohemian Reformation Some of Hus followers led by Vok Voksa z Valdstejna burnt the Papal bulls Hus they said should be obeyed rather than the Church which they considered a fraudulent mob of adulterers and simonists 73 In January 1413 a general council in Rome condemned the writings of Wycliffe and ordered them to be burned though at the time the Church was unable to enforce this in Prague 74 self published source However Jan Hus tricked into arriving at the Council of Constance by a false safe conduct was seized and burned at the stake The Council reiterated the order for Wycliffe s books to be burned and since Wycliffe himself was already dead it ordered that his body be exhumed and burned which was duly done However the Church never managed to completely extirpate his writings enough unburned copies survived for these writings to be known up to the present citation needed Villena s books in Castile edit Henry of Villena a scion of Aragon s old dynasty was a scholar surgeon and translator who was persecuted by the kings of Castile and Aragon as a sorcerer and necromancer Upon his death in prison John II of Castile ordered his confessor Bishop Barrientos to burn Villena s library 75 The poet Juan de Mena skewered the bishop for this destruction in his Labyrinth of Fortune 76 and others accused him of plundering it for the purpose of later plagiarizing the works himself but Barrientos portrayed himself as bound by his king s orders and as having done what he could to preserve the library s most important works citation needed Your Majesty after the death of Don Enrique de Villena as a Christian king you sent me your devoted follower to burn his books which I executed in the presence of your servants These actions and other ones are a testament to your Majesty s devotion to Christianity While this is praiseworthy on the other hand it is useful to entrust some books to reliable people who would use them solely with the goal of educating themselves to better defend the Christian religion and faith and to bedevil idolaters and practitioners of necromancy 77 Codices of the peoples conquered by the Aztecs by Itzcoatl edit According to the Madrid Codex the fourth tlatoani Itzcoatl ruling from 1427 or 1428 to 1440 ordered the burning of all historical codices because it was not wise that all the people should know the paintings 78 e Among other purposes this allowed the Aztec state to develop a state sanctioned history and mythos that venerated the Aztec god Huitzilopochtli citation needed Gemistus Plethon s Nomoi by Patriarch Gennadius II edit After the death of the prominent late Byzantine scholar Gemistus Plethon there was discovered among his papers a major work called Nomōn syngrafi Nomwn syggrafh book of laws or Nomoi Nomoi laws He had been compiling it throughout most of his adult life but never published it It contained his most esoteric beliefs including an objection to some of the basic tenets of Christianity and an explicit advocacy of a restoration in modified form of the worship of gods of the Classical Greek mythology obviously heretical as the Orthodox Church understood the term The manuscript came into the possession of Princess Theodora wife of Demetrios despot of Morea Theodora sent the manuscript to Gennadius II Patriarch of Constantinople asking for his advice on what to do with it he returned it advising her to destroy it Morea was under invasion from Sultan Mehmet II and Theodora escaped with Demetrios to Constantinople where she gave the manuscript back to Gennadius reluctant to herself destroy the only copy of such a distinguished scholar s work Gennadius finally burnt it in 1460 However in a letter to the Exarch Joseph which still survives Gennadius details the book providing chapter headings and brief summaries of the contents Plethon s own summary of the Nomoi titled Summary of the Doctrines of Zoroaster and Plato also survived among manuscripts held by his former student Bessarion though the full detailed text was lost with Gennadius burning citation needed Early Modern Period from 1492 to 1650 editDecameron Ovid and other lewd books by Savonarola edit Main article Bonfire of the Vanities In 1497 followers of the Italian priest Girolamo Savonarola collected and publicly burned books and objects which were deemed to be immoral some but by no means all of which might fit modern criteria of pornography or lewd pictures as well as pagan books gaming tables cosmetics copies of Boccaccio s Decameron and all the works of Ovid which could be found in Florence 79 Arabic and Hebrew books in Andalucia edit In 1490 a number of Hebrew Bibles and a number of other Jewish books were burned at the behest of the Spanish Inquisition In 1499 or in early 1500 about 5000 Arabic manuscripts including a school library all that could be found in the city were consumed by flames in a public square in Granada Spain on the orders of Cardenal Ximenez de Cisneros the Archbishop of Toledo and the head of the Spanish Inquisition 80 81 excepting only those on medicine which are conserved in the library of El Escorial 82 Arabic books and archives in Oran by Spanish conquerors edit In 1509 Spanish forces commanded by Count Pedro Navarro on the orders of Cardinal Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros conquered the city of Oran in North Africa Thereupon the occupying forces set fire to the books and archives of the town a direct continuation of Cardenal Cisneros book destruction in Granada a few years before see above 83 Catholic theological works by Martin Luther edit At the instruction of Reformer Martin Luther a public burning of books was held in the public square outside Wittenberg s Elster Gate on December 10 1520 Together with the papal bull of Excommunication Exsurge Domine issued against Luther himself were burned works which Luther considered as symbols of Catholic orthodoxy including the Code of Canon Law the Summa Theologica of St Thomas Aquinas and the Summa Angelica Angelo Carletti s work on Scotist theology 84 Lutheran and other Protestant writings in the Habsburg Netherlands edit In March 1521 Emperor Charles V published in Flanders a ban prohibiting the books sermons and writings of the said Luther and all his followers and adherents and ordering all such materials to be burnt This was followed by a stream of local bans throughout the Habsburg Netherlands and in neighboring states particularly the ecclesiastical principalities of Liege Utrecht Cologne and Munster Implementation was intensive in the southern part of the Habsburg Netherlands present day Belgium At Leuven eighty copies of Luther s works were burned in October 1520 even before publication of the official ban At Antwerp no less than 400 Lutheran works 300 of them confiscated from booksellers were destroyed in the Emperor s presence in July 1521 In the same month 300 Lutheran works were destroyed at Ghent More public book burnings followed in 1522 at Bruges and twice more at Antwerp Implementation of the Emperor s ban was less swift in the northern part present day Netherlands In 1522 the authorities at Leiden ordered confiscation of all Lutheran works in the town but apparently did not burn them The first mass book burning in the North was in 1521 in the ecclesiastical territory of Utrecht The first mass book burning in Amsterdam took place later in 1526 Thereafter public book burning remained part of life in the Habsburg Netherlands for much of the 16th century Anabaptist and Calvinist writings later joining the Lutheran ones in the flames Yet despite this relentless campaign Protestant writings continued to proliferate As well as the books being burned many of the printers and booksellers involved in disseminating them were themselves burned at the stake by the Inquisition 85 The works of Galen and Avicenna by Paracelsus edit In 1527 the innovative physician Paracelsus was licensed to practice in Basel with the privilege of lecturing at the University of Basel He published harsh criticism of the Basel physicians and apothecaries creating political turmoil to the point of his life being threatened He was prone to many outbursts of abusive language abhorred untested theory and ridiculed anybody who placed more importance on traditional medical texts than on practice The patients are your textbook the sickbed is your study If disease put us to the test all our splendor title ring and name will be as much help as a horse s tail 86 In a display of his contempt for conventional medicine Paracelsus publicly burned editions of the works of Galen and Avicenna two of the most highly respected traditional medical texts which established physicians tended to trust without reservations but which according to Paracelsus contained many serious medical errors citation needed Books and papers of the Portuguese Order of Christ By Fra Antonio of Lisbon edit In 1523 Fra Antonio also known as Antonius of Lisbon a Spanish born Jerome friar was given the authority and responsibility to reform the Order of Christ in Portugal His reform included the burning of part of the Order s papers and books as well as instigating the burning of human beings he ordered two autos da fes the first and only ones ever held in the Order s headquarters in Tomar with a total of four people burned at the stake citation needed Servetus writings burned with their author at Geneva and also burned at Vienne edit In 1553 Servetus was burned as a heretic at the order of the city council of Geneva dominated by Calvin because a remark in his translation of Ptolemy s Geographia was considered an intolerable heresy As he was placed on the stake around Servetus waist were tied a large bundle of manuscript and a thick octavo printed book his Christianismi Restitutio In the same year the Catholic authorities at Vienne also burned Servetus in effigy together with whatever of his writings fell into their hands in token of the fact that Catholics and Protestants mutually hostile in this time were united in regarding Servetus as a heretic and seeking to extirpate his works At the time it was considered that they succeeded but three copies were later found to have survived from which all later editions were printed 87 The Historie of Italie In England edit The Historie of Italie 1549 a scholarly and in itself not particularly controversial book by William Thomas was in 1554 suppressed and publicly burnt by order of Queen Mary I of England after its author was executed on charges of treason Enough copies survived for new editions to be published in 1561 and 1562 after Elizabeth I came to power 88 Religious and other writings of the Saint Thomas Christians by the Portuguese Church in India edit See also Synod of Diamper Prohibited books On June 20 1599 Aleixo de Menezes Latin Catholic Archbishop of Goa convened the Synod of Diamper at Udayamperoor known as Diamper in non vernacular sources This diocesan synod or council was aimed at forcing the ancient Saint Thomas Christians of the Malabar Coast modern Kerala state India to abandon their practices customs and doctrines the result of centuries of living their own Christian lives in an Indian environment and force upon them instead the full doctrines and practices of 16th century European Catholic Christianity at the time involved in a titanic struggle with the rising tide of European Protestantism Among other things the Synod of Diamper condemned as heretical numerous religious and other books current among the Saint Thomas Christians which differed on numerous points from Catholic doctrine All these were to be handed over to the Church to be burned Some of the books which are said to have been burnt at the Synod of Diamper are 1 The book of the Infancy of the