Casson 2001
Casson, Lionel. Libraries in the Ancient World. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001.
The Beginnings: The Ancient Near East
Egypt: papyrus; Mesopotamia: clay tablets; Sumerians write in cuneiform on clay
Elba
Hattusas, capital of empire of Hittites from c17-13BC
- mass of clay tablets uncovered from royal palace, most documentary
- many have colophons identifying the title and scribe
- series of tablets from c13BC containing detailed bibliographical entries -- an early library catalogue
- repeated copying of well-known works built up collections for particular temple/palaces -- no book trade
- library of this size only the prerogative of kings, who could create holdings by plundering other collections
Tiglath-Pileser I (reigned Assyria 1115-1077BC); founded library unearthed in temple of Assur at Ashur; mostly documentary and religious materials
Ashubanipal (reigned Assyria 688-627BC); boasted of his literacy (could read and write cuneiform); created large private royal library; probably acquired while plundering Babylon; tablets contain warnings against stealing or rubbing out the text
Near Eastern collections "were not the seed which engendered the libraris with their far wider horizons that were to arise in the world of Greece and Rome" (15)
Egypt surely had libraries, but none survive because of perishability of papyrus