Outline of forgery
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to forgery:
Forgery - process of making, adapting, or imitating objects, statistics, or documents with the intent to deceive.
Types of forgery
- Archaeological forgery
- Art forgery
- Black propaganda — false information and material that purports to be from a source on one side of a conflict, but is actually from the opposing side
- Counterfeiting
- * Counterfeit money — types of counterfeit coin include the cliché forgery, the fourrée and the slug
- * Counterfeit consumer goods
- * Counterfeit medication
- * Counterfeit watches
- * Unapproved aircraft parts
- * Watered stock
- False documents
- Forgery as covert operation
- Identity document forgery
- * Fake passport
- Literary forgery
- * Fake memoirs
- * Pseudopigraphy — the false attribution of a work, not always as an act of forgery
- Musical forgery — music allegedly written by composers of past eras, but actually composed later by someone else
- Philatelic forgery — fake stamps produced to defraud stamp collecters
- Signature forgery
Legality of forgery
United Kingdom
- Forgery of Foreign Bills Act 1803
- Forgery Act 1830
- Forgery, Abolition of Punishment of Death Act 1832
- Forgery Act 1837
- Forgery Act 1861
- Forgery Act 1870
- Forgery Act 1913
- Forgery and Counterfeiting Act 1981
International
- Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement
- Council of Europe Convention on the Counterfeiting of Medical Products
Related offences
- Phishing — impersonating a reputable organization via electronic media, which often involves creating a replica of a trustworthy website
- Uttering — knowingly passing on a forgery with the intent to defraud
Detection and prevention of forgery
Anti-counterfeiting agencies and organisations
- Applied DNA Sciences — an American company that develops DNA-based technology to help identify counterfeit goods
- Authentics Foundation - an international non-governmental organization that raises public awareness of counterfeits
- Central Bank Counterfeit Deterrence Group — an international group of central banks that investigates emerging threats to the security of banknotes
- Counterfeit Coin Bulletin — a now-defunct publication of the American Numismatic Association
- International Federation of Spirits Producers — the trade association for the worldwide spirit industry's protection against counterfeit produce
- Philatelic Foundation — a major source of authentication of rare and valuable postage stamps
- United States Secret Service — the agency responsible for the prevention and investigation of counterfeit U.S. currency
- Verified-Accredited Wholesale Distributors — a program that offers accreditation to wholesale pharmaceutical distribution facilities
Tools and techniques
- Authentication - the act of confirming the truth of an attribute of a single piece of data claimed true by an entity.
- Counterfeit banknote detection pen — uses an iodine-based ink that reacts with the starch found in counterfeit banknotes
- EURion constellation — a pattern of symbols incorporated into banknote designs, which can be detected by imaging software
- Geometric lathe — a 19th-century lathe used for making ornamental patterns on the plates used in printing banknotes and stamps
- Microprinting - very small text hidden on banknotes or cheques, that is difficult to accurately reproduce
- Optical variable device — an iridescent image that cannot be photocopied or scanned
- Optically variable ink — ink that appears to change color depending on the angle it is viewed from
- Philatelic expertisation — the process whereby an expert is asked to give an opinion whether a philatelic item is genuine
- Questioned document examination — a forensic science discipline that attempts to answer questions about disputed documents