Saviour History of Our Lord 2 Book of John Braldon 3 The Pearl of Faith 4 The Book of the Fathers 5 The Life of the Abbot Isaias 6 The Book of Sunday 7 Maclamatas 8 Uguarda or the Rose 9 Comiz 10 The Epistle of Mernaceal 11 Menra 12 Of Orders 13 Homilies in which the Eucharist is said to be the image of Christ 14 Exposition of Gospels 15 The Book of Rubban Hormisda 16 The Flowers of the Saints 17 The Book of Lots 18 The Parsimon or Persian Medicines Dr Istvan Perczel a Hungarian scholar researching Syrian Christians in India found that certain texts survived the destruction of Syriac religious writings by the Portuguese missionaries 89 Manuscripts were either kept hidden by the Saint Thomas Christians or carried away by those of them who escaped from the area of Portuguese rule and sought refuge with Indian rulers However a systematic research is yet to be conducted to determine which of the books listed as heretical at Diamper still exist and which are gone forever citation needed Maya codices by Spanish Bishop of Yucatan edit July 12 1562 Fray Diego de Landa acting Bishop of Yucatan then recently conquered by the Spanish threw into the fires the books of the Maya 90 The number of destroyed books is greatly disputed De Landa himself admitted to 27 other sources claim 99 times as many 91 92 the later being disputed as an exaggeration motivated by anti Spanish feeling the so called Black Legend Only three Maya codices and a fragment of a fourth survive Approximately 5 000 Maya cult images were also burned at the same time The burning of books and images alike were part of de Landa s effort to eradicate the Maya idol worship which he considered diabolical As narrated by de Landa himself he had gained access to the sacred books transcribed on deerskin by previously gaining the natives trust and showing a considerable interest in their culture and language 93 94 We found a large number of books in these characters and as they contained nothing in which were not to be seen as superstition and lies of the devil we burned them all which they the Maya lamented to an amazing degree and which caused them much affliction 82 95 De Landa was later recalled to Spain and accused of having acted illegally in Yucatan though eventually found not guilty of these charges Present day apologists for de Landa assert that while he had destroyed the Maya books his own Relacion de las cosas de Yucatan is a major source for the Mayan language and culture Allen Wells calls his work an ethnographic masterpiece 96 while William J Folan Laraine A Fletcher and Ellen R Kintz have written that Landa s account of Maya social organization and towns before conquest is a gem 97 Arabic books in Spain owners ordered to destroy their own books by King Philip II edit Further information Hispanicization In 1567 Philip II of Spain issued a royal decree in Spain forbidding Moriscos Muslims who had been converted to Christianity but remained living in distinct communities from the use of Arabic on all occasions formal and informal speaking and writing Using Arabic in any sense of the word would be regarded as a crime They were given three years to learn a Christian language after which they would have to get rid of all Arabic written material It is unknown how many of the Moriscos complied with the decree and destroyed their own Arabic books and how many kept them in defiance of the King s decree the decree is known to have triggered one of the largest Morisco Revolts 98 Obscene Maltese poetry by the Inquisition edit In 1584 Pasquale Vassallo a Maltese Dominican friar wrote a collection of songs of the kind known as canczuni in Italian and Maltese The poems fell into the hands of other Dominican friars who denounced him for writing obscene literature At the order of the Inquisition in 1585 the poems were burned for this allegedly obscene content 99 Arwi books by Portuguese in India and Ceylon edit With the 16th century extension of the Portuguese Empire to India and Ceylon the staunchly Catholic colonizers were hostile to Muslims they found living there An aspect of this was a Portuguese hostility to and destruction of writings in the Arwi language a type of Tamil with many Arabic words written in a variety of the Arabic script and used by local Muslims Much of Arwi cultural heritage was thus destroyed though the precise extent of the destruction might never be known citation needed Luther s Bible translation by German Catholics edit Martin Luther s 1534 German translation of the Bible was burned in Catholic dominated parts of Germany in 1624 by order of the Pope 100 Uriel da Costa s book by Jewish community and city authorities in Amsterdam edit The 1624 book An Examination of the Traditions of the Pharisees written by the dissident Jewish intellectual Uriel da Costa was burned in public by joint action of the Amsterdam Jewish Community and the city s Protestant dominated City Council The book which questioned the fundamental idea of the immortality of the soul was considered heretical by the Jewish community which excommunicated him and was arrested by the Dutch authorities as a public enemy to religion 101 Marco Antonio de Dominis writings in Rome edit The theologian and scientist Marco Antonio de Dominis came in 1624 into conflict with the Inquisition in Rome and was declared a relapsed heretic He died in prison which did not end his trial On December 21 1624 his body was burned together with his works 102 103 Early Modern Period 1650 to 1800 editBooks burned by civil military and ecclesiastical authorities between 1640 and 1660 in Cromwell s England edit Sixty identified printed books pamphlets and broadsheets and 3 newsbooks were ordered to be burned during this turbulent period spanning the English Civil War and Oliver Cromwell s rule 104 Socinian and Anti Trinitarian books by secular and church authorities in the Dutch Republic edit As noted by Jonathan Israel the Dutch Republic was more tolerant than other 17th century states allowing a wide range of religious groups to practise more or less freely and openly disseminate their views However the dominant Calvinist Church drew the line at Socinian and Anti Trinitarian doctrines which were deemed to undermine the very foundations of Christianity In the late 1640s and 1650s Polish and German holders of such views arrived in the Netherlands as refugees from persecution in Poland and Brandenburg Dutch authorities made an effort to stop them spreading their theological writings by arrests and fines as well as book burning For example in 1645 the burgomasters at Rotterdam discovered a stock of 100 books by Cellius and destroyed them In 1659 Lancelot van Brederode published anonymously 900 copies of a 563 page book assailing the dominant Calvinist Church and the doctrine of the Trinity The writer s identity was discovered and he was arrested and heavily fined and the authorities made an effort to hunt down and destroy all copies of the book but since it had already been distributed many of the copies survived The book Bescherming der Waerheyt Godts by Foeke Floris a liberal Anabaptist preacher was in 1687 banned by authorities in Friesland which deemed it to be Socinian and all copies were ordered to be burned In 1669 the Hof high court of Holland ordered the Amsterdam municipal authorities to raid booksellers in the city seize and destroy Socinian books especially the Biblioteca fratrum Polonorum Book of the Polish Brethren at the time known to be widely circulating in Amsterdam The Amsterdam burgomasters felt obliged to go along with this at least formally but in fact some of them mitigated the practical effect by warning booksellers of impending raids 105 Book criticising Puritanism in Boston edit The first book burning incident in the Thirteen Colonies occurred in Boston in 1651 when William Pynchon founder of Springfield Massachusetts published The Meritorious Price of Our Redemption which criticised the Puritans who were then in power in Massachusetts The book became the first banned book in North America and subsequently all known copies were publicly burned Pynchon left for England prior to a scheduled appearance in court and never returned 106 107 108 Manuscripts of John Amos Comenius by anti Swedish Polish partisans edit During the Northern Wars in 1655 the well known Bohemian Protestant theologian and educator John Amos Comenius then living in exile at the city of Leszno in Poland declared his support for the Protestant Swedish side In retaliation Polish partisans burned his house his manuscripts and his school s printing press Notably the original manuscript of Comenius Pansophiae Prodromus was destroyed in the fire fortunately the text had already been printed and thus survived citation needed Quaker books in Boston edit In 1656 the authorities at Boston imprisoned the Quaker women preachers Ann Austin and Mary Fisher who had arrived on a ship from Barbados Among other things they were charged with bringing with them and spreading here sundry books wherein are contained most corrupt heretical and blasphemous doctrines contrary to the truth of the gospel here professed amongst us as the colonial gazette put it The books in question about a hundred were publicly burned in Boston s Market Square 109 Pascal s Lettres provinciales by King Louis XIV edit As part of his intensive campaign against the Jansenists King Louis XIV of France in 1660 ordered the book Lettres provinciales by Blaise Pascal which contained a fierce defense of the Jansenist doctrines to be shredded and burnt Despite Louis XIV absolute power in France this decree proved ineffective Lettres provinciales continued to be clandestinely printed and disseminated eventually outliving the Jansenist controversy which gave it birth and becoming recognized as a masterpiece of French prose citation needed Hobbes books at Oxford University edit In 1683 several books by Thomas Hobbes and other authors were burnt in Oxford University 110 Mythical and or mystical writings of Moshe Chaim Luzzatto by rabbis edit During the 1720s rabbis in Italy and Germany ordered the burning of the kabbalist writings of the then young Moshe Chaim Luzzatto The Messianic messages which Luzzatto claimed to have gotten from a being called The Maggid were considered heretical and potentially highly disruptive of the Jewish communities daily life and Luzzatto was ordered to cease disseminating them Though Luzzatto in later life got considerable renown among Jews and his later books were highly esteemed most of the early writings were considered irrevocably lost until some of them turned up in 1958 in a manuscript preserved in the Library of Oxford 111 112 113 Protestant books and Bibles by Archbishop of Salzburg edit In 1731 Count Leopold Anton von Firmian Archbishop of Salzburg as well as its temporal ruler embarked on a savage persecution of the Lutherans living in the rural regions of Salzburg As well expelling tens of thousands of Protestant Salzburgers the Archbishop ordered the wholesale seizure and burning of all Protestant books and Bibles 114 Amalasunta by Carlo Goldoni edit In 1733 Venetian playwright Carlo Goldoni burned his tragedy Amalasunta due to negative reception by his audiences 115 The writings of Johann Christian Edelmann by Imperial authorities in Frankfurt edit In 1750 the Imperial Book Commission of the Holy Roman Empire at Frankfurt Main ordered the wholesale burning of the works of Johann Christian Edelmann a radical disciple of Spinoza who had outraged the Lutheran and Calvinist clergies by his Deism his championing of sexual freedom and his asserting that Jesus had been a human being and not the Son of God In addition Edelmann was also an outspoken opponent