Stolen medieval text found in garage

A medieval text stolen from the Santiago de Compostela Cathedral in northwest Spain last year was found in a nearby garage yesterday…

A medieval text stolen from the Santiago de Compostela Cathedral in northwest Spain last year was found in a nearby garage yesterday, after police arrested a handyman – fired after 25 years at the cathedral – and three members of his family.

The Codex Calixtinus, a 12th-century collection of sermons and liturgical passages, vanished last July from a safe deposit box in the cathedral, the end of the ancient Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route.

Police said they had found the elaborately illustrated manuscript, a treasured part of Spain’s cultural and religious heritage, in a garage near the Galician town.

Earlier dawn raids on properties connected to the detained former church handyman, his wife, son and another woman had led police to the discovery of at least €1.2 million, eight copies of the codex and other ancient books that had also been stolen from the cathedral.

READ MORE

Officers also found documents and correspondence related to senior church figures and keys to various outbuildings.

The cathedral’s book of hours, a popular type of devotional book in the Middle Ages, was also recovered.

The main suspect, whom police have not named, was sacked after working for the cathedral as a freelance handyman and electrician for more than 25 years, police said. He was made redundant after faking a work contract to make it look like he had permanent job, and claimed he was owed €40,000 for unfair dismissal. – (Reuters)