- Security printing — the field of the printing industry that deals with the printing of items such as banknotes and identity documents
- Security thread — a thin ribbon threaded through a banknote, that appears as a solid line when held up to the light
- Taggant — a radio frequency microchip that can be tracked and identified
- Watermark — a recognizable image or pattern in paper that appears as various shades of lightness when viewed
Examples of forgery
Archaeological forgery
- Acámbaro figures — over 32,000 ceramic figurines which appear to provide evidence for the co-existence of dinosaurs and humans
- Archaeoraptor — the supposed "missing link" between birds and tetrapod dinosaurs; constructed by rearranging pieces of genuine fossils
- AVM Runestone — a student prank that was believed to be an ancient Norse runestone
- Beringer's Lying Stones — fake fossils that were planted as an 18th-century prank
- Brandenburg stone — a stone slab bearing markings which appear to be letters of an unknown alphabet
- Calaveras Skull — a human skull that was thought to prove the existence of Pliocene-age man in North America
- Cardiff Giant — a ten-foot-tall "petrified man" carved out of gypsum
- Chiemsee Cauldron — a golden cauldron found at the bottom of a lake
- Crystal skull — a series of artifacts crafted from quartz, often attributed to Aztec or Mayan civilizations
- Drake's Plate of Brass — supposedly a brass plaque planted by Francis Drake upon arrival in America, but a practical joke that span out of control
- Grave Creek Stone — a small sandstone disk inscribed with twenty-five pseudo-alphabetical characters
- Holly Oak gorget — a mammoth engraved upon a shell pendant
- Ica stones — a collection of andesite stones that depict dinosaurs co-existing with humans
- Japanese Paleolithic hoax — many paleolithic finds manufactured by amateur archaeologist Shinichi Fujimura to bolster his reputation
- Kafkania pebble — a small rounded pebble bearing what could be an early example of Greek syllabic writing
- Kinderhook plates — six bell-shaped pieces of brass with strange engravings; Latter-Day Saints founder Joseph Smith allegedly attempted to translate them
- Lead Books of Sacromonte — a series of texts inscribed on circular lead leaves, denounced as heretical forgeries by the Vatican in 1682; modern scholars concur with this analysis
- Lenape Stone — an engraving that appears to show Native Americans hunting a woolly mammoth
- Michigan relics — artifacts that appear to prove that East Europeans lived in Michigan in ancient times; a money-making scam
- The inscription at Pedra da Gávea — allegedly carved by Phoenicians, who were not thought to have had the naval capacity to travel across the ocean to Brazil
- Persian Princess — the mummified body of a "Persian princess"; the corpse of a woman who was murdered around 1996
- Piltdown Man — the jaw of an orangutan attached to the skull of a human, hailed as the missing link between humans and apes
- Sherborne Bone — a bone with a horse's head engraved on it, now known to be a schoolboy prank
- Solid Muldoon — a "petrified human" made out of the mortar, rock dust, clay, plaster, ground bones, blood, and meat
- Spirit Pond runestones — small stones bearing runic inscriptions, ostensibly of pre-Columbian origin
- Tiara of Saitaferne — a tiara exhibited at the Louvre Museum as belonging to a Scythian king, until this statement was disputed by the goldsmith who created it
Art forgery
- Amarna Princess — a statue created by Shaun Greenhalgh in the ancient Egyptian style, and sold to Bolton Museum for £439,767
- Black Admiral — a Revolutionary War-era painting of a black man in a naval uniform
- Bust of Flora — a bust of the Roman goddess Flora, previously believed to be a work by Leonardo da Vinci, now attributed to Richard Cockle Lucas.
