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
The Beginnings: Greece
end of c5BC, Greeks begin mentioning "booksellers" (emerged in Athens); by the latter part of the c4BC, "the prerequitsites for the creation of the public library had been met" (28): scriptoria turning out multiple copies, dealers selling them, people collecting them
leading up to library at Alexandria:
- c3BC, Aristotle amasses large personal library (28-9); student Demetrius of Phalerum was intimate with Ptolemies, may have suggested Aristotle's library as a model for Alexandria
- then Athens passes law stating authorized versions of the plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides must be maintained by the records offic
The Library of Alexandria
Ptolemy I founded Museum to entice scholars to the cultural wasteland of Alexandria; offered scholars handsome salary, free food and lodging, tax exemption, to come live and work in an area of his palace
library grew to meet demands of the scholars; Ptolemies sent buyers out with money, told them to buy the oldest copies (less copying); confiscated books coming in on ships, gave a copy to the owner and kept the original -- wanted to acquire everything
newly acquired books stacked in warehouse; authors name and ethnic added to tab at end of rolls
main library, 490,000 rolls; "daughter library", 42,800
first head librarian: Zenodotus
- used Aristotle's system, presumably
- first to organize library alphabetically (by author, within categories, only by first letter)
- created first authorized text of Homer
Callimachus of Cyrene: produced the Pinakes, or Tables of Persons Eminent in Every Branch of Learning together with a List of Their Writings; brief biographical sketch of all authors with list of works in alphabetical order, organized by category (how to list authors who wrote across multiple genres?)
Eratosthenes, Director from ~245-205BC, learned in geography
(Philitas, created Miscellaneous Words, proto-dictionary of arcane terms in Homer; became wel-known)
thus first phase of Alexandrian scholarship created indispensable tools of scholarship: dictionaries, authoritative text editions, commentaries, grammars (45)
some believe library was destroyed by fire in 48BC; possibly only part was destroyed; after Rome took over Egypt in 30BC, Directorship and museum became political plum, and it degenerated; most likely was laid waste during fighting in Alexandria in 270AD
The Growth of Libraries
Pergamum, rivalled Alexandria; annoyed, Alexandria stopped exporting papyrus, so they produced more pergamena (paper of Pergamum) -- hence parchment
higher rates of education, literacy during c3-2BC; papyrus of everyday writing survives from Roman rule in Egypt
- people read to pass the time, often Homer (mostly Iliad), then Euripides
- major authors probably available in bookstores, the rest written to order
- local libraries could provide copies to copy from
The Beginnings: Rome
by end of c3BC, two types of private libraries in Rome: general colelctions of Greek classics owned by wealthy families, and comprehensive collections of Latin and Greek drama owned by theater managers (Plautus example) (65)
fate of Aristotle's library, 68-9
highly trained Greek slaves kept as library personnel in large private collections (70)
people acquire books by borrowing from friends, copying them for themselves (example of Cicero 76-7; see also Johnson 2009); people acquired current books through gift copies given by the author or presentation copies
bookstore acted as a scriptorium, a shop that did copying (78)
Libraries of the Roman Empire: The City of Rome
Caesar planned to enhance Rome's cultural status by constructing a public library, but his assassination cut the project short; was revived by Asinius Pollio
two sections, one for Latin works, the other for Greek
Trajan's library
Greek libraries stored stacks in small rooms, with large colonnade that could act as a reading room; Roman libraries stored books where they were read, and were primarily designed for readers
libraries then incorporated into public paths (~c2BC); baths acted as public spaces for all Romans, so the public had access to the collections
emperors cared about libraries, continued to add more
freedmen given white collar library jobs; from time of Vespasian onward to c2AD, though, libraries governed by men for whom the position was a stepping stone to a higher office (freeborn) (98)
when short on space, libraries may have stored less valuable books elsewhere, or begun to specialize (100)
Rome's many libraries did for Latin works what Alexandria was doing in one library for Greek
in Republican times, booksellers mostly transcribed works from private libraries; with empire, bookdealers had expanded role, would have available for ready sale works of contemporary authors
- no copyright, so authors didn't make much money from bookdealers, who could copy indefinitely
some libraries permitted limited borrowing
Libraries of the Roman Empire: Outside the City of Rome
graffiti preserved on walls of Pompeii (109-110)