âWe have the opinion of experts who say that this move would be against the constitution,â said Regional Governor Piotr CaÅbecki. âI think we should appeal to the hearts of the lawmakers and to their conscience. There is no room for politics here.â
A historian and lawmaker with Polandâs right-wing ruling party, Piotr Babinetz, has proposed legislation that would enable the government to take possession of the manuscript for sum of 25 million zlotys ($6.2 million) and give it to the government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
The gesture would aim to underscore the close relations between the two nations and governments as well as to reciprocate for Hungaryâs decision to hand over last year a gilded suit of armor of the 16th century Polish king Sigismund II Augustus.
Naldus Naldius crafted the elaborately decorated manuscript while serving at the court of Hungaryâs King Matthias Corvinus. The book, which describes the Hungarian kingâs library, was sold by a merchant to the city of Torun in the mid 16th century and it has remained there ever since.
Danetta Ryszkowska-Mirowska, head of the Torun public library, described the manuscript as âunique and pricelessâ and said that no amount of money could compensate its loss for Polandâs cultural heritage.
She joined other library officials to protest the plan she called âbizarreâ and contrary to Polandâs national heritage protection laws.
Poland lost much of its cultural heritage - particularly from its art and book collections - throughout its history, but especially during the bombings and plunder of World War II.
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