- Camille Corot forgeries — thousands of imitation Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot paintings
- Eadred Reliquary — a silver vessel created by Shaun Greenhalgh, containing a piece of wood which he claimed was a fragment of the True Cross
- Etruscan terracotta warriors — three terracotta warriors created by Italian forgers and sold to the Metropolitan Museum of Art
- The Faun — a sculpture created by Shaun Greenhalgh and sold as a work by Paul Gauguin
- Flower portrait — a portrait of William Shakespeare, probably painted in the 19th century
- Michelangelo's Cupid — a sleeping Cupid sculpture that was created, artificially aged and sold by Renaissance artist Michelangelo
- Risley Park Lanx — the replica of a genuine Roman artifact, "discovered" by the Greenhalgh family and put on display at the British Museum
- Rospigliosi Cup — a gold and enamel cup thought to have been crafted by Italian goldsmith Benvenuto Cellini, but now considered a 19th-century forgery
- The works of the Spanish Forger — an unidentified 19th-century artist who created over 200 medieval miniatures, which are still highly valued by collectors
Black propaganda
- The Franklin Prophecy — an anti-Semitic speech falsely attributed to Benjamin Franklin, arguing against the admittance of Jewish immigrants to the newly formed United States
- Morey letter — a letter published during the 1880 US presidential elections, suggesting that James A. Garfield was in favor of Chinese immigration
- Our Race Will Rule Undisputed Over The World — a speech given by the non-existent Rabbi Emanuel Rabinovich, outlining Jewish plans for world domination
- A Protocol of 1919 — a document supposedly found among the belongings of a Jew killed in battle, outlining Jewish plans for world domination
- The Protocols of the Elders of Zion — a lengthy text, originating in Russia and widely publicized by the Nazi party, outlining Jewish plans for world domination
- A Radical Program for the Twentieth Century — a text supposedly written by a British Jewish Communist, cited as proof that the civil rights movement in America was a foreign Communist plot
- Tanaka Memorial — an alleged Japanese strategic planning document, advising Emperor Hirohito on how to conquer the world
Counterfeiting
- 2012 Pakistan fake medicine crisis — a batch of counterfeit medicine that killed over 100 heart patients at a hospital in Punjab
- Counterfeit United States currency — some notable examples of counterfeit operations
- Fake Indian Currency Note — fake currency in circulation in the Indian economy
- Operation Bernhard — a Nazi plot to destabilize the British economy by dropping counterfeit notes out of aircraft
- Superdollar — a very high-quality counterfeit the United States hundred dollar bill
- Partnair Flight 394 — a chartered flight that crashed in 1989, killing all 55 people on board; it was caused by counterfeit aircraft parts
- Unauthorized Apple Stores in China — twenty-two unauthorized Apple Stores discovered in Kunming
Forged documents
- Canuck letter — a letter implying that a Democratic presidential candidate was prejudiced against French-Canadians
- Casket letters — letters and sonnets supposedly written by Mary, Queen of Scots, implicating her in the murder of her husband
- Donation of Constantine — a decree issued by emperor Constantine I, granting authority over Rome and part of the Roman Empire to Pope Sylvester I and his successors
- Dossiers Secrets — documents, planted in the National Library of France, that were used as the basis for a series of BBC documentaries
- Habbush letter — a letter linking Saddam Hussein to al-Qaeda and the 9/11 attacks
- Killian documents — memos critical of President George W. Bush's service in the National Guard
- Larmenius Charter — a Latin manuscript listing twenty-two successive Grand Masters of the Knights Templar
- Lindsay pamphlet scandal — pamphlets distributed by the Australian Liberal Party, claiming an alliance between the Labor Party and an Islamic organization
- Mustafa-letter — a letter used by Norway's Liberal Party to prove that the country was in danger of being overrun with Muslims
- Niger uranium forgeries — documents implying that Saddam Hussein had attempted to purchase yellowcake uranium powder, allegedly to build weapons of mass destruction
- Oath of a Freeman — a copy of the loyalty oath drawn up by 17th-century Pilgrims
- Privilegium Maius — a medieval manuscript boosting the legitimacy and influence of the House of Habsburg
- Pseudo-Isidorian Decretals — letters and canons purportedly authored by early popes, including a collection authored by "Benedict Levita".
