Library at Alexandria Discovered? 123
dustmote writes "According to the BBC, a Polish-Egyptian team believes they may have discovered the Library at Alexandria, including ancient lecture halls or auditoria, in the Bruchion region of the city. It's said by some that the burning of the library set civilization back as much as a thousand years."
Good thing.. (Score:2, Funny)
Proudly pulling random things into context. . .
Re:Good thing.. (Score:2)
Oh neato! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh neato! (Score:2, Insightful)
Troy had the same problem. Took us centuries to find it too. There's a lot of ancient mysteries yet to be rediscovered.
Re:Oh neato! (Score:3, Interesting)
As for the library they should have had an offsite backup. Or maybe this is the reason we know that?
Re:Oh neato! (Score:1)
The Romans ruled every piece of the World the "backup" would have been located. So no, a backup wouldn't have mattered. It's like storing Windows backups on another Windows box. They're both going to get wiped sooner or later.
A thousand years? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why would that have mattered? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why would that have mattered? (Score:2, Interesting)
This kind of stuff happened many times throughout history. Conquering civ's tried to erase the history of the conquered by destroying it's traces and replacing history to begin with the conquerors.
It wasn't about burning books, it was about destroying inferior history.
Re:Why would that have mattered? (Score:4, Interesting)
Although you are right that many conquerers did deliberately destroy the writings of the conquered (e.g. the Spanish in Mesoamerica), I suspect that more often such libraries were destroyed because the conquerers didn't know or care what a library was (e.g. the Mongol destruction of Baghdad's library or, more recently, Rumsfeld's neglect in Baghdad [ccmep.org] -- I wonder what librarian Laura Bush thought about the untidiness [chron.com] of U.S. forces standing by while an ancient library burned?).
Re:Why would that have mattered? (Score:1, Troll)
"Sharon's book was good."
Check out a good tutorial on apostrophe usage:
http://www.mccc.edu/students/tutoring/apostroph
Re:Why would that have mattered? (Score:2)
Learn something new everyday it seems.
Re:Oh neato! (Score:2)
Chuck Noblett, holding a large, clay phalus: This is a piece of exotic artwork I'm making for an exhibition about the lost city of Pompei.
Jerri: How was it lost?
Noblett: Nobody knows, Jerri--it was buried under volcanic ash, so all the records were destroyed.
mmm strangers with candy
X (Score:3, Funny)
Hey, someone had to ruin the joke.
Re:Oh neato! (Score:2)
Re:Oh neato! (Score:3, Funny)
They do, but it was translated a little different. The floor kept smacking Indy in the head.
Poland is not soviet any more (Score:1)
Re:Poland is not soviet any more (Score:2)
Re:Poland is not soviet any more (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Poland is not soviet any more (Score:2)
The Big X on the floor is a reference to a scene in an Indiana Jones movie that came out in 1989. Poland was still clinging onto the soviet system. (more likely the other way round?) Lech Walesa wasn't elected President of the Republic of Poland until December of 1990.
I absolutely agree that being a US ally isn't something to be proud of.
Why the self-loathing? (Score:1, Insightful)
Why? Who is a good nation to be an ally of? France? Oops... looks like they're involved in their latest little genocide matter in Africa [bbc.co.uk]. Hey, what's a few million dead anyway when they're black or jew as long as a Frenchman is making a buck?
Germany? My friends in Germany worry me with their desire to blame the Holocaust on the Jews [poe-news.com]. These are some deep rooted issues that are beginning to crop up again. This has long been a popular m
Re:Oh neato! (Score:2)
wonder where we be with it. (Score:3, Funny)
I wonder if these same people could come up with a list of things that we could burn that would actually set us ahead.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:3, Insightful)
So maybe it's more like this:
The Burning of Alexandria is to the Development of Technology, as licensing is to computing technology.
*whew* I'd hate to live at a time when machines controled my every move, from who and how I interact with people, to the wo
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:3)
Well, we tried [canadaka.net], but we left the job half done when we couldn't find any good beer.
Kidding! We love our big lug of a brother to the south. ;)
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm going to be gerenal here as my SPLUTTERING RAGE is making it hard to type.
