The World Organization for Manuscript Preservation is a non-profit, privately-funded research organization whose tradition of “keeping history’s flame alive through the sharing of ancient digital documents” originated almost twelve generations ago in the early to mid-1700’s.
As the WOMP historical archives detail, it was in 1721 while on a six-week archeological dig in Tunisia, that Polish historian Ivan R. Davidovich unearthed the infamous carpentry weblog of Jesus of Nazareth. The discovery, which would be mocked by scholars and scientists alike, did not deter Davidovich from continuing his research and involving subsequent generations in the tireless search for similar documents.
     Over the next one hundred and fifty years, the Davidovich family would continue the quest, uncovering other stunning documents such as (but not limited to) Alexander the Great’s Great Weblog (Shamus P. Davidovich, 1771), Noah’s Digital Request for Pairs of Living Creatures (Samuel K. Davidavich, 1801), Julius Caesar’s Thoughts on the Ides of March (Carlton L. Davidson, 1833), Johann Gutenberg’s Digital Gutenblog (Abraham Davidson, 1891) and the Nobel Prize winning discovery of Atilla the Hun’s Aquileia Conquest Journal (Fisher O. Davidson, 1910).

Davidovich,
in explorer’s leggings.




The blog of Christ.


Investors tour
the Brooklyn Bridge.
It would be in 1912, after presenting one-hundred and ninety one years of discoveries to the international scientific community in New York City, that investors would step in to help establish the World Organization for Manuscript Preservation and erect the worldwide headquarters in the museum district of Stockholm, Sweden.
     To this day, the W.O.M.P. continues its quest (under the curator-ship of Paul Davidson) to uncover and preserve history’s most important voices through the sharing of their digital documents and cyber-journals. The year 2006 marks the first time in W.O.M.P.’s extended history that such documents have become available to the general public via the publishing of the archival compendium entitled The Lost Blogs.