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- Date:
- c. 300 BCE - c. 275
Beside the bulk of Greek literature and a full corpus of Egyptian records, there is evidence that the library incorporated the written works of other nations. Early in the 3rd century bce, a Chaldean priest named Berosus wrote (in Greek) a history of Babylonia. His book quickly became known in Egypt and was probably used by Manetho. According to Pliny the Elder, Hermippus in Alexandria wrote a voluminous book on Zoroastrianism. Buddhist writings would also become available, as a consequence of the exchange of embassies between Ashoka and Philadelphus. The translation of the Pentateuch from Hebrew into Greek was a practical necessity for the large Jewish community in Alexandria, already Hellenized by the end of the 3rd century bce. The translation of the Septuagint was executed piecemeal during the 3rd and 2nd centuries bce, rendered possible in Alexandria because of the abundance of research material available at the library. The Septuagint has survived as the most valuable work in the history of translation and continues to be indispensable to all biblical studies.
Growth of the library
The association of the library with the Mouseion, whose scholars required a reliable resource, helped the library to develop into a proper research centre. Its location close to the harbour and within the royal palace’s grounds placed it under the direct supervision of the kings. Those circumstances aided the rapid growth of the library’s collection. Within half a century of its foundation circa 295 bce, the collections of the Royal Library had exceeded the space allotted to contain the accumulated books. It was found necessary to establish an offshoot that could house the surplus volumes. To that end, Ptolemy III (246–221 bce) incorporated the branch library into the newly built Serapeum, which was situated at a distance from the royal quarter in the Egyptian district south of the city.
Estimates of the total number of books in the library vary. The earliest surviving figure, from the 3rd century bce, is reported as “more than 200,000 books,” whereas the medieval text of John Tzetzes mentions “42,000 books in the outer library; in the inner (Royal) Library 400,000 mixed books, plus 90,000 unmixed books.” A still higher estimate of 700,000 was reported between the 2nd and 4th centuries ce.
Registration and classification of books
Galen preserved the information that was recorded for each book; it included the work’s title, author, and editor as well as its place of origin, length (in lines), and whether the manuscript was mixed (containing more than one work) or unmixed (a single text). It is worth noting that a scribe’s pay was rated according to the quality of writing and number of lines. In an attempt to standardize costs and wages throughout the empire, Diocletian ranked a scribe’s pay as follows:
to a scribe for the best writing 100 lines, 25 denarii; for second-quality writing 100 lines, 20 denarii; to a notary for writing a petition or legal document 100 lines, 10 denarii.
Further, a bibliographical survey of the contents of the library “in every field of learning,” a tremendous undertaking, was entrusted to Greek poet and scholar Callimachus, who was known for his encyclopedic erudition. The result was the Pinakes (“Tables”), which has survived in only a few fragments. Those remains attest to the following divisions: rhetoric, law, epic, tragedy, comedy, lyric poetry, history, medicine, mathematics, natural science, and miscellaneous. Callimachus’s work instantly became a model for future works of a similar nature. Its influence can be traced to the Middle Ages, to its brilliant 10th-century Arabic counterpart, bookseller Ibn al-Nadīm’s Kitāb al-fihrist (“Index”), which has survived intact.
It was mainly because of the Library of Alexandria that the scholars of the Mouseion were able to maintain scholarship at the highest level in almost all areas of learning. In appreciation of their achievements, Vitruvius, in the 1st century ce, expressed the gratitude felt by subsequent generations for the work of the “predecessors” in preserving the
memory of mankind.…Hence we must render to them indeed the greatest thanks, because they did not let all go in jealous silence, but provided for the record in writing of their ideas in every kind.