of royal absolutism With Frankfurt s entire magistracy and municipal government in attendance and seventy guards to hold back the crowds nearly a thousand copies of Edelmann s writings were tossed on to a tower of flaming birch wood Edelmann himself was granted refuge in Berlin by Friedrich the Great but on condition that he stop publishing his views 116 Works of Voltaire edit At first the French philosopher Voltaire s arrival at the court of King Frederick the Great was a great success However in late 1751 king and philosopher quarreled over Voltaire s pamphlet Doctor Akakia French Histoire du Docteur Akakia et du Natif de St Malo a satirical essay of a very biting nature directed against Maupertuis the president of the Royal Academy of Sciences at Berlin whom Voltaire considered a pretentious pedant It so excited the anger of King Frederick the patron of the academy that he ordered all copies to be seized and burnt by the common hangman The order was effective in Prussia but the King could not prevent some 30 000 copies being sold in Paris In the aftermath Voltaire had to leave Prussia though he and King Frederick were later reconciled citation needed Voltaire s works were burnt several times in pre revolutionary France In his Lettres philosophique published in Rouen in 1734 he described British attitudes toward government literature and religion and clearly implied that the British constitutional monarchy was better than the French absolute one which led to the book being burned citation needed Later Voltaire s Dictionnaire philosophique which was originally called the Dictionnaire philosophique portatif had its first volume consisting of 73 articles in 344 pages burnt upon release in June 1764 117 An economic pamphlet Man With Forty Crowns was ordered to be burnt by the Parlement of Paris and a bookseller who had sold a copy was pilloried It is said that one of the magistrates on the case exclaimed Is it only his books we shall burn 118 Books that offended Qianlong Emperor edit Further information Literary inquisition Qing and Qianlong Emperor Burning of books and modification of texts China s Qianlong Emperor 1711 1799 embarked on an ambitious program the Complete Library of the Four Treasuries or Siku Quanshu largest compilation of books in Chinese history possibly in human history in general The enterprise included however also the systematic banning and burning of books considered unfitting to be included especially those critical even by subtle hints of the ruling Qing dynasty During this Emperor s nearly sixty years on the throne the destruction of about 3000 evil titles books poems and plays was decreed the number of individual copies confiscated and destroyed is variously estimated at tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands As well as systematically destroying the written works 53 authors of such works were executed in some cases by lingering torture or along with their family members A famous earlier Chinese encyclopedia Tiangong Kaiwu Chinese 天工開物 was included among the works banned and destroyed at this time and was long considered to be lost forever but some original copies were discovered preserved intact in Japan 119 The Qianlong Emperor s own masterpiece the Complete Library of the Four Treasuries produced only in seven hand written copies was itself the target of later book burnings the copies kept in Zhenjiang and Yangzhou were destroyed during the Taiping Rebellion and in 1860 during the Second Opium War an Anglo French expedition force burned most of the copy kept at Beijing s Old Summer Palace The four remaining copies though suffering some damage during World War II are still preserved at four Chinese museums and libraries citation needed Anti Wilhelm Tell tract Canton of Uri edit The 1760 tract by Simeon Uriel Freudenberger from Luzern arguing that Wilhelm Tell was a myth and the acts attributed to him had not happened in reality was publicly burnt in Altdorf capital of the Swiss canton of Uri where according to the legend William Tell shot the apple from his son s head 120 Vernacular Catholic hymn books at Mainz edit In 1787 an attempt by the Catholic authorities at Mainz to introduce vernacular hymn books encountered strong resistance from conservative Catholics who refused to abandon the old Latin books and who seized and burned copies of the new German language books 121 The Libro d Oro in the French ruled Ionian Islands edit With the Treaty of Leoben and the Treaty of Campo Formio in 1797 the French Republic gained the Ionian Islands hitherto ruled by the Venetian Republic France proceeded to annex the islands organize them as the departements of Mer Egee Ithaque and Corcyre and introduce there the principles and institutions of the French Revolution initially getting great enthusiasm among the islands inhabitants The abolition of aristocratic privileges was accompanied by the public burning of the Libro d Oro formal directory of nobles in the Republic of Venice which included those of the Ionian Islands citation needed Industrial Revolution period edit The Burned Book by Rabbi Nachman of Breslov edit In 1808 Rabbi Nachman of Breslov burned the only copy or copies of one of his own books for an unknown reason Many Hasidic Jews continue to search for The Burned Book as they call it by looking for clues in his other writings 122 Records of the Goa Inquisition by Portuguese colonial authorities edit In 1812 the Goa Inquisition was suppressed after hundreds of years in which it had been enacting various kinds of religious persecution in the Portuguese colony of Goa India In the aftermath most of the Goa Inquisition s records were destroyed a great loss to historians making it is impossible to know the exact number of the Inquisition s victims 123 The Code Napoleon by German Nationalist students edit On October 18 1817 about 450 students members of the newly founded German Burschenschaften fraternities came together at Wartburg Castle to celebrate the German victory over Napoleon two years before condemn conservatism and call for German unity The Code Napoleon as well as the writings of German conservatives were ceremoniously burned in effigy instead of the costly volumes scraps of parchment with the titles of the books were placed on the bonfire Among these was August von Kotzebue s History of the German Empires Karl Ludwig Sand one of the students participating in this gathering would assassinate Kotzebue two years later 124 William Blake manuscripts by Frederick Tatham edit The poet William Blake died in 1827 and his manuscripts were left with his wife Catherine After her death in 1831 the manuscripts were inherited by Frederick Tatham who burned some that he deemed heretical or politically radical Tatham was an Irvingite member of one of the many fundamentalist movements of the 19th century and opposed to any work that smacked of blasphemy 125 At the time Blake was nearly forgotten and Tatham could act with impunity When Blake was re discovered some decades later and recognized as a major English poet the damage was already done citation needed Count Istvan Szechenyi s book by conservative Hungarian nobles edit In 1825 Count Istvan Szechenyi came to the fore as a major Hungarian reformer Though himself a noble a magnate from one of Hungary s most powerful families Szechenyi published Hitel Credit a book arguing that the nobles privileges were both morally indefensible and economically detrimental to the nobles themselves In 1831 angry conservative nobles publicly burned copies of Szechenyi s book citation needed Early braille books in Paris edit In 1842 officials at the school for the blind in Paris were ordered by its new director Armand Dufau to burn books written in the new braille code After every braille book at the institute that could be found was burned supporters of the code s inventor Louis Braille rebelled against Dufau by continuing to use the code and braille was eventually restored at the school 126 Libraries of Buddhist monasteries during the Taiping Rebellion edit The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom established by rebels in South China in 1854 sought to replace Confucianism Buddhism and Chinese folk religion with the Taiping s version of Christianity God Worshipping which held that the Taiping leader Hong Xiuquan was the younger brother of Jesus Christ As part of this policy the libraries of the Buddhist monasteries were destroyed almost completely in the case of the Yangtze Delta area 127 Temples of Daoism Confucianism and other traditional beliefs were often defaced 128 Following the suppression of the Taiping Rebellion the victorious forces of the Qing dynasty engaged in their own extensive destruction of books and records It is thought that only a tenth of Taiping published records survive to this day as they were mostly destroyed by the Qing in an attempt to rewrite the history of the conflict 129 The Bonnie Blue Flag by Union General Benjamin Butler edit During the American Civil War when Union Major General Benjamin Butler captured New Orleans he ordered the destruction of all copies of the music for the popular Confederate song The Bonnie Blue Flag as well as imposing a 500 fine on A E Blackmar who published this music citation needed On the Ancient Cypriots by Ottoman Authorities edit Following its publication in 1869 the book On the Ancient Cypriots by Greek Cypriot priest and scholar Ieronymos Myriantheus was banned by the Ottoman Empire due to its Greek Nationalist tendencies and 460 copies of it were burned In a punitive measure towards Myriantheus the Ottomans refused to recognize him as Bishop of Kyrenia 130 Lewd books by Anthony Comstock and the NYSSV edit Anthony Comstock founded the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice NYSSV in 1873 and over the years burned 15 tons of books 284 000 pounds of plate and almost 4 million pictures The NYSSV was financed by wealthy and influential New York philanthropists Lobbying the United States Congress also led to the enactment of the Comstock laws citation needed Pedigrees and books of Muslim law and theology By the Mahdi in Sudan edit After establishing his rule over Sudan in 1885 Muhammad Ahmad known as the Mahdi authorized the burning of lists of pedigrees which in his view accentuated tribalism at the expense of religious unity as well as books of Muslim law and theology because of their association with the old order which the Mahdi had overthrown citation needed Emily Dickinson s correspondence on her orders edit Following the death of noted American poet Emily Dickinson in 1890 her sister Lavinia Dickinson burned almost all of her correspondences in keeping with Emily s wishes but as it was unclear whether the forty notebooks and loose sheets all filled with almost 1800 poems were to be included in this Lavinia saved these and began to publish the poems that year 131 132 When Dickinson s work gained prominence scholars greatly regretted the loss of the papers which Lavinia Dickinson did burn and which might have helped elucidate some puzzling references in the poems citation needed Ivan Bloch s research on Russian Jews by Tsarist Russian government edit In 1901 the Russian Council of Ministers banned a five volume work on the socio economic conditions of Jews in the Russian Empire the result of a decade long comprehensive statistical research commissioned by Ivan Bloch It was entitled Comparison of the material and moral levels in the Western Great Russian and Polish Regions The research s conclusions that Jewish economic activity was beneficial to the Empire refuted antisemitic demagoguery and were disliked by the government which ordered all copies to be