Treasured Galileo manuscript is a forgery, University of Michigan says
Detective work by academic revealed supposed letter and notes by astronomer from 1610 were work of a 20th-century Italian forger
For nearly a century, the University of Michigan library kept what was understood to be a manuscript written by the astronomer Galileo Galilei. But now, after an internal investigation, the school believes that document was a fake.
The university announced on Tuesday that the so-called Galileo manuscript" - a one-page document that includes a letter accompanying the astronomer's presentation of his telescope and his supposed notes observing Jupiter's moons through his telescope in 1610 - was crafted by Tobia Nicotra, a well-known forger from Italy who was fined and sentenced to two years in jail for crafting fake Galileo documents in 1934. He also infamously produced fake autographs of Christopher Columbus and Mozart.
Continue reading...