Silver Bible
The Silver Bible, Codex argenteus (which means the "Silver Book"), is Sweden's most valuable book and one of the world's most famous manuscripts. It was written in Italy at the beginning of the 6th century.
The Silver Bible is despite its name not a complete Bible but the four gospels written in the Gothic language. The translation from Greek to Gothic was done in the fourth century by the Gothic Bishop Ulfilas, who also constructed the Gothic alphabet. The Silver Bible was probably copied in Ravenna in the period under the Ostrogoths, and possibly for their King Theoderic the Great, at the beginning of the 6th century. It is written on thin purple coloured vellum of a very high quality in gold and silver ink. The silver script is dominant and has given rise to the term the "silver book","codex argenteus". It was designed to be a work of magnificence, which is possibly hard to understand today. It probably originally had a splendid binding decorated with pearls and gems. The text of the Silver Bible is one of the oldest and most extensive examples of the Gothic language of any document surviving today.

The Silver Bible can be viewed in the Library's exhibition Expo Rediviva
The Silver Bible was known of in the 16th century when it was in a Benedictine Monastry in Werden in the Ruhr district. By the year 1600 it had passed into the hands of the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolph II and was in Prague when the Swedes stormed the city in 1648. As Swedish war booty it arrived in Stockholm and became part of Queen Christina's library. After the Queen's abdication it passed to one of her librarians, Isaac Vossius, who took it to Holland. From there it was bought by the Lord Chamberlain (and University Chancellor) Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie, who presented it to Uppsala University in 1669.
The Silver Bible originally had at least 336 leaves. Of these 187 are in Uppsala. Another leaf has survived for posterity and is in Speyer in Germany. It was discovered sensationally in 1970 in Speyer Cathedral together with some hidden relics. This leaf appears to have travelled a somewhat different path than the others before it came to light again.
The text of the Silver Bible has been published in various editions. The latest and most important is the facsimile edition which was made in 1927 with high technological equipment and the expertise of among others Professor The Swedberg.