seized and burned Only a few survived circulating as great rarities 133 Italian Nationalist literature by Austrian authorities in Trieste edit In the tense period following the Bosnian crisis of 1908 09 the Austrian authorities in Trieste cracked down on the Italian Irredentists in the city who were seeking to end Austrian rule there and annex Trieste to Italy which would actually happen ten years later at the end of World War I A very large quantity of Italian language books and periodicals whose contents were deemed subversive were confiscated and consigned to destruction The authorities had the condemned material meticulously weighted it was found to measure no less than 4 7 metric tons Thereupon on February 13 1909 the books and periodicals were officially burned at the Servola blast furnaces f The site of the book burnings was very near the home of the writer Italo Svevo though Svevo s own works were spared Servola is a suburb of Trieste citation needed World War I and interwar era editBooks in Serbian by World War I Bulgarian Army edit In the aftermath of the Serbian defeat in the Serbian Campaign of World War I the region of Old Serbia came under the control of Bulgarian occupational authorities Bulgaria engaged in a campaign of cultural genocide Serbian priests professors teachers and public officials were deported into prison camps in pre war Bulgaria or executed they were later replaced by their Bulgarian counterparts The use of the Serbian language was banned Books in Serbian were confiscated from libraries schools and private collections to be burned publicly Books deemed to be of particular value were selected by Bulgarian ethnographers and sent back into Bulgaria 134 Valley of the Squinting Windows at Delvin Ireland edit In 1918 the Valley of the Squinting Windows by Brinsley MacNamara was burned in Delvin Ireland MacNamara never returned to the area his father James MacNamara was boycotted and subsequently emigrated and a court case was even sought The book criticised the village s inhabitants for being overly concerned with their image towards neighbours and although it called the town Garradrimna geographical details made it clear that Delvin was meant 135 George Grosz s cartoons by court order in Weimar Germany edit In June 1920 the left wing German cartoonist George Grosz produced a lithographic collection in three editions entitled Gott mit uns A satire on German society and the counterrevolution the collection was swiftly banned Grosz was charged with insulting the army which resulted in a court order to have the collection destroyed The artist also had to pay a 300 German Mark fine 136 Margaret Sanger s Family Limitation by British court order edit In 1923 the anarchist Guy Aldred and his partner and co worker Rose Witcop a birth control activist published together a British edition of Margaret Sanger s Family Limitation a key pioneering work on the subject They were denounced by a London magistrate for this indiscriminate publication 137 The two lodged an appeal strongly supported in their legal struggle by Dora Russell who with her husband Bertrand Russell and John Maynard Keynes paid the legal costs 138 However it was to no avail Despite expert testimony from a consultant to Guy s Hospital and evidence at the appeal that the book had only been sold to those aged over twenty one the court ordered the entire stock to be destroyed 139 Theodore Dreiser s works at Warsaw Indiana edit Trustees of Warsaw Indiana ordered the burning of all the library s works by local author Theodore Dreiser in 1935 140 Works of Goethe Shaw and Freud by Metaxas dictatorship in Greece edit Ioannis Metaxas who held dictatorial power in Greece between 1936 and 1941 conducted an intensive campaign against what he considered Anti Greek literature and viewed as dangerous to the national interest Targeted under this definition and put to the fire were not only the writings of dissident Greek writers but even works by such authors as Goethe Shaw and Freud 141 Books pamphlets and pictures by Soviet authorities edit In his Open Letter to Stalin Old Bolshevik and former Soviet diplomat Fyodor Raskolnikov alleges that Soviet libraries began circulating long lists of books pamphlets and pictures to be burnt on sight following Joseph Stalin s ascension to power Those lists include the names of authors whose works were deemed undesirable Raskolnikov was surprised to find his work on the October Revolution in one of those lists 142 The lists contained numerous books from the West which were deemed decadent 143 Pompeu Fabra s library by Franco s troops edit In 1939 shortly after the surrender of Barcelona Franco s troops burned the entire library of Pompeu Fabra the main author of the normative reform of contemporary Catalan language while shouting Abajo la inteligencia Down with the intelligentsia 144 World War II editJewish anti Nazi and degenerate books by the Nazis edit Main article Nazi book burnings nbsp In 1933 Nazis burned works of Jewish authors and other works considered un German at the library of the Institut fur Sexualwissenschaft in Berlin The works of some Jewish authors and other so called degenerate books were burnt by the Nazis in the 1930s and 1940s Richard Euringer director of the libraries in Essen identified 18 000 works deemed not to correspond with Nazi ideology which were publicly burned citation needed On May 10 1933 on the Opernplatz in Berlin SA and Nazi youth groups burned around 25 000 books from the Institut fur Sexualwissenschaft and the Humboldt University including works by Albert Einstein Vicki Baum Bertolt Brecht Heinrich Heine Helen Keller Thomas Mann Karl Marx Erich Maria Remarque Frank Wedekind Ernest Hemingway and H G Wells Student groups throughout Germany in 34 towns also carried out their own book burnings on that day and in the following weeks Erich Kastner wrote an ironic account published only after the fall of Nazism of having witnessed the burning of his own books on that occasion Radio broadcasts of the burnings were played in Berlin and elsewhere and 40 000 turned up to hear Joseph Goebbels make a speech about the acts See here for a partial list of authors whose books were burned 145 As well as destroying the published works of Lion Feuchtwanger Nazis at the same time broke into his home stole and destroyed several manuscripts of his works in progress Luckily for Feuchtwanger he and his wife were at the time in America and he survived to continue writing in exile citation needed In May 1995 146 Micha Ullman s underground Bibliotek memorial de was inaugurated on Bebelplatz square in Berlin where the Nazi book burnings began The memorial consists of a window on the surface of the plaza under which vacant bookshelves are lit and visible A bronze plaque bears a quote by Heinrich Heine Where books are burned in the end people will burn 147 Jewish books in Alessandria by pro Nazi mob edit On December 13 1943 in Alessandria Italy a mob of supporters of the German imposed Italian Social Republic attacked the synagogue of the city s small Jewish community on Via Milano Books and manuscripts were taken out of the synagogue and set on fire at Piazza Rattazzi The burning of the Jewish books was a prelude to a mass arrest and deportation of the Jews themselves A total of 48 Jews were deported from Alessandria many of whom were murdered in Auschwitz 148 Andre Malraux s manuscript by the Gestapo edit During World War II the French writer and anti Nazi resistance fighter Andre Malraux worked on a long novel The Struggle Against the Angel the manuscript of which was destroyed by the Gestapo upon his capture in 1944 The name was apparently inspired by the Jacob story in the Bible A surviving opening part named The Walnut Trees of Altenburg was published after the war 149 Manuscripts and books in Warsaw Poland by the Nazis edit nbsp Works of Macrobius ca 1470 is one of the books burned by the Germans during the Planned destruction of Warsaw 150 The Nazis destroyed much of Warsaw during World War II an estimated 16 million books and about 85 of the city s buildings g The libraries of the University of Warsaw and of the Warsaw Institute of Technology were razed 14 other libraries were completely burned to the ground German Verbrennungskommandos Burning detachments were responsible for much of the targeted attacks on libraries and other centers of knowledge and learning citation needed In October 1944 the manuscript collection of the National Library of Poland was burned to erase Polish national history Part of the Krasinski Library s building was destroyed in September 1939 leading to its collections which had almost all survived being moved in 1941 In September 1944 an original collection of 250 000 items was shelled by German artillery although many books were saved by being thrown out the windows by library staff In October what had survived was deliberately burned by the authorities including 26 000 manuscripts 2 500 incunables printed before 1501 80 000 early printed books 100 000 drawings and printmakings 50 000 note and theatre manuscripts and many maps and atlases citation needed The Zaluski Library established in 1747 and thus the oldest public library in Poland and one of the oldest and most important libraries in Europe was burned down during the Uprising in October 1944 Out of about 400 000 printed items maps and manuscripts only some 1800 manuscripts and 30 000 printed materials survived Unlike earlier Nazi book burnings where specific books were deliberately targeted the burning of this library was part of the general setting on fire of a large part of the city of Warsaw citation needed The extensive library of the Polish Museum Rapperswil founded in 1870 in Rapperswil Switzerland had been created when Poland was not a country and was thus moved to Warsaw in 1927 In September 1939 the National Polish Museum in Rapperswil along with the Polish School at Batignolles lost almost their entire collection during the German bombardment of Warsaw 151 Books in the National Library of Serbia by World War II German bomber planes edit On April 6 1941 during World War II German bomber planes under orders by Nazi Germany specifically targeted the National Library of Serbia in Belgrade The entire collection was destroyed including 1 300 ancient Cyrillic manuscripts 152 and 300 000 books 153 Cold War era and 1990s editThe books of Knut Hamsun in post World War II Norway edit Following the liberation of Norway from Nazi occupation in 1945 angry crowds burned the books of Knut Hamsun in public in major Norwegian cities due to Hamsun s having collaborated with the Nazis 154 Post World War II Germany edit Main article Denazification On May 13 1946 the Allied Control Council issued a directive for the confiscation of all media that could supposedly contribute to Nazism or militarism As a consequence a list was drawn up of over 30 000 titles ranging from school textbooks to poetry which were then banned All copies of books on the list were to be confiscated and destroyed the possession of a book on the list was made a punishable offence All the millions of copies of these books were to be confiscated and destroyed The representative of the Military Directorate admitted that the order was no different in intent or execution from Nazi book burnings 155 All confiscated literature was reduced to pulp instead of burning In August 1946 the order was amended so that In the interest of research and scholarship the Zone Commanders in Berlin the Komendantura may preserve a limited number of documents prohibited in paragraph 1 These documents will be kept in special accommodation where they may be used by German scholars and other German