The Catholic Church has done these things, and they were the major force in doing these things not because they're wonderful, all-singing, all-dancing modern thinkers. They did it because they wiped out their competition.
We would have vastly more and wider knowledge within collective civilisation if the Church (and not just the Church, true enough, but this is a response) did destroy modes of thinking that clashed with their own. From the crusaides to the witch-hunts.
Oh, one last point
Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go to the bathroom. On reading that previous comment, I have a bad taste in my mouth.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:2, Funny)
God, that was a fucking lame joke.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1)
Well, most of the world wasn't Catholic, so they were free to develop science without any interference from the Church... Did they? No.
We would have vastly more and wider knowledge within collective civilisation if the Church (and not just the Church, true enough, but this is a response) did destroy modes of thinking that clashed with their own.
The point I was making was that science derives from the Catholic "mode of thinking". So a lack of Cath
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:2)
So you have a problem with the defense of Christian pilgrims who were being attacked by the Turks?
Now I know you're trolling.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:3, Interesting)
That was more of Protestant thing.
The Catholic church was burning witches long before Protestants even existed.
In fact, one of the charges brought against Joan of Arc in 1431 was witchcraft. This was before the Protestant reformation.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:3, Informative)
Well, most of the world wasn't Catholic, so they were free to develop science without any interference from the Church... Did they? No.
Well, the first christian Roman emperors (way before the separation of the Church to Catholic and Orthodox, when the roman empire was practically the whole world), closed the University of Athens and suppressed any ideas of that time that would question the beliefs of their religion (and not just in greece but in alexandria too). Just to mention that greek philoshophers
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1)
The original poster is correct - the Muslims had invaded the Holy Lands by force
I did said recapture.
Europe foresaw the danger coming from the east and acted. The holyness given to this war was just an excuse to recruit soldiers (else nobody would fight outside europe, people didn't give shit for what was happening thousands of miles away). The crusades made use of sword in their way even in places that were still christian, mostly looting to sustain supplies for their troops (they were anything but g
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:2, Insightful)
something. If you want to find someone to hate
and demonize and blame for the evils of the
world, it's all too easy. There are plenty of
myths that can help you blame the Catholic
Church, or the Jews, or the Muslims, or
blacks, or any other group you arbitrarily
decide to go into a sputtering rage about.
A prime example is the myth that crazed
Christian fanatics destroyed the library. That
story has about as much historical credibility
as the Bible.
The fact is, it
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1, Interesting)
Really? Why don't you try telling that to Bruno, Copernicus or Galileo? How many heretics did the church burn at the stake? How long did they try to suppress the heliocentric theory of the universe?
This is pretty much an open-and-shut case.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1, Informative)
The library(ies) at Alexandria have been burned a number of times inadvertently. The final burning or dismantling was ordered by the Caliph of Baghdad in the 600s, because the codices and scrolls "either contradicted the Quran and are heresy, or affirmed it and are superfluous."
I think that the burnings in the 300s had more to do with the character and volatility of the Alexandrine people, long known before and after these times for their tendency to riot, than to the character of Catholics or Monophy
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:2)
I'm glad that can't happen today.
Nah, today is more like soviet russia.
In soviet russia, religious wars are dressed in robes of politics.
Re: wonder where we be with it. (Score:2)
> The crusades were political wars dressed in the robes of religion.
One theory is that the Crusades were a plan to get all the European males suffering from "testosterone poisoning" to go fight somewhere else instead of staying home and fighting each other.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:5, Insightful)
As another poster pointed out, they were pretty much the only game in town. The Cathlic church hardly deserves credit for doing the little they did. Also, it's hardly the invention of Christianity to believe the world is understandable. The Cathlolics can't lay claim to that any more than we can.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1)
Don't discount the Irish in the saving of civilization [amazon.com]. Can't say if that's true, but you know, all generalizations are false anyway.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:2)
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1, Informative)
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1, Informative)
Firstly, the dark ages in which the Arabs were preservers and Galileo's period lie about one thousand years apart, so comparing the two situations is necessarily specious.
