• How 99% of Ancient Literature Was Lost

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 16 11:08:44 2023
    from https://www.openculture.com/2023/03/how-99-of-ancient-literature-was-lost.html

    How 99% of Ancient Literature Was Lost
    in History, Literature | March 13th, 2023 5 Comments

    Ancient Greece and Rome had plenty of literature, but practically none
    of it survives today. What exactly became of almost everything written
    down in Western antiquity is the subject of the video above by
    ancient-history Youtube channel Told in Stone, previously featured here
    on Open Culture for its investigations into everything from the
    Colosseum and the Pantheon to Roman nightlife and the explosion of Mount Vesuvius. But none of its past videos has quite as much relevance to
    this particular story as the one on the burning of the Library of
    Alexandria.

    Described by narrator Garret Ryan as “the greatest of all ancient libraries,” the Library of Alexandria could have contained between
    532,800 and 700,000 volumes in scroll form, all of them lost by the time
    Julius Caesar burned it down in 48 B.C..

    Even so, “the loss of all but a tiny fraction of ancient literature was
    not brought about by the disappearance of a single library. It was,
    instead, the consequence of the basic fragility of texts before the
    advent of printing.” Papyrus, the pre-paper writing material first
    developed in ancient Egypt, certainly couldn’t stand the test of time:
    in relatively humid western Europe, “most papyri had to be recopied
    every century or so.”

    Plus ça change: even, and perhaps especially, in our digital era,
    long-term data archival has turned out to necessitate regular movement
    from one storage medium to the next. But perhaps our civilization will
    prove luckier with the process than the Roman Empire, whose collapse
    meant that “the elites who had traditionally commissioned new copies all
    but vanished. Far fewer manuscripts were produced, and those that were
    tended to serve the particular purposes of religion, education, and the technical disciplines.” For these and other reasons, very few classics
    made it to the Middle Ages, and thus to the Renaissance. But even if you don’t have much to study, so the latter era gloriously demonstrated, you
    can more than compensate by studying it hard.

    Related content:

    What Was Actually Lost When the Library of Alexandria Burned?

    How Egyptian Papyrus Is Made: Watch Artisans Keep a 5,000-Year-Old Art Alive

    The Rise and Fall of the Great Library of Alexandria: An Animated
    Introduction

    The Turin Erotic Papyrus: The Oldest Known Depiction of Human Sexuality
    (Circa 1150 B.C.E.)

    How Ancient Scrolls, Charred by the Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD,
    Are Now Being Read by Particle Accelerators, 3D Modeling & Artificial Intelligence

    Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities,
    language, and culture. His projects include the Substack newsletter
    Books on Cities, the book The Stateless City: a Walk through
    21st-Century Los Angeles and the video series The City in Cinema. Follow
    him on Twitter at @colinmarshall or on Facebook.


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    by Colin Marshall | Permalink | Comments (5) |

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    Comments (5)
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    Frances Almefleh says:
    March 13, 2023 at 5:51 pm
    https://youtu.be/C8M4i9fvq1M
    How Islam Saved Western Civilization
    History lecture by Dr. Roy Casagranda

    https://youtu.be/2ZN1qVd52z8
    History lecture by Dr. Adnan Rashid

    I hope you will enjoy these lectures by historians. They may expand your
    view of how Western civilization developed.

    Reply
    T droppelman says:
    March 15, 2023 at 4:54 am
    This article neglects the fact that monotheism taught that only the
    Hebrew scriptures had any moral value and that the spirituality of the preceeding ages was demonic and needed to be avoided. Many works of
    literature were deliberately not copied for that reason.

    Reply
    Dakota says:
    March 15, 2023 at 7:17 am
    If I’m not mistaken I believe one of the caliphate burned fown the
    library of Alexandria, not Julius Caesar.

    Reply
    Alexander says:
    March 15, 2023 at 9:34 am
    There existed more durable writing material than papyrus before
    printing, parchment for example and paper started being used in Europe
    during the middle ages.

    Reply
    Lefke' says:
    March 16, 2023 at 9:23 am
    Many were taken and hidden in the Vatican.
    Leonardo da Vinci copied many ancient inventions.

    Reply

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