The first librarian was the
Theatine priest
Paolo Maria Paciaudi, who was assigned as "Antiquario e Bibliotecario". The goal was to form a public library as part of a project by Duke Filippo's prime minister,
Guillaume Du Tillot. The library lacked many of the works that had been collected by the
House of Farnese while ruling in Parma, when the future
Charles III of Spain, brother of Filippo and who was Duke from 1731 to 1735, moved the local library and archives to
Naples in 1736. Paciaudi failed to acquire the collections of Cardinal
Domenico Passionei in Roma and of the Pertusati family of Milan, and thus embarked on shopping for books in the market. He catalogued his purchases under six main classes: Theology,
Nomology, Philosophy, History, Philology, and Liberal and Mechanic Arts. The books required the importation of Louis Antoine Laferté, a master book binder. The collection was kept in a gallery refurbished for the purpose by the court architect,
Ennemond Alexandre Petitot, and inaugurated in 1769. In 1771, both Du Tillot and Paciaudi fell out of favor, and the library fell under the supervision of the Benedictine Andrea Mazza. However, Paciaudi was recalled from 1778 till his death in 1785 to his former office. Paciaudi was replaced by the polymath cleric
Ireneo Affò; he presided over expansion into the Galleria dell'Incoronata. When Affò died in 1797, he was replaced by former Jesuit priest Matteo Luigi Canonici, until 1805. In 1804, the Napoleonic administration of the Duchy named Angelo Pezzana as director, a post he held till 1862. Pezzana catalogued the books under five classes: Theology, Jurisprudence, Science & arts,
Belle-Lettere (Fine Literature), and History. Under his management, the library acquired the collections of the
Hebraist professor, abate
Giovanni Bernardo De Rossi; the manuscripts of
Francesco Albergati Capacelli; the Carte of Monsignor Casapini; the collections of designs and engravings belonging to Massimiliano Ortalli and canon Raffaele Balestra; the collection of Judaica and Hebrew manuscripts sold by Salomon Stern and
Mordecai Bisliches; and collections of Bartolomeo Gamba, Michele Colombo, and Giovanni Bonaventura Porta; as well as the typographic/printed artifacts of
Giovanni Battista Bodoni (now gathered in the adjacent
Museo Bodoni in the Palazzo Pilotta. The ceiling of the
Sala Dante was frescoed (1841–1857) by
Francesco Scaramuzza. The next librarians included Federico Odorici (1862–1876) and
Luigi Rossi (1888–1893). During the
Italian Campaign of the Second World War, in March and April 1944 the
RAF bombed Parma. The main targets were Parma's train station and marshalling yards, but the high altitude bombing was often inaccurate and many of Parma's historic buildings were damaged, among them the Biblioteca Palatina. Some 21,000 volumes of the library's collection were
lost. In 1950, this loss was partly made up for by copies made from books in the library of Mario Ferrarini. == Collection ==