The Guardian Australia

One of world’s smallest books sold at auction for £3,500

- Daniel Boffey in Brussels

One of the world’s smallest books has been sold at an auction in Brussels for €4,200 (£3,500).

The leather-bound work, measuring 5mm by 5mm – smaller than the end of a pencil – contains versions of the Lord’s Prayer in Dutch, English, American English, French, German, Spanish and Swedish.

It hadbeen valued between €1,000 and €1,500 but an anonymous buyer snapped it up at Arenberg Auctions in Brussels for €3,500, with additional costs bringing the price paid to €4,200.

Henri Godts, the auctioneer, said: “The printed text is so minuscule that you cannot read it with the naked eye but need a strong magnifying glass.”

The book, titledThe Lord’s Prayer, was one of a few hundred published in 1952 by the Gutenberg Museum, in Mainz, Germany, as part of a fundraisin­g initiative to pay for the building’s reconstruc­tion after the second world war.

The institutio­n is one of the world’s oldest printing museums, named after Johannes Gutenberg, who pioneered mechanical printing in Europe in the 15th century.

Godts said: “The copy has been in a collection for dozens of years and is kept in a jewel box as if it were a gem. You could even incorporat­e it into a transparen­t jewel and wear it around your neck, if you so wish.”

The book came with the metal printing plates used to make it.

There is a long history to the publicatio­n of miniature books. In Europe, many were produced in the 16th century as printers sought to test the technologi­cal limits of the presses, but there are examples from ancient Mesopotami­a dating back to 2325BC.

According to the US-based Miniature Book Society, a miniature book “is no more than three inches in height, width, or thickness”. A book titled Teeny Ted from Turnip Town, measuring 70 micrometre­s by 100 micrometre­s, holds the Guinness World Record for being the smallest reproducti­on of a printed book. A micrometre is equivalent to 0.001mm.

 ?? ?? The book, entitledTh­e Lord’s Prayer, was one of a few hundred published in 1952 by the Gutenberg Museum, in Mainz, Germany.
The book, entitledTh­e Lord’s Prayer, was one of a few hundred published in 1952 by the Gutenberg Museum, in Mainz, Germany.
 ?? ?? Many miniature books were produced in the 16th century as printers sought to test the technologi­cal limits of the presses.
Many miniature books were produced in the 16th century as printers sought to test the technologi­cal limits of the presses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia