A Publishing History of a Prohibited Best-seller THE ABBÉ DE VERTOT AND HIS HISTOIRE DE MALTE
English
This remarkable and entertaining study examines perhaps the most notorious example of a book whose enormous popular success was due almost entirely to its being banned by the Vatican. The story of the Abbé de Vertot and his Histoire de Malte will fascinate scholars of the history of the book, printing in the eighteenth century, enlightenment printing trends, the history of Malta and the Order of St John, and the history of censorship.
Histoire des Chevaliers Hospitaliers de S. Jean de Jerusalem, affectionately referred to as Histoire de Malte, was written by the Abbé de Vertot and printed in Paris in four quarto volumes in 1726. The author, a provincial clergyman who attained great fame in the capital of the monde philosophe, was commissioned by the Order of St John to be its chronicler and compose a history of the Order from its humble origins in Jerusalem until the year of publication. Vertot spent thirteen years composing the work but the product was far from what his patrons expected. What was meant to be a chronicle of the Catholic Order ended up attracting the ire of the inquisition due to the numerous anti-papist statements which the author included. Shortly after it saw the light, the publication was buried in the Vatican’s literary cemetery, the Index Librorum Prohibitorum. This study is based on hitherto unpublished sources from archives and libraries around the world.
A Publishing History of a Prohibited Best-Seller examines the publication, prohibition and circulation of Vertot’s infamous book. It includes an illustrated bibliography of more than 120 different editions of the book, reproductions of the maps present in Vertot’s original, as well as a transcription of the report compiled by the Order of St John, together with inserts of the statements deemed objectionable by the Knights and the Vatican.
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