Secondly, it was the Caliph of Baghdad, a Muslim, who had the Library of Alexandria "preserved" to the ground in 641, not the Chri
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:2)
You raise a valid point, but you confuse the timeline, and over generalize. I think that modding you as a troll is a bit too much though.
Perhaps they were more liberal, tolerant or progressive at the time of St. Isidore (that was 6th or 7th century or so?)
However, the Catholic Church became corrupt, aggressive and oppressive at the turn of the millenium. At that time they star
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:2)
Did you miss /. this [slashdot.org]? Read what a Vatican astronomer [astrobio.net] has to say about that.
Re:wonder where we be with it. (Score:1)
Books to burn (Score:2)
"Great illustrated classics" Burn them all. They got the names of great classics, but they are simplified versions that ruin the whole point. Read the real book, or sit in your cave ignorant, either one is better than something from that series. I'm glad I had already read real versions before I started adding them to my library (hey they are cheap, and I didn't have them...) or I might not have recognized it.
My new favorite word: (Score:1)
backups! (Score:4, Funny)
Which just goes to show the importance of doing your back-ups!
Re:backups! (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
More on the Mouseion (Score:4, Informative)
ancient Library of Alexandria, the Mouseion [dotgeek.org], for his TV series Cosmos.
Overheard in ancient Alexandria... (Score:5, Funny)
Afterwards, PHB got a raise for keeping it "reasonably" under budget. Imagine the loss if both copies were destroyed!!!
Who knows? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Likely to have been late 4th-century (Score:5, Interesting)
It is also worth remembering that much of what did survive out of the destruction of classical learning was eventually preserved and re-transmitted to a deeply ignorant and religiously hidebound Europe several hundred years later through the hands of the relatively liberal and learned muslim arabs
-wb-
Re:Likely to have been late 4th-century (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Likely to have been late 4th-century (Score:2)
A substantial body of opinion dates the major destruction of the Alexandrian library/museum to the late 4th century AD, i.e. a time when Christians were in charge and very concerned to discourage pagan things, which included the learning of the ancients ........
Your knowledge of history is lax. The Catholic Church (as opposed to, say, the Ethiopian Church) had basically embodied the "science" of a certain group of ancients -- the Greeks.
By the time Galileo, et al, got around to challenging the Gre
What about the Vatican Library (Score:5, Insightful)
To suggest that Christians deliberately burn books simply to hide knowledge is totally wrong. That from time to time bullheaded idiots sometimes get control of ecclesiastical authority and abuse that same political and spiritual power to evil ends is not disputed. This happens in most religions (including atheism) or even political movements. (This is in response to the grandpartent article. I agree with you dasunt.)
The problem that happened at Alexandria, and what caused the "Dark Ages" was a total breakdown of the political & social framework of Europe due to the collapse of the Roman Empire. It didn't burn down earlier simply because the Roman Legions would have massacred anybody that tried to challenge Roman authority. By 400 A.D. the Roman government had all but stopped existing in any form, and the citizens of Rome itself were fighting off invaders into the city itself from the Vandals, Goths, and other germanic tribes that routinely sacked Rome for what was left of wealth from being an imperial capital. This was almost like the "Mad Max" movies by Mel Gibson in terms of a total lack of control by governments, except in silly irrelavent symbolism that doesn't keep my neighbor from raping my wife and killing my kids.
Christians burning books (Score:1)
I haven't done any serious research but that much i can point out:
Having said
Re:Christians burning books (Score:2)
Often the church was a major political force (England's House of Lords still has member of the clergy holding seats recognising this political authority) throughout Europe during the previous two mellenia. They would even hold territory that would be under the exclusive use of the church (as much as counties or duchies). I
Re:Christians burning books (Score:1)
I'll just remind you that in America, and elsewhere, crusaders have been trying to eliminate non-christian cultures (their written works included).
I'd also like to point out that the modern concept of a University and scientific thought is an outgrowth of Christian thought and philosophies dating from the middle ages.