- William Lynch speech — a speech by an 18th-century slave owner, who claims to have discovered the secret of controlling slaves by pitting them against each other
- Zeno map — a map of the North Atlantic containing many non-existent islands
- Zinoviev letter — a directive from Moscow to Britain's Communist Party, calling for intensified communist agitation; the letter contributed to the downfall of Prime Minister MacDonald
Literary forgery
- The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ — a religious text supposedly transcribed from the Akashic records
- The Archko Volume — a series of supposedly contemporary reports relating to the life and death of Jesus
- Autobiography of Howard Hughes — an "autobiography" of reclusive eccentric Howard Hughes, written without his knowledge or consent
- Book of Jasher — an alternative account of the Old Testament narrative
- Book of Veles — a set of Slavic texts written on wooden planks
- Centrum Naturae Concentratum — a 17th-century alchemical text
- Christine — a compilation of letters purportedly written by an English girl studying in Germany in 1914, before the outbreak of war
- Chronicle of Huru — supposedly an official chronicle of the medieval Moldavian court
- Chronicon of Pseudo-Dexter — a 15th-century account of the Church's activities in Spain, attributed to Flavius Dexter
- De Situ Britanniae — an 18th-century forgery represented as a Roman account of ancient Britain
- Epistle to the Alexandrians — an unknown text derided as a forgery in a 7th-century manuscript
- Epistle to the Laodiceans — a lost letter of Saint Paul, often "rediscovered" by forgers
- Essene Gospel of Peace — a text which claims, among other things, that Jesus was a vegetarian
- Gospel of Josephus — a forgery created to raise publicity for a novel
- Historias de la Conquista del Mayab — a Mexican manuscript supposedly written by an 18th-century monk
- History of the Captivity in Babylon — an ostensibly Old Testament text elaborating on the Book of Jeremiah
- Hitler Diaries — a set of volumes purported to be the diaries of Adolf Hitler, serialized in the German magazine Stern and the British Sunday Times
- Ireland Shakespeare forgeries — forged correspondence between Shakespeare and his contemporaries, and a "lost play" entitled Vortigern and Rowena
- Jack the Ripper Diary — the forged diary of Victorian merchant James Maybrick, apparently revealing him to be Jack the Ripper
- Letter of Benan — the letter of an Egyptian physician describing his encounters with Jesus
- Letter to an Anti-Zionist Friend — a letter in support of Zionism, attributed to Martin Luther King, Jr.
- The Lost Chapter of the Acts of the Apostles — the "missing" 29th chapter of the Acts of the Apostles
- Memoirs Of Mr. Hempher, The British Spy To The Middle East — a document purporting to be the account of an 18th-century secret agent, describing his role in founding the Islamic reform movement of Wahhabism
- Manuscripts of Dvůr Králové and Zelená Hora — fraudulent Slavic manuscripts created in the early 19th century
- Minuscule 2427 — a minuscule manuscript of the Gospel of Mark
- Mussolini diaries — several forged diaries supposedly written by the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini
- My Sister and I — an autobiographical work attributed to the philosopher Nietzsche, containing a probably fictional account of his incestuous relationship with his sister
- — a New Age bible written by an American dentist
- Ossianic poems — a cycle of epic poems published by the Scottish poet James Macpherson, attributed to the legendary Ossian
- Roxburghe Ballads — over a thousand 17th-century ballads published by John Payne Collier, some of which he had written himself
- Salamander Letter — a document that offers an alternative account of Joseph Smith's finding of the Book of Mormon.
- Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses — a magical text supposedly written by Moses, providing instructions on how to perform the miracles portrayed in the Bible
- The Songs of Bilitis — a collection of erotic poetry allegedly found on the walls of a tomb in Cyprus
- Supplements to the Satyricon — several forged versions of the Latin novel Satyricon
- Talmud Jmmanuel — a supposedly ancient Aramaic text suggesting an extraterrestrial origin for the Bible
- The Zohar — a primary text of medieval Kabbalah, written by a 16th-century Spanish Rabbi but attributed to Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, an ancient sage of the Second Temple period
Musical forgery
- Adélaïde Concerto — a violin concerto attributed to Mozart
Philatelic forgery
- Russian philatelic forgeries — some examples of notable Russian stamp forgeries
- Stock Exchange Forgery 1872-73 — a fraud perpetrated by telegraph clerks at the London Stock Exchange
- Turner Collection of Forgeries — a collection of forged postage stamps on display at the British Library
Forgery controversies
- Augustan History — a collection of biographies of Roman emperors
- Bat Creek inscription — an inscription on a stone allegedly found in a Native American burial mound
- Isleworth Mona Lisa — a close imitation of da Vinci's Mona Lisa, sometimes attributed in part to da Vinci
- James Ossuary — a chalk box used to contain the bones of the dead, bearing the inscription "James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus"
- Jehoash Inscription — an inscription confirming the Biblical account of the repairs made to the temple in Jerusalem by Jehoash
- Jordan Lead Codices — a series of ring-bound books of lead and copper, that are said to pre-date the writings of St. Paul
- Kensington Runestone — a slab of greywacke covered in Scandinavian runes, found in North America and supposedly carved in the 14th century
- Letter of Lentulus — an epistle allegedly written by a Roman Consul, giving a physical description of Jesus
- Majestic 12 documents — supposedly leaked papers relating to the formation, in 1947, of a secret committee of US officials to investigate the Roswell incident
- Mar Saba letter — an epistle, attributed to Clement of Alexandria, discussing the Secret Gospel of Mark
- The Memoirs of Naim Bey — a collection of telegrams indicating that the Armenian Genocide was formally implemented as Ottoman Empire policy
- Newark Holy Stones — a set of artifacts allegedly discovered among a group of ancient Indian burial grounds
- Old High German lullaby — a supposedly 10th-century poem containing numerous references to Germanic mythology
- Prophecy of the Popes — a series of 112 short cryptic phrases which purport to predict future Roman Catholic Popes
- Shroud of Turin — a linen cloth that is said to be the burial shroud of Jesus, and bears the image of a man who appears to have suffered injuries consistent with crucifixion
- Sinaia lead plates — a set of lead plates written in an unknown language
- Sisson documents — sixty-eight Russian documents which claim that Trotsky and Lenin were German agents attempting to bring about Russia's withdrawal from World War I
- Stalin's alleged speech of 19 August 1939 — a speech supposedly given by Joseph Stalin in which he stated that the approaching war would benefit the Soviet Union
- Titulus Crucis — a piece of wood, ostensibly a fragment of the True Cross upon which Jesus was crucified
- US Army Field Manual 30-31B — a text purporting to be a classified appendix of a US Army Field Manual which describes top-secret counter-insurgency tactics
- Vinland map — an allegedly 15th-century map of the world, which could be the earliest map to depict America
- Bords de la Seine à Argenteuil — an oil painting by Monet
- Glozel artifacts — over three thousand artifacts dating back to the Neolithic era, discovered in a small French hamlet
- Lady of Elche — a stone bust believed to have been carved by the Iberians
- Praeneste fibula — a golden brooch bearing an inscription in Old Latin
Notable forgers
Archaeological forgers
- Charles Dawson — "discoverer" of the Piltdown Man
- Shinichi Fujimura
- Oded Golan — accused of forging the James Ossuary, among other things; he was acquitted of these charges in March 2012
- Islam Akhun
- Brigido Lara
- Moses Shapira
Art forgers
- Giovanni Bastianini
- William Blundell
- Chang Dai-chien
- Yves Chaudron
- Alceo Dossena
- John Drewe
- Kenneth Fetterman
- Alfredo Fioravanti
- Shaun Greenhalgh — described by the Metropolitan Police as "the most diverse art forger known in history"
- Guy Hain
- Eric Hebborn
- Elmyr de Hory — subject of the Orson Welles documentary F for Fake
- Geert Jan Jansen
- Tom Keating
- Konrad Kujau — the author of the Hitler Diaries
- Mark A. Landis
- Lothar Malskat
- Han van Meegeren — estimated to have earned the equivalent of over thirty million dollars for his forgeries
- Jacques van Meegeren
- John Myatt
- Sámuel Literáti Nemes
- Edmé Samson
- Ely Sakhai
- Jean-Pierre Schecroun
- Émile Schuffenecker
- Karl Sim
- David Stein
- Tony Tetro
- Robert Thwaites
- Franz Tieze
- William J. Toye
- Eduardo de Valfierno — allegedly masterminded the 1911 theft of the Mona Lisa
- Kenneth Walton — author of the memoir
- E. M. Washington
- Theo van Wijngaarden
Counterfeiters
- Philip Alston
- Anatasios Arnaouti
- Trevor Ashmore
- Robert Baudin
- Charles Black
- William Booth
- Mary Butterworth
- William Chaloner
- Louis Colavecchio
- The Cragg Vale Coiners
- Thomas Dangerfield
- Mike DeBardeleben
- John Duff
- Edward Emery
- David Farnsworth
- Bernhard Krüger — director of the Nazi counterfeiting plot codenamed Operation Bernhard
- Ignazio Lupo
- Catherine Murphy — the last woman to be executed by burning.
