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Apart from its catechetical and evangelical purposes, it introduces to readers the early Tagalog script called
?baybayin,? which used symbols that represent a complete syllable.
The rare book in-depth
Edwin Wolf II, editor of one of three facsimile editions of Doctrina Christiana, wrote an introductory essay for
the text which discussed four major aspects of the original volume: physical description, bibliographical
history, authorship, and actual printing.
Wolf described the book as ?browned and brittle? with 74 pages bound with the woodcut cover of an image of
St. Dominic, with some of the pages having been separated from its original stitching.
The pages were printed through xylography, a method of printing texts using hand-carved woodblocks.
According to Wolf, the Chinese who pioneered this printing method had a vital role in the production of books
during the Spanish era.
He said the Chinese books brought to Manila served as ?xylographic models upon which the books could be
based.?
Wolf also included in his essay documents which proved the licensed printing of the books in 1593.
One of them was a letter written by then Governor Gomez Perez Dasmarinas to Philip II of Spain in the same
year.
The letter notified the King of granting a license for Doctrina Christiana to be printed in Tagalog and Chinese.
Wolf also discussed the contributions of the four orders of priests in the Philippines (Augustinians, Jesuits,
Domincans and Franciscans) who prepared and revised the book.
He said these orders ?might have written or worked on the Doctrinas printed in 1593.?
Leaf through history
Villaroel wrote in his book Printing and Rare Books published in 1991 that three copies of Doctrina Christiana
were found in three different times and places.
In 1947, one copy in Spanish and Tagalog written in pre-hispanic syllabary was found in Italy.
The other two copies both written in Chinese were found in 1948 at the Vatican Library, and in 1952 at the
National Library of Madrid. Today, the U.S. Library of Congress holds the only surviving copy of Doctrina
Christiana in Tagalog.
Villaroel also said that there were three facsimile editions of the Doctrina in print, including his own and the
other two by Wolf and Dominican priest Jesus Gayo. The first was in 1948 by Wolf, now distributed as an
eBook.
?During the [earlier] times, it was hard to preserve books,? he said. ?You are lucky today that you have all
these computers for the preservation of these rare books.?
But Eilers noted that readers still needed to carefully study the text in Doctrina?s eBook version.
Aside from Project Gutenberg, other websites like the World Digital Library also distribute copies of Doctrina in
easy-to-access electronic files.
In April, the online library published a catalog of scanned pages of the original book, giving readers the feeling
of reading from the original copy. As compared to the plain text distributed by Project Gutenberg, the site
provides a more interesting reading with the browned old pages being flashed on the screen.
Search sites like Google would also provide internet users easy access to the Doctrina eBook through a long
list of results from the keywords ?Doctrina Christiana.?
Other sources that offer the free eBook are manybooks.net, mybebook.com and the Filipino library
filipiniana.net.
Users can also read the book anywhere by downloading it in portable document format (PDF) to their mobile
phones and other compatible gadgets.
Posted on 09/16/2009 - 19:30
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