persons who have received permission to do so from the Allies only under strict supervision by the Allied Control Authority citation needed Books in Kurdish in north Iran edit Following the suppression of the pro Soviet Kurdish Republic of Mahabad in north Iran in December 1946 and January 1947 members of the victorious Iranian Army burned all Kurdish language books that they could find as well as closing down the Kurdish printing press and banning the teaching of Kurdish 156 Comic book burnings 1948 edit In 1948 children overseen by priests teachers and parents publicly burned several hundred comic books in both Spencer West Virginia and Binghamton New York Once these stories were picked up by the national press wire services similar events followed in many other cities 157 Books by Shen Congwen by Chinese booksellers edit Around 1949 the books that Shen Congwen pseudonym of Shen Yuehuan had written in the period 1922 1949 were banned in the Republic of China and both banned and subsequently burned by booksellers in the People s Republic of China 158 Judaica collection at Birobidzhan by Stalin edit As part of Joseph Stalin s efforts to stamp out Jewish culture in the Soviet Union in the late 1940s and early 1950s the Judaica collection in the library of Birobidzhan capital of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast on the Chinese border was burned 159 160 161 Romanian literature by the Romanian Workers Party edit In the 1950s the Romanian Workers Party had started purging the libraries of the Romanian People s Republic Romanian Republica Populară Romină RPR by burning any books mentioning Bessarabia or the Bukovina and German and Italian translations of Romanian literature The entire contents of the Casa Școalelor had been emptied with books on national popular culture and religious works were burned A librarian of the Academy Barbu Lăzăreanu was put in charge of maps documents photographs the unique lexicographical file of the Romanian language which all were proving the Latin origin of Romanian Displeasing the Slavic committee that had passed on them they were burned 762 Romanian literary works were withdrawn from circulation including those of Liviu Rebreanu Ioan Alexandru Brătescu Voinești and Octavian Goga The purged books and treasures were replaced with millions of books and pamphlets Cartea Rusă alone issued 3 701 300 copies of Romanian translations of 174 Russian books with additional 329 050 copies translated in Hungarian German Serbian and Turkish The purging of the books was led by Petre Constantinescu Iași Mihai Roller Barbu Lăzăreanu and Emil Petrovici 162 Mordecai Kaplan s publications by Union of Orthodox Rabbis edit In 1954 the rabbi Mordecai Kaplan was excommunicated from Orthodox Judaism in the United States and his works were publicly burned at the annual gathering of the Union of Orthodox Rabbis 163 164 165 Hungarian Revolution of 1956 edit Communist books were burned by the revolutionaries during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 when 122 communities reported book burnings 166 167 Memoirs of Yrjo Leino by Finnish government under Soviet pressure edit Further information Finlandization Yrjo Leino a Communist activist was Finnish Minister of the Interior in the crucial 1945 1948 period In 1948 he suddenly resigned for reasons which remain unclear and went into retirement Leino returned to the public eye in 1958 with his memoirs of his time as Minister of the Interior The manuscript was prepared in secret even most of the staff of the publishing company Tammi were kept in ignorance but the project was revealed by Leino because of an indiscretion just before the planned publication It turned out the Soviet Union was very strongly opposed to publication of the memoirs The Soviet Union s Charge d affaires in Finland Ivan Filippov Ambassador Viktor Lebedev had suddenly departed from Finland a few weeks earlier on October 21 1958 demanded that Prime Minister Karl August Fagerholm s government prevent the release of Leino s memoirs Fagerholm said that the government could legally do nothing because the work had not yet been released nor was there censorship in Finland Filippov advised that if Leino s book was published the Soviet Union would draw serious conclusions Later the same day Fagerholm called the publisher Untamo Utrio and it was decided that the January launch of the book was to be cancelled Eventually the entire print run of the book was destroyed at the Soviet Union s request Almost all of the books some 12 500 copies were burned in August 1962 with the exception of a few volumes which were furtively sent to political activists Deputy director of Tammi Jarl Hellemann later argued that the fuss about the book was completely disproportionate to its substance describing the incident as the first instance of Finnish self censorship motivated by concerns about relations to the Soviet Union 168 The book was finally published in 1991 when interest in it had largely dissipated citation needed Brazil military coup 1964 edit Following the 1964 Brazilian coup d etat General Justino Alves Bastos commander of the Third Army ordered in Rio Grande do Sul the burning of all subversive books Among the books he branded as subversive was Stendhal s The Red and the Black 169 Stendhal s was written in criticism of the situation in France under the reactionary regime of the Restored Bourbon monarchy 1815 1830 Evidently General Bastos felt some of this could also apply to life in Brazil under the right wing military junta citation needed Religious anti Communist and genealogy books in the Cultural Revolution edit It is the Chinese tradition to record family members in a book including every male born in the family who they are married to etc Traditionally only males names are recorded in the books During the Cultural Revolution 1966 1976 many such books were forcibly destroyed or burned to ashes because they were considered by the Chinese Communist Party as among the Four Old Things to be eschewed 170 Also many copies of classical works of Chinese literature were destroyed though unlike the genealogy books these usually existed in many copies some of which survived Many copies of the Buddhist Taoist and Confucian books were destroyed thought to be promoting the old thinking 171 172 Sine s Massacre during power struggle in Penguin Books edit In 1965 the British publishing house Penguin Books was torn by an intense power struggle with chief editor Tony Godwin and the board of directors attempting to remove the company founder Allen Lane One of the acts taken by Lane in an effort to retain his position was to steal and burn the entire print run of the English edition of Massacre by the French cartoonist Sine whose content was reportedly deeply offensive 173 174 Beatles burnings Southern United States 1966 edit John Lennon member of the popular music group The Beatles sparked outrage from religious conservatives in the Southern Bible Belt states due to his quote The Beatles are more popular than Jesus from an interview he had done in England five months previous to the Beatles 1966 US Tour their final tour as a group Disc Jockeys evangelists and the Ku Klux Klan implored the local public to bring their Beatles records books magazines posters and memorabilia to Beatles bonfire burning events citation needed Leftist books in Chile during the Pinochet dictatorship edit Main article Book burnings in Chile nbsp Burning left wing books during the early days of the Chilean military dictatorship 1974 After the victory of Augusto Pinochet s forces in the Chilean coup of 1973 bookburnings of Marxist and other works ensued Journalist Carlos Rama reported in February 1974 that up to that point destroyed works included the handwritten Chilean Declaration of Independence by Bernardo O Higgins thousands of books of Editora Nacional Quimantu including the Complete Works of Che Guevara thousands of books in the party headquarters of the Chilean Socialist Party and MAPU personal copies of works by Marx Lenin and anti fascist thinkers and thousands of copies of newspapers and magazines favorable to Salvador Allende including Chile Today 175 In some instances even books on Cubism were burned because ignorant soldiers thought it had to do with the Cuban Revolution 176 177 Books burned by at order of school board in Drake North Dakota USA edit On November 8 1973 the custodian at Drake s elementary high school used the school s furnace to burn 32 copies of Kurt Vonnegut s Slaugherhouse Five at the order of the school board after they deemed the novel profane and therefore unsuitable for use in class 178 Other books reported to have been burned were Deliverance by James Dickey and a short story anthology with stories from Joseph Conrad William Faulkner and John Steinbeck 179 Book burning caused by Viet Cong in South Vietnam edit Following The Fall of Saigon Viet Cong gained nominal authority in South Vietnam and conducted several book burnings along with eliminating any cultural forms of South Vietnam This act of destruction was made since the Vietnamese Communists condemned those values were corruptible ones shaped by puppet government derogatory words to indicate Republic of Vietnam and American Imperialism 180 From the Noble Savage to the Noble Revolutionary Venezuela 1976 edit In 1976 detractors of Venezuelan liberal writer Carlos Rangel publicly burned copies of his book From the Noble Savage to the Noble Revolutionary in the year of its publication at the Central University of Venezuela 181 182 New Testament Jerusalem 1980 edit On 23 March 1980 Yad L Achim an Orthodox Jewish counter missionary organisation that was at the time a beneficiary of subsidies from the Israeli Ministry of Religion ceremonially incinerated hundreds of copies of the New Testament publicly in Jerusalem Some people including Israel Shahak protested against this public burning of Christian books 183 The Burning of Jaffna Library edit Main article Burning of Jaffna Library Took place on the night of June 1 1981 when an organized mob of Sinhalese individuals went on a rampage burning the library to destroy Tamil language Literary works against Tamils It was one of the most violent examples of ethnic biblioclasm of the 20th century At the time of its destruction the library was one of the biggest in Asia containing over 97 000 books and manuscripts citation needed Sikh Reference Library Amritsar 1984 edit The Sikh Reference Library in Amritsar a collection of newspapers and other literary works related sedition incinerated by Indian troops during the 1984 Operation Blue Star The missing literature has not been recovered to this day and are presumbed to be lost 184 185 186 187 188 1 The library hosted a vast collection of an estimated 20 000 literary works just before the destruction including 11 107 books 2 500 manuscripts newspaper archives historical letters documents files and others 3 Most of the literature was written in the Punjabi language and related to Sikhism but there were also Hindi Assamese Bengali Sindhi English and French works touching upon various topics The Satanic Verses worldwide edit Main article The Satanic Verses controversy The 1988 publication of the novel The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie was followed by angry demonstrations and riots around the world by followers of political Islam who considered it blasphemous In the United Kingdom book burnings were staged in the cities of Bolton and Bradford 189 In addition five UK bookstores selling the novel were the target of bombings and two bookstores in Berkeley California were firebombed 190 191 The author was condemned to death by various Islamist