You must be a Minister of Information of the Vatican? Secular schooling hint for Europe was given by Arab universities. Giving a
Re:Christians burning books (Score:1)
I think you miss the point. New environments and new experiences forced the idea of religious tolerance to happen in America. If you want to talk about religious intolerance, all you have to do is look at a typical Islamic country right now. In Saudi Arabia and several other countries in that region of the world, it is still the death penalty to convert to
Nice Try (Score:2)
Atheism is the rejection of supernaturalism.
Name one religion that does not rely on a supernatural mechanism for its existance.
If atheism is a religion, then an abiotic environment has all kinds of biotic critters running about.
Atheism is a philosophy, not a theology.
Re:Nice Try (Score:2)
Perhaps I could use a term a little more appropriate, like Secular-Humanism, which is much more specific in terms of theological viewpoint than simply the concept of somebody who rejects diety or any other sort of supernaturalism. These do indeed have organizations, even aspects that could be called in other context a "sacrament".
Some atheists I've seen go so far as to form "clubs" of common social groups of this particular viewpoint,
Re:Nice Try (Score:2)
You obviously haven't visited http://www.adherents.com/.
Perhaps I could use a term a little more appropriate, like Secular-Humanism...
Which is not atheism....
Some atheists I've seen go so far as to form "clubs" of common social groups...
Which means the chess club is now a religion....
BTW, I did see a survey of Unitarian ministers that claimed over 65% of the ministers didn't believe in the existance of a God.
Which doesn't ha
Re:Likely to have been late 4th-century (Score:4, Informative)
Your bigotry is showing.
There is no doubt that learning was lost after the fall of Rome. Knowledge was preserved through intervening centuries in several unlikely places far afield. Before you blast the Christians for this, perhaps you should know that much of the ancient knowledge that was saved was in fact preserved by the chirch itself. This included much from Arab and other eastern sources that was lost even in the east when the far-from-civilized Mohammedans deliberately destroyed anything they judged heretical, which by definition is pretty much anything other than the Koran and the Hadith.)
You might want to read How the Irish Saved Civilization [amazon.com] to get an understanding of how the church in Irelend was actually instrumental in maintaining a library of this information through the turbulent times of the incorrectly-named "dark ages", and then re-seeding that information throughout Europe. A good book, worth a read...
Re:Who knows? (Score:1)
Detrimental? The Bible? What was detrimental wasn't the Bible, or God; but religious impostors claiming divine authority while doing works of evil. Sure they often claimed the Bible as their source of authority. That doesn't mean that the Bible made them do it. Today, this has put a sour taste in everyones mouth.
Please don't troll, many of us don't like it.
The lesson stands: Don't believe or do something just because your ecclesiastical leader tells you to. Read and understand your own religious bo
julius caesar? (Score:2)
Maybe I'm wrong? Or maybe it's politically correct to blame it on the romans.
Re:julius caesar? (Score:2, Interesting)
Maybe your history of math course should focus on math.
Re:julius caesar? (Score:1)
Wow. Rebuild it and have the Jews, Buddhists and Hindus burn it, too. For great just^w^w good measure.
Re:julius caesar? (Score:2)
I thought it was destroyed by Omar (Caliph of Baghdad) in 640-someting AD.
Omar was not the Caliph of Baghdad, and never even set foot in it. He was Caliph of the Muslims at the time, and Baghdad was not build yet, nor was the seat of power transferred to it yet (this was more than a century after he died. Omar lived in Medina in the western Hijaz region of Arabia. He travelled to Jerusalem to receive the city from the Byzantines though
Julius Caesar would've taken his shot way earlier (47BC) and the
At last! (Score:3, Funny)
Other Great Ancient Libraries (Score:4, Interesting)
Then, even before, there was King Assurbanipal of Assyria, who in 650 BC created a great library. He had copies made of thousands of years worth of Sumerian tablets. In fact, it's unlikely we'd have even a tiny fraction of the surviving Sumerian information if he hadn't done that. His library had 22,000 volumes (clay tablets). I don't know what number of those are still extant and intact.
That's why I back up all my CDROMs onto clay tablets. As the marketroids tell me, it's a robust archival medium for assuring SOHO data persistence!