- Emanuel Ninger
- Bernard von NotHaus — inventor of the Liberty Dollar
- Salomon Smolianoff — WWII concentration camp detainee and key figure in Operation Bernhard
- Samuel C. Upham
- Arthur Williams
Document forgers
- Frank Abagnale — subject of the film Catch Me If You Can
- Charles Bertram — author of De Situ Britanniae
- Joseph Cosey
- Przybysław Dyjamentowski
- Michael John Hamdani
- Adolfo Kaminsky
- Jean LaBanta
- Maharaja Nandakumar
- Richard Pigott
- Piligrim
- James Reavis
- Alves dos Reis
- Scott Reuben
- William Roupell
- William Wynne Ryland
- Michael Sabo
- Alexander Howland Smith
- Robert Spring
- Adolf Ludvig Stierneld
- Brita Tott
- Lucio Urtubia
- Denis Vrain-Lucas
- Henry Woodhouse
Literary forgers
- Annio da Viterbo
- Sir Edmund Backhouse, 2nd Baronet
- Adémar de Chabannes
- Thomas Chatterton
- Mark Hofmann — forger of several documents relating to the Latter Day Saint movement, including the Salamander letter
- William Henry Ireland — author of the Ireland Shakespeare forgeries and the pseudepigraphical play Vortigern and Rowena
- Clifford Irving
- William Lauder
- James Macpherson — the supposed "translator" of the Ossianic poems
- Iolo Morganwg
- François Nodot
- Francesco Maria Pratilli
- Constantine Simonides
- Clotilde de Surville
- Charles Weisberg
Musical forgers
- Henri Casadesus
- Marius Casadesus — creator of the Adélaïde Concerto
- François-Joseph Fétis
- Fritz Kreisler
- Winfried Michel
- David Popper
- Roman Turovsky-Savchuk
- Vladimir Vavilov
- Voller Brothers
Signature forgers
- Henry Fauntleroy
- James Townsend Saward
Stamp forgers
- A. Alisaffi
- Bernhardt Assmus
- Rainer Blüm
- Delandre
- Georges Fouré
- François Fournier
- Sigmund Friedl
- Julius Goldner
- N. Imperato
- Madame Joseph
- Louis-Henri Mercier
- Erasmo Oneglia
- Adolph Otto
- Angelo Panelli
- Oswald Schroeder
- Lucian Smeets
- Jean de Sperati
- Philip Spiro
- Béla Székula
- Raoul de Thuin
- Harold Treherne
Media
- The Art of the Faker — a book about art forgery by Frank Arnau
- The Counterfeiters — a movie inspired by the Nazi counterfeiting scheme, Operation Bernhard
- F for Fake — an Orson Welles documentary about art forger Elmyr de Hory
- Fake Britain — a BBC television series about counterfeiting and its effects on consumers
- ' — a memoir by art forger Kenneth Walton
- Fake or Fortune? — a BBC television series which examines the provenance of notable artworks
- ' — a book by Kenneth L. Feder on the topic of pseudoarcheology
- Pierre Grassou — a novel by Honoré de Balzac about a fictional art forger
- Selling Hitler — an ITV drama-documentary about the Hitler Diaries