The Central Public Library of Milan (known
as the Sormani Library) is the main seat of the municipal library system of the
Milanese capital, located in Corso Porta Vittoria.
The library has a vast collection of
volumes, the catalog has more than 650,000; deals with all fields of knowledge
and is therefore a general library, even if it maintains a large quantity of
texts in the field of humanistic, juridical and artistic sciences.
Location
Palazzo Sormani, now seat of the Central
Municipal Library, dates back to the first half of the seventeenth century. It
was built by the will of the Cardinal Cesare Monti and with the intervention of
Francesco Maria Richini.
Today the "Sormani"; is the
library with the widest range of books, periodicals and multimedia of the Milan
Library System and one of the largest public libraries in the city.
“Sormani”
Library is a place of culture for everyone, that gives access to fundamental
documents and publications in all branches of knowledge, with a particularly
rich heritage in the humanities, legal sciences and arts. According to the
definition of its first Director, Giovanni Bellini, it is “the home of the
Milanese scholars”.
.
The bound newspapers cataloged with the Q
PER signature and the periodicals in paper are kept in the detached warehouse
of via Quaranta 43, a deposit now accessible only by reservation.
Stendhal
The French writer Stendhal, born
Marie-Henri Beyle (1783 - 1842), was a consul in Civitavecchia
from 1831 until his death, which happened suddenly during a trip to France in 1842.
The Bucci family, who had hosted Stendhal in Civitavecchia
during his years at the Consulate, looked after his assets in the Papal States for exactly a century before deciding to
sell them to Federico Gentile in 1942. Finally, in 1969, the president of the
Banca Commerciale Italiana, Raffaele Mattioli (1895 - 1973), negotiated the
purchase of the Bucci Stendhal Collection in order to donate it to Milan 's Municipal
Library, where it was permanently rehoused on 14th April, 1970.
The Bucci Stendhal Collection
The Bucci Stendhal Collection consists of
2,793 items, including:around 1,200 volumes, pamphlets and magazine issues (of
which almost a thousand belonged to Stendhal); letters, documents and
manuscripts;an oil portrait painted in Rome in 1835 by the artist Jean-Louis
Ducis; two wooden bookcases and some relics, including a walking stick and a
wooden tin containing handwritten notes by the French writer, clear proof of
Stendhal's irresistible urge to write wherever he went.
Stendhal's graphomania
Stendhal's graphomania is mainly evidenced
by the numerous annotations, marginalia and glosses that fill the covers, the
margins and sometimes entire pages (or interleaves) of about half the volumes
in his library (458 out of a total of 987). In these brief and sometimes
deliberately enigmatic notes, the writer spontaneously jots down moments from
his daily, private, social and professional life, just as in a real
"diary".
Stendhal in Milan
Between 1814 and 1821, Stendhal spent long
periods in Milan, falling in love with the city for its lively art and
culture.In June 1821, however, he was forced to leave the Lombard capital in
haste because he was wanted by the Austrian police due to his links with the
Carbonari. The French writer entrusted his manuscripts and the volumes from his
library to his friend Luigi Buzzi, in the hope of being able to recover them
shortly. He managed to return to his beloved Milan for a very short period in January
1828, taking with him some volumes of particular importance.
The "Grechetto" room at Palazzo
Sormani
These 23 paintings belong to a pictorial
cycle depicting the myth of Orpheus and offer a unique insight into the
knowledge of botany and zoology at the beginning of the 17th century. A
"cabinet of curiosities" with more than 280 animal specimens and
hundreds of botanical species.
Humorous and satirical magazines
Both pre- and post-unification, Milan has
been home to many significant humorous and satirical magazines, examples of
that "lighter" branch of literature that aims to represent the
disharmony, contrasts and complexity of real life by following, illustrating
and mocking characters and events. From the first ("L’uomo di
pietra") to the best-known ("Il Guerin Meschino") all the way
through to "Bertoldo"
The Beretta mayoralty
One of the prime targets was the first
mayor of Milan ,
Antonio Beretta, and his policy of "Great Works".
The Divine Comedy illustrated by Amos
Nattini
Milan's Central Municipal Library preserves
one of the 1,000 numbered copies of the Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri,
illustrated by Amos Nattini (1892 - 1985) and published between 1931 and
1941.The work consists of 3 imposing volumes (81x65 cm ), one for each cantica, printed by the Casa
Editrice Dante (Dante Publishing House) founded by Nattini and Valdameri. Each
volume was produced with extreme attention to detail, using paper made from rags
in the town of Fabriano ;
the print characters, designed by Nattini himself, are inspired by
"primitive Latin types" and are engraved on a copper plate in the
form of etchings; each cantica has a hand-embossed calfskin cover. The three
volumes, acquired in the 1930s, survived the bombings of 13th August, 1943
thanks to effective precautionary measures and, stored in the specially
designed "Danteum" on display in one of Palazzo Sormani's state
rooms, still form part of the Library's collection.
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