clerics and lives in hiding citation needed Central University Library Bucharest 1989 edit During the Romanian Revolution of December 1989 the Central University Library of Bucharest was burned down in uncertain circumstances and over 500 000 books along with about 3 700 manuscripts were destroyed 192 193 Oriental Institute in Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina 1992 edit On 17 May 1992 the Oriental Institute in besieged city of Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina was targeted by JNA and Serb nationalists artillery and repeatedly hit with a barrages of incendiary ammunition fired from positions on the hills overlooking the city center The Institute occupied the top floors of a large four storey office block squeezed between other buildings in a densely built neighborhood with no other buildings being hit After catching the fire the institute was completely burned out and most of its collections destroyed by blaze The collections of the institute were among the richest of its kind containing Oriental manuscripts centuries old and written about the subjects in wide varieties of fields in Arabic Persian Turkish Hebrew and local arebica native Bosnian language written in Arabic script other languages and many different scripts and in many different geographical location around the world The losses included 5 263 bound manuscripts as well as tens of thousands of Ottoman era documents of various kind Only about 1 of Institute materials was saved 194 195 196 197 198 National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina 1992 edit On August 25 1992 the National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina was firebombed and destroyed by Serbian nationalists Almost all the contents of the library were destroyed including more than 1 5 million books that included 4 000 rare books 700 manuscripts and 100 years of Bosnian newspapers and journals 199 Abkhazian Research Institute of History Language and Literature and National Library of Abkhazia by Georgian troops edit Georgian troops entered Abkhazia on August 14 1992 sparking a 14 month war At the end of October the Abkhazian Research Institute of History Language and Literature named after Dmitry Gulia which housed an important library and archive was torched by Georgian troops also targeted was the capital s public library It seems to have been a deliberate attempt by the Georgian paramilitary soldiers to wipe out the region s historical record 200 The Nasir i Khusraw Foundation in Kabul by the Taliban regime edit In 1987 the Nasir i Khusraw Foundation was established in Kabul Afghanistan due to the collaborative efforts of several civil society and academic institutions leading scholars and members of the Ismaili community This site included video and book publishing facilities a museum and a library 201 The library was a marvel in its extensive collection of fifty five thousand books available to all students and researchers in the languages of Arabic English and Pashto In addition its Persian collection was unparalleled including an extremely rare 12th century manuscript of Firdawsi s epic masterpiece The Book of Kings Shahnama The Ismaili collection of the library housed works from Hasan i Sabbah and Nasir i Khusraw and the seals of the first Aga Khan With the withdrawal of the Soviet forces from Afghanistan in the late 1980s and the strengthening of the Taliban forces the library collection was relocated to the valley of Kayan However on August 12 1998 the Taliban fighters ransacked the press the museum the video facilities and the library destroying some books in the fire and throwing others in a nearby river Not a single book was spared including a thousand year old Quran 202 Morgh e Amin publication house in Tehran by Islamic extremists edit Some days after publishing a novel entitled The Gods Laugh on Mondays by Iranian novelist Reza Khoshnazar men came at night saying they are Islamic building inspectors and torched the publisher s book shop on or around August 22 203 or 23 1995 204 205 21st century editAbu Nuwas poetry by Egyptian Ministry of Culture edit In January 2001 the Egyptian Ministry of Culture ordered the burning of some 6 000 books of homoerotic poetry by the well known 8th century Persian Arab poet Abu Nuwas even though his writings are considered classics of Arab literature 206 207 Iraq s national library Baghdad 2003 edit Following the 2003 invasion of Iraq Iraq s national library and the Islamic library in central Baghdad were burned and destroyed by looters 208 The national library housed rare volumes and documents from as far back as the 16th century including entire royal court records and files from the period when Iraq was part of the Ottoman Empire The destroyed Islamic library of Baghdad included one of the oldest surviving copies of the Qur an 209 United Talmund Torah School Library Montreal 2004 edit Further information United Talmud Torahs of Montreal Arson in the elementary school library On the morning of April 5 2004 18 year old Sleiman El Merhebi firebombed a school library of the United Talmud Torahs of Montreal burning its 10 000 volume collection Reconstruction and other indirect costs amounted to 600 000 Canadian dollars 210 Dan Brown s The Da Vinci Code Italy 2006 edit On May 20 2006 at noon two communal Italian councillors Stefano Gizzi and Massimo Ruspandini it staged a burning of a copy of The Da Vinci Code after the film of the same name premiered in the square of Italian town Ceccano 211 212 213 The Diary of Anne Frank during a midsummer s party Germany 2006 edit On June 24 2006 a group of men aged between 24 and 28 214 threw a United States flag and a copy of The Diary of Anne Frank into a bonfire first the flag then the book 215 during a midsummer s party in German village Pretzien 216 They were supposedly members of a far right group called Heimat Bund Ostelbien East Elbian Homeland Federation 216 who also organized the party 214 Harry Potter books edit Further information Religious debates over the Harry Potter series There have been several incidents of Harry Potter books being burned including those directed by churches at Alamogordo New Mexico and Charleston South Carolina in 2006 217 More recently books have been burnt in response to J K Rowling s comments on Donald Trump 218 and to protest her gender critical beliefs 219 220 Inventory of Prospero s Books by proprietors Tom Wayne and W E Leathem edit On May 27 2007 Tom Wayne and W E Leathem the proprietors of Prospero s Books a used book store in Kansas City Missouri publicly burned a portion of their inventory to protest what they perceived as society s increasing indifference to the printed word The protest was interrupted by the Kansas City Fire Department on the grounds that Wayne and Leathem had failed to obtain the required permits 221 New Testaments in city of Or Yehuda Israel edit In May 2008 a fairly large number of New Testaments were burned in Or Yehuda Israel Conflicting accounts have the deputy mayor of Or Yehuda Uzi Aharon of Haredi party Shas claiming to have organized the burnings or to have stopped them He admitted involvement in collecting New Testaments and Messianic propaganda that had been distributed in the city The burning apparently violated Israeli laws about destroying religious items 222 Non approved Bibles books and music in Canton North Carolina edit The Amazing Grace Baptist Church of Canton North Carolina headed by Pastor Marc Grizzard intended to hold a book burning on Halloween 2009 223 224 The church being a King James Version exclusive church held all other translations of the Bible to be heretical and also considered both the writings of Christian writers and preachers such as Billy Graham and T D Jakes and most musical genres to be heretical expressions However a confluence of rain oppositional protesters 225 and a state environmental protection law against open burning resulted in the church having to retreat into the edifice to ceremoniously tear apart and dump the media into a trash can as recorded on video which was submitted to People For the American Way s Right Wing Watch blog 226 nevertheless the church claimed that the book burning was a success 227 Bagram Bibles edit Main article Bagram Bible program In 2009 the US military burned Bibles in Pashto and Dari that were part of an unauthorized program to proselytize Christianity in Afghanistan 228 2010 11 Florida Qur an burning and related burnings edit Main article 2010 Qur an burning controversy On September 11 2010 Fred Phelps burned a Qur an with the American flag at the Westboro Baptist Church 229 Bob Old and another preacher burned a Qur an in Nashville Tennessee 230 A New Jersey transit worker burned a few pages of a Qur an at the Ground Zero Mosque in Manhattan 231 Burned Qur ans were found in Knoxville Tennessee East Lansing Michigan Springfield Tennessee and Chicago Illinois 232 233 234 Operation Dark Heart memoir by Anthony Shaffer by the U S Dept of Defense edit On September 20 2010 the Pentagon bought 235 and burned 236 9 500 copies of Operation Dark Heart nearly all the first run copies for supposedly containing classified information citation needed Gaddafi s Green Book edit During the Libyan Civil War copies of Muammar Gaddafi s Green Book were burned by anti Gaddafi demonstrators 237 Suspected Colorado City incident edit Sometime during the weekend of April 15 17 2011 books and other items designated for a new public library in the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints polygamous community Colorado City Arizona were removed from the facility where they had been stored and burned nearby 238 239 A lawyer for some FLDS members has stated that the burning was the result of a cleanup of the property and that no political or religious statement was intended however the burned items were under lock and key and were not the property of those who burned them 240 Lawrence Hill books covers in Amsterdam 2011 edit On June 22 2011 a group of Dutch activists torched the cover of Lawrence Hill s The Book of Negroes translated as Het negerboek in Dutch in front of the National Slavery Monument Dutch Slavernijmonument of Amsterdam 241 over the use of the term negro in the title which they found to be offensive 242 On the same day Greg Hollingshead chair of the Writers Union of Canada called the act censorship at its worst while recognizing the sensitivity over the use of the word negro in book titles 243 Qur ans in Afghanistan edit Main article 2012 Afghanistan Quran burning protests On February 22 2012 four copies of the Qur an were burned at Bagram Airfield due to being among 1 652 books slated for destruction The remaining books which officials claimed were being used for communication among extremists were saved and put into storage 244 Akram Aylisli s novels in Azerbaijan edit The writings of the Azerbaijani novelist Akram Aylisli were burned on Feb 9 2013 He was officially stripped of his People s Writer title and his presidentially awarded pension He wrote about the Armenian Holocaust in ways that were offensive to Azerbaijan 245 246 247 248 Anti climate change book at San Jose State University edit In May 2013 two San Jose State University professors department chair Alison Bridger PhD and associate professor Craig Clements PhD were photographed holding a match to a book they disagreed with The Mad Mad Mad World of Climatism by Steve Goreham The university initially posted it on their website but then took it down 249 250 251 Theology library purge in North Carolina edit Traditionalist Catholic seminarians purged a Boone North Carolina theology library in 2017 of works they considered heretical