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The Library of Alexandria

The Great Library of Alexandria was the most important library of the ancient world. It was founded around 300 B.C. by Ptolemy I, and was greatly enhanced by the later Ptolemaic rulers, when Alexandria served as the cultural centre of the Hellenistic world. Euclid and Eratosthenes were among the many Greek mathematicians who worked at the library. The library attempted to obtain copies of all known scrolls of any consequence, even searching incoming ships (Alexandria was a first rate seaport) for scrolls which could be copied. The exact number of scrolls that it contained is not known, although estimates have ranged up to 700,000 scrolls. Alexandria became a centre for learning as well as a repository of knowledge. The exact fate of the library is also unknown. It may have been destroyed in the first century B.C. by Julius Caesar, or it may have been destroyed by religious fanatics under the leadership of Patriarch Theophilus of Alexandria in 391 A.D. Few of the works of the library survive, but part of the catalogue does survive, tantalizing us about the treasures contained in the library.


Last updated December 13, 2005. URL: http://www.stormloader.com/ajy/greatlib.html For questions or comments e-mail James Yolkowski. Math Lair home page