Re:For the rest of time (Score:2)
Re:For the rest of time (Score:2, Interesting)
Especially true given that islam didn't exist when the library is thought to have been destroyed!
Re:For the rest of time (Score:2)
Re:For the rest of time (Score:5, Interesting)
and among them we have the burning of the library of Alexandria by the Muslim invaders.
Erm, Muhammad was born in 570 AD. For it to have happened as you claim, he would have had to have gone back in time to before the birth of Christ, founded a new religion, and then compelled his new followers to burn down the library. Occam's razor suggest instead that you're talking out of your arse.
While we're on this note, let's not forget the contributions made to Mathematics and Science, over the centuries, by countless Muslims. To name but one: Al Khwarizmi [wikipedia.org], from whose name we get the word 'algorithm', and from whose work on mathematics (Hisab al-jabr wa al-muqabala) we get the word 'algebra'. Tell me, AC, what have you contributed?
Re:For the rest of time (Score:1, Informative)
Muslims blames invaders in the 7th century.
There's no doubt there was such an invasion.
What's very doubtful is whether they destroyed the
library.
As for contributions to Mathematics and Science
by "countless Muslims," I think that's a bit of
an exaggeration. It's fashionable in some circles
to exalt this or that civilization at the
expense of the Europeans. The Muslims deserve
some credit, but I wouldn't go overboard.
The Muslims were tolerant in some places, bu
Thanks for nothing! (Score:1)
including the very important concept of
zero. Where would modern mathematics be
without these things?
Re:Thanks for nothing! (Score:1)
The Mayans independantly invented the concept of zero. Unfortunately, they got too involved with fratricidal wars to really go anywhere with it.
And that points out a critical thing: EVERY civilization throughout history has had its flaws. None of them have been care bears. It's a fact of life that for most of human history, the Care Bears would have been little pastel bearskin rugs in the longhouses of their less enlightened,
Address of Alexandria library (Score:5, Funny)
Douglas County Public Library
720 Fillmore St
Alexandria, MN 56308
(320) 762-3014
Thats about 50 miles from where I live.
Re: (Score:2)
We need more burning. (Score:1, Troll)
Sure, it would be fun and possibly enlightening to read that stuff, but it wouldn't help you cure leprosy. The ancients were IGNORANT, and you should only prize info that has been confirmed by science (something they did not have).
Re:We need more burning. (Score:1, Interesting)
You're missing the point. The people who regret the burning argue that all that nonsense being burned just meant that people had to waste hundreds of years thinking it up and writing it all down again again before they could move on to more scientific matters: if the library hadn't been burned, people would have got on with "important" things much soo
My only question... (Score:2)
Sshh!! (Score:1, Funny)
Article sparse with info (Score:2)
Maybe I am too eager, but does anyone know what conference this was presented at and/or if the archeological team has a webpage? I see that Zahi Hawass has a webpage [guardians.net], but, being a "president of Egypt'
Awsome discovery (Score:3, Informative)
Well, it is my home town. I was born and raised there many moons ago.
Anyway, to give some perspective and background:
Egypt is floating on archeology, literally. It is very common to find amphorae and stuff when digging foundations for buildings.
Oh, and by the way, here are some pictures from the city today, focusing on the electric tramways [geocities.com], two types, narrow carriage for downtown, and a wider one for the eastern parts.
I miss it!
Alexandria led to the invention of the Book (Score:2)
The Ptolemic Pharaoh stopped the export of parpyrus for a period to try to gain the upper hand. This embargo resulted in pergamom (Origin of word paper)being used as substitute. Pergamom could not easely be concateneted into long roll like Papyrus so they used leafs and later started to bind them into fore-runner of a book.
Re:Alexandria led to the invention of the Book (Score:1)
A little depressed but unsurprised... (Score:1, Flamebait)
But, as usual, it's damn the ignorance, full speed ahead! Especially when it comes to any mention of religion (especially Christan sects) here on
All we really know about Alexandia is the library is gone and everybody points their finger at their favorite villain.
I hope you people reali
Re:ads.doubleclick SUCKS (Score:2)
Mods, put down the crack pipe