including the writing of Henri Nouwen and Thomas Merton The books were burned Parishioners uncomfortable with the radical behavior of local church officials celebrate Catholic mass in an automobile repair shop instead of the church building 252 Southwestern Ontario schools book burning edit The Conseil scolaire catholique Providence that oversees elementary and secondary schools in Southwestern Ontario held a flame purification ceremony in 2019 burning and burying 5 000 books from 30 Southwestern Ontario French language schools for depicting racist stereotypes of Indigenous peoples of the Americas Tintin in America and Asterix and the Great Crossing were among the burned books 253 254 Harry Potter and other books edit On March 31 2019 a Catholic priest in Gdansk Poland burned books such as Harry Potter and novels in the Twilight series The other objects were an umbrella with a Hello Kitty pattern an elephant figurine a tribal mask and a figurine of a Hindu god 255 256 257 Zhenyuan China edit In October 2019 officials at a library in the Gansu Province reportedly burned 65 books that were banned by the regime 258 Harrison s Principles of Internal Medicine by an Iranian cleric edit In January 2020 a video of Abbas Tabrizian s ceremony went viral on social media in which he set a copy of Harrison s Principles of Internal Medicine on fire with lighter Tabrizian is an Iranian Shia cleric rejecting medicine and promoting instead Islamic medicine Iranian officials and authorities of Shia seminaries condemned the act 259 260 Tennessee Global Vision Bible Church book burning and subsequent Bible burning edit On February 2 2022 Pastor Greg Locke of the Global Vision Bible Church in Mount Juliet Tennessee led a book burning event with attendees also throwing books and other media into the fire The burning was livestreamed on Facebook 261 The burn pile was fed partially with dozens of wood forklift pallets At one point Locke claimed that the fire department was trying to put the fire out but his security team was successfully blocking their access Along with contributions from the crowd a dumpster full of books was unveiled and burned by Locke and attendees 262 Locke claimed it was his and the churches biblical right to burn cultic materials that they deem are a threat to their religious rights and freedoms and belief systems On Instagram Locke wrote that anything tied to the Masonic Lodge needs to be destroyed 263 On Easter Sunday March 31 2024 a trailer with about 200 Bibles was set on fire blocking the entrance to the church 264 Russian Ukrainian war edit In Mariupol Russians burned all the books from the library of the church of Petro Mohyla 265 In the temporarily occupied Mariupol Russian invaders threw away books from the library collections of the Pryazovskyi State Technical University 266 In 2023 the Ukrainian government removed 19 million Russian and Soviet era books from libraries 267 Quran burnings in Sweden edit Main article 2023 Quran desecration in Sweden After a series of Quran burnings in Sweden by right wing nationalist Rasmus Paludan 268 more individuals started emulating him including in the Netherlands 269 leading to further Quran burnings under police protection These incidents attracted international attention and ignited a global debate on freedom of expression lt ref name nyt See also edit nbsp Lists portal nbsp Literature portal List of books banned by governments List of destroyed libraries Book burning Censorship Fahrenheit 451 Lost literary workReferences editInformational notes Aristoxenus book is lost but the Plato reference survives in a quote in Diogenes Laertius Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers ix 40 The dictionary account is apparently based on Bede Book II Chapter 1 who used the expression impalpable of finer texture than wind and air Arnold s life depends for its sources on Otto of Freising and a chapter in John of Salisbury s Historia Pontificalis See the entry Maimonidean Controversy under Maimonides in volume 11 of the Encyclopaedia Judaica Keter Publishing and Dogma in Medieval Jewish Thought by Menachem Kellner Note that Leon Portilla finds Tlacaelel to be the instigator of this burning despite lack of specific historical evidence citation needed The Trieste book burnings are referenced in John Gatt Rutter s comprehensive biographical work Italo Svevo A Double Life Clarendon Press Oxford 1988 Ch 47 p 242 85 of buildings lost 10 were destroyed in the 1939 Invasion of Poland that ignited World War II 15 in the reorganization of Warsaw and the Warsaw Ghetto uprising 1943 25 in the 1944 Uprising and 35 due to systematic German actions after the second Uprising Citations a b Bible Gateway passage Jeremiah 36 New International Version Bible Gateway Retrieved April 7 2022 Protagoras fl 5th c B C E Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on February 24 2004 Retrieved September 9 2021 a b Diogenes Laertius Lives of Eminent Philosophers BOOK IX Chapter 8 PROTAGORAS 481 411 b c www perseus tufts edu Retrieved July 6 2022 Cicero De Natura Deorum p 1 23 6 Burnet John 1914 Greek Philosophy Part I Thales to Plato London Macmillan and Co OCLC 697902275 page needed Cooper John M Hutchinson D S eds 1997 Introduction Plato Complete Works Indianapolis Hackett Publishing ISBN 978 0 87220 349 5 page needed Democritus Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy August 15 2004 Retrieved September 9 2021 Gossin Pamela ed 2002 Encyclopedia of Literature and Science Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 30538 2 page needed Sima Qian Chapter 6 The Basic Annals of the First Emperor of Qin thirty fourth year 213 BC Shiji 史記 in Chinese 相李斯曰 臣請史官非秦記皆燒之 非博士官所職 天下敢有D詩 書 百家語者 悉詣守 尉雜燒之 有敢偶語詩書者棄市 以古非今者族 吏見知不舉者與同罪 令下三十日不燒 黥為城旦 所不去者 醫藥卜筮種樹之書 若欲有学法令 以吏为师 Jing Liao March 2004 A Historical Perspective The Root Cause for the Underdevelopment of User Services in Chinese Academic Libraries PDF The Journal of Academic Librarianship 30 2 109 115 doi 10 1016 j acalib 2004 01 007 Archived from the original PDF on June 7 2011 Ku Chieh Kang December 1938 A Study of Literary Persecution During The Ming Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 3 3 4 Translated by Goodrich L Carrington Harvard Yenching Institute 255 doi 10 2307 2717839 JSTOR 2717839 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint date and year link Livy History of Rome p 39 16 1 Maccabees 1 56 Bellemore Jane The Dating of Seneca s Ad Marciam De Consolatione The Classical Quarterly 42 no 1 1992 219 234 Cramer Frederick H Bookburning and Censorship in Ancient Rome Journal of the History of Ideas 6 no 2 April 1945 157 196 Tacitus The Annals of Imperial Rome translated by Michael Grant p 34 London Harmondsworth 1964 cited in Cramer Frederick H Bookburning and Censorship in Ancient Rome Journal of the History of Ideas 6 no 2 April 1945 157 196 Suetonius Twelve Caesars Augustus 31 Ant xx 5 4 B J ii 12 2 Book 2 Cardwell The Latin Josephus sites google com Retrieved July 6 2022 Curious arts WebBible Encyclopedia Christiananswers net Retrieved January 5 2014 Avodah Zarah 17b et seq Hananiah Ḥanina B Teradion JewishEncyclopedia com Retrieved July 18 2016 Ta anit iv 6 Singer Isidore Adler Cyrus 1925 The Jewish encyclopedia a descriptive record of the history religion literature and customs of the Jewish people from the earliest times to the present day Funk and Wagnalls pp 21 22 OCLC 426865 Lucian of Samosata Alexander the False Prophet Tertullian org August 31 2001 Retrieved July 18 2016 Barnes Constantine and Eusebius 20 Clarke 648 citing Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae 660 and Mosiacarum et Romanarum Legum Collatio 25 36 8 H M Gwatkin Notes on Some Chronological Questions Connected with the Persecution of Diocletian English Historical Review 13 51 1898 499 Barnes Constantine and Eusebius 22 Clarke 650 Odahl 67 69 Potter 337 Prudentius Peristephanon Crowns of Martyrdom Joseph Priestley An history of the corruptions of Christianity 1782 pg 173 174 Theodosius I at New Advent Encyclopedia Michael von Albrecht and Gareth L Schmeling A history of Roman literature 1997 page 1744 Athanasius of Alexandria Paschal letter letter 39 367 AD Lactantius Institutiones divinae I 6 quoting a lost work by Varro Tacitus Annales VI 12 Rutilius Claudius Namatianus De reditu suo Mckenna Stephen The Library of Iberian Resources On line Paganism and Pagan Survivals in Spain up to the Fall of the Visigothic Kingdom by Stephen McKenna Libro uca edu Retrieved January 5 2014 Quinn Thomas September 10 2010 Thomas Quinn What Do You Do with a Chocolate Jesus An irreverent commentary on religion Choco jesus blogspot com Retrieved January 5 2014 CrystaLinks Etruscans claims Stilicho was among the burners CT 9 16 2 Retrieved August 9 2021 Skellmeyer On burning books Skellmeyer blogspot com April 6 2011 Retrieved January 5 2014 Abelard org Abelard org Retrieved January 5 2014 Meijer Reinder Literature of the Low Countries A Short History of Dutch Literature in the Netherlands and Belgium New York Twayne Publishers Inc 1971 9 10 Grattan Flood William The Twelve Apostles of Erin The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 1 New York Robert Appleton Company 1907 24 Jul 2013 Smith William Wace Henry 1880 A Dictionary of Christian Biography Literature Sects and Doctrines Being a Continuation of The Dictionary of the Bible VolumeII Eaba Hermocrates Boston Little Brown and Company p 415 El Abbadi Mostafa Fathallah Omnia Mounir 2008 What Happened to the Ancient Library of Alexandria Boston Brill p 89 ISBN 978 90 04 16545 8 Theodore Jonathan 2016 The Modern Cultural Myth of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Manchester Palgrave Macmillan p 182 ISBN 978 1 137 56996 7 There was no remaining Great Library in the sense of the iconic vast priceless collection CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA The Alexandrian Library Newadvent org March 1 1907 Retrieved July 18 2016 The Venerable Bede May 28 2013 The Mysterious Fate of the Great Library of Alexandria Bede org uk Retrieved July 18 2016 Volume 6 Book 61 Number 510 Usc edu Archived from the original on August 23 2011 Retrieved January 5 2014 Mozarabic Rite by Henry Jenner in the Catholic Encyclopedia Eleanor of Aquitaine Timeline robertfripp ca Archived from the original on August 14 2007 The Story of Early Indian Civilization by Gertrude Emerson Sen Orient Longmans 1964 Meisami Ed Scott Julie Starkey Paul 1998 Encyclopedia of Arabic Literature Vol 2 London Routledge p 857 ISBN 978 0 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East ed De Nicola amp Melville Brill Boston c2016 pp 140 141 George Lane Society of Ancient Sources Iran After the Mongols The Idea of Iran Vol 8 ed S Babaie I B Tauris London c2019 pp 17 18 John Huss Theopedia Retrieved March 11 2012 Schaff Philip 1953 Huss John Hussites The New Schzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge pp 415 20 Maseko Achim Nkosi 2009 Church Schism amp Corruption Lulu ISBN 978 1 4092 2186 9 page needed Garcia de Santamaria Alvar c 1450 Cronica de Juan II Chronicle of John II Madrid Ch 8 Medieval Spanish Poetry Cancionero Spanish Arts archived from the original on May 23 2022 retrieved June 16 2006 Barrientos Lope de 1994 Paloma Cuenca Munoz ed Tratado de la Divinanca Tract on Divinity Cuenca Council of Cuenca ISBN 978 84 86788 28 5 Madrid Codex VIII 192v as quoted in Leon Portilla p 155 Leon Portilla Miguel 1963 Aztec Thought and Culture A Study of the Ancient Nahuatl Mind Civilization of the American Indian series no 67 Jack Emory Davis trans Norman University of 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burning in England c 1640 c 1660 Cromohs 12 2007 1 25 Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Jonathan I Israel The Dutch Republic Clarendon Press Oxford 1995 Ch 34 913 915 Paxton Mark Censorship p 53 Greenwood Press 2008 eBook Collection EBSCOhost Web March 7 2013 Bremer Francis J and Tom Webster Puritans And Puritanism in Europe And America A Comprehensive Encyclopedia p 183 209 ABC CLIO 2006 eBook Collection EBSCOhost Web March 7 2013 William Pynchon Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia 6th Edition 2011 1 Academic Search Premier Web March 7 2013 Quakers Fight Religious Freedom Puritan Massachusetts Destroying Ideas Remains Hot Topic Archived from the original on March 13 2018 Retrieved March 12 2018 Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto Azamra 2007 Feldman Rabbi Yaakov November 15 2015 Part One Da at Tevunot The Life of Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto Yaakov Feldman Bush Lawrence May 15 2017 THE MYSTICAL ETHICIST Jewish Currents Catholics Cleanse Salzburg of Protestants Gambaccini Piero December 1 2003 Mountebanks and Medicasters A History of Italian Charlatans from the Middle Ages to the Present North Carolina McFarland amp Co p 164 ISBN 9780786416066 Christopehr Clark The Iron Kingdom London 2006 pp 254 5 Maurois 1959 p 9 Maurois 1959 p 11 needham volume 4 part 2 172 Wernick Robert August 2004 In Search of William Tell Smithsonian Tim Blanning The Pursuit of Glory Europe 1648 1815 Penguin 2007 p 388 Kaplan Aryeh 1980 Gems of Rabbi Nachman Jerusalem Yeshiva Chasidei Breslov pp 20 21 Salomon H P 2001 pp 345 7 Dumas Alexandre 1843 Celebrated Crimes Chapman and Hall p 324 Ackroyd Blake p 391 Changing of the Guard Recognition of the Braille Code Afb org Retrieved July 18 2016 Tarocco Francesca 2007 The Cultural Practices of Modern Chinese Buddhism Attuning the Dharma London Routledge p 48 ISBN 9781136754395 Platt The Jen Yu wen Collection on the Taiping Revolutionary Movement The Yale University Library Gazette volume 49 number 3 January 1975 pages 293 296 Peri twn arxaiwn Kypriwn 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1996 The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 Reform Revolt and Repression London Longman Lendvai Paul 2008 One Day That Shook the Communist World The 1956 Hungarian Uprising and Its Legacy Princeton NJ Princeton UP Hellemann Jarl Kustantajan nakokulma kirjoituksia kirjallisuuden reunalta s 56 60 Otava 1999 Helsinki E Bradford Burns A History of Brazil Columbia University Press 1993 p 451 ISBN 9780231079556 Retrieved January 5 2014 via Internet Archive Wen Chihua Madsen Richard P 1995 1995 The Red Mirror Children of China s Cultural Revolution Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 2488 2 Chinese Cultural Revolution punahou edu Sullivan Lawrence R 2012 Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Communist Party Scarecrow Press p 31 ISBN 9780810872257 Warhurst Susie producer Morpurgo Michael September 2 2010 Penguin Puffin and the Paperback Revolution Radio broadcast BBC Radio 4 Archived from the original on September 6 2010 Waters Florence August 26 2010 Penguin s pioneering publisher who never read books The Telegraph Archived from the original on August 31 2010 Retrieved September 9 2021 Lane published DH Lawrence s Lady Chatterley s Lover which sold 2 1 million copies in its first year He was a terrier snapping at the establishment Morpurgo says Yet years later the same man stole out in the dark to empty a Penguin warehouse full of books of French illustrations and burn them because he d decided they were sacrilegious Rama Carlos LA QUEMA DE LIBROS EN CHILE in Spanish Magicas Ruinas cronicas del siglo pasado Retrieved November 4 2012 Edwards Jorge Books in Chile Index on Censorship nº 2 1984 pp 20 23 Andrain Charles Political Change in the Third World 2011 p 186 Tollefson Ozzie November 2 2021 Recalling book burning in Drake North Dakota high school Fergus Falls Daily Journal Retrieved December 16 2021 Librarians Grapple With Conservatives Latest Efforts to Ban Books Time Retrieved December 16 2021 Thanh Tich Đốt Sach Goc nhin Alan in Vietnamese July 22 2015 Archived from the original on 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Peace Destruction of Libraries during and after the Balkan Wars of the 1990s PDF School of Library and Information Science Simmons University See slides 1 and 15 17 Archived from the original ppt pdf on September 27 2007 Retrieved May 22 2020 Andras Riedlmayer 2005 Convivencia under Fire Genocide and Book burning in Bosnia PDF bgs ba Biblioteka Sarajevo Sarajevo YEARBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION OF SLAVICIST LIBRARIANS pp 1 26 Archived from the original PDF on May 17 2020 Retrieved May 22 2020 Riedlmayer Andras 1995 Erasing the Past The Destruction of Libraries and Archives in Bosnia Herzegovina Middle East Studies Association Bulletin 29 1 7 11 doi 10 1017 S0026318400030418 ISSN 0026 3184 JSTOR 23061201 S2CID 164940150 Zeco Munevera William B Tomljanovich July 1996 The National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Current War The Library Quarterly Information Community Policy 66 3 294 301 doi 10 1086 602886 JSTOR 4309131 S2CID 147428591 Abkhazia Cultural Tragedy Revisited Archived September 22 2019 at the Wayback Machine Caucasus Reporting Service Institute for War and Peace Reporting Virani 2007 p 110 Virani 2007 p 111 112 Banned and Burned in Tehran Newsweek October 1995 pp 37 38 Report of the Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression Mr Abid Hussain submitted pursuant to Commission on Human Rights resolution 1993 45 Human Rights Library University of Minnesota United Nations Economic and Social Council March 11 1996 Archived from the original on October 13 2017 Retrieved September 9 2021 On or around 23 August 1995 the bookshop and publishing house Morgh e Amin located on the Karim Khand Zand Avenue in Tehran was set on fire as the result of the explosion of a bomb by private individuals According to information received by the Special Rapporteur the arson attack was related to the publication of a novel written by Mr Mohamad Reza Koshbin Khoshnazar and entitled Khodayegan Doshanbeha Mikhandand Gods laugh on Mondays that had apparently aroused the anger of the arsonists Report of the Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression Mr Abid Hussain submitted pursuant to Commission on Human Rights resolution 1993 45 PDF United Nations Economic and Social Council March 11 1996 p 10 Retrieved September 9 2021 On or around 23 August 1995 the bookshop and publishing house Morgh e Amin located on the Karim Khand Zand Avenue in Tehran was set on fire as the result of the explosion of a bomb by private individuals According to information received by the Special Rapporteur the arson attack was related to the publication of a novel written by Mr Mohamad Reza Koshbin Khoshnazar and entitled Khodayegan Doshanbeha Mikhandand Gods laugh on Mondays that had apparently aroused the anger of the arsonists Al Hayat January 13 2001 Middle East Report 219 Summer 2001 Hassan Ghali July 2004 The Pillage Of Iraq Counter Currents org Prized Iraqi annals lost in blaze BBC News April 14 2003 Retrieved April 26 2010 Notable Library Burnings In Our Times United Talmud Torah School Library Montreal Quebec Centennial College Archived from the original on November 25 2018 Retrieved September 9 2021 Libro blasfemo E Ceccano brucia il Codice Corriere della Sera Corriere della Sera in Italian May 19 2006 Archived from the original on May 24 2006 Retrieved September 9 2021 Moore Graeme May 21 2006 Scuffles erupt as The Da Vinci Code burned in Italian town square WIS Associated Press Archived from the original on September 9 2021 Retrieved September 9 2021 Millions flock to Da Vinci Code BBC News May 22 2006 Archived from the original on June 20 2006 Retrieved September 9 2021 a b 7 Charged With Inciting Racial Hatred in Anne Frank Book Burning Haaretz dpa October 19 2006 Archived from the original on September 9 2021 Retrieved September 9 2021 In Germany Men Who Burned Anne Frank s Diary Face Trial Deutsche Welle February 26 2007 Archived from the original on November 9 2016 Retrieved September 9 2021 a b Three German Far rightists Torch Copy of Diary of Anne Frank Haaretz Associated Press July 6 2006 Archived from the original on September 9 2021 Retrieved September 9 2021 Serchuk David December 1 2006 Harry Potter and the Ministry of Fire Forbes McCluskey Megan February 1 2017 Harry Potter Book Burning Time Retrieved March 5 2018 Nolan Emma September 16 2020 J K Rowling Book Burning Videos Are Spreading Like Wildfire Across TikTok Newsweek Retrieved May 11 2023 Morrison Hamish May 11 2023 Pink Peacock staff burn Harry Potter book in Glasgow street The National Retrieved May 11 2023 Bookstore owner burns books in protest CNN Archived from the original on June 3 2007 Retrieved August 12 2013 Mark Bixler Hundreds of New Testaments torched in Israel CNN May 28 2008 One Baptist Church To Celebrate Halloween By Burning Bibles KWTX October 13 2009 Archived from the original on July 28 2011 Retrieved January 31 2011 Miller Kathleen October 14 2009 North Carolina church to burn Satan s books including works of Mother Teresa Raw Story North John December 1 2009 Church s Bible and book burning prompts protest in Halloween rain Asheville Daily Planet Worst Book Burning Ever YouTube November 12 2009 Retrieved July 18 2016 Amazing Grace Baptist Church statement on the Halloween 2009 book burning US burns Bibles in Afghanistan row Webcitation org Archived from the original on May 26 2009 Retrieved January 5 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Anderson Phil September 11 2010 WBC s flames produce little heat Topeka Capital Journal Archived from the original on September 13 2010 Retrieved March 11 2012 Katz Basil and Edith Honan September 11 2010 Tensions over Quran spark isolated incidents on 9 11 Reuters Retrieved March 11 2012 Walker Joe and Ann Sutherland September 12 2010 Man burns Quran pages at site of controversial New York City mosque Herald Sun Retrieved March 11 2012 Welsch Anthony September 13 2010 Knoxville mosque leaders downplay shot burned Koran WBIR Knoxville Retrieved March 11 2012 Burned Koran found in Michigan UPI September 13 2010 Retrieved March 11 2012 Guzzardi Will September 15 2010 Burned Quran Found Outside Muslim Community Center in Chicago Huffington Post Retrieved March 11 2012 Shane Scott September 9 2010 Pentagon Plan Buying Books to Keep Secrets New York Times Retrieved March 11 2012 DeMichele Jenny September 29 2010 Pentagon Burns Copies of Operation Dark Heart Before Banned Book Week US Financial Post Archived from the original on May 26 2012 Retrieved March 11 2012 Dziadosz Alexander March 2 2011 Hemming Jon ed East Libyans burn Gaddafi book demand constitution Reuters Archived from the original on February 21 2014 Retrieved September 9 2021 Utah Local News Salt Lake City News Sports Archive The Salt Lake Tribune Sltrib com April 19 2011 Retrieved August 14 2012 New library a sign of changing times in polygamous Utah town CBS News November 2016 Winslow Ben April 22 2011 New developments in alleged book burning in FLDS towns KSTU Archived from the original on April 27 2011 Retrieved September 9 2021 de Bruijn Enny July 28 2011 Het negerboek geeft slaven een stem Reformatorisch Dagblad in Dutch Archived from the original on September 9 2021 Retrieved September 9 2021 Dutch group burns cover of Hill s Book of Negroes CBC News July 22 2011 Archived from the original on June 23 2011 Retrieved September 9 2021 Hickman Angela July 22 2011 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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