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Libraries in the Ancient World by Lionel Casson
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Libraries in the Ancient World

by Lionel Casson

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392413,304 (3.66)16
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Yale University Press (2001), Hardcover

Member:cygnoir
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Tags:libraries, history, nonfiction
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Showing 4 of 4
Excellet little book. Read it overnight. Very enjoyable and informative.
  jaygheiser | Jul 23, 2008 |
Libraries > History > To 400
  Budz888 | May 31, 2008 |
How much has changed and how little.
  muir | Dec 7, 2007 |
Me, resist a book with a title like this? Especially when it's on sale? Ha.

Casson's account of where, when, how and why libraries began is eminently readable, as well as informative. It's amazing how much we can determine from sparse literary references coupled with the archaeological record. We know that cuneiform tablets had colophons and how those tablets were stored. We learn that some form of cataloguing was used as early as 2000 B.C.E. And you're not the only one who reads in the bath: the public baths of Rome were also public libraries.

Illustrated with photographs and diagrams.
  lilithcat | Nov 9, 2005 |
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Incipit

Lionel Casson

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0300097212, Paperback)

The Dewey decimal system of cataloguing and its modern successors are relatively new, and they sometimes seem inadequate as ways of organizing knowledge in ever-changing fields of study. But the idea of bringing order to collections of written material is an ancient one, as Lionel Casson writes in this lucid survey of bibliophilia in the ancient Mediterranean. Among the earliest examples of written material that we have are lists of library holdings, clay tablets from Mesopotamia that archive commercial inventories, scholarly texts, and a surprising number of works on witchcraft and remedies against it.

Ancient libraries grew, Casson writes, by many means: by peaceful trade, as when book-hungry Romans spent extravagant sums on Greek texts made in southern Italy; by conquest, as when the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal looted the libraries of his ancient rival Babylon, carting the contents to his capital of Nineveh; and by fiat, as when the Egyptian pharaohs appropriated private collections to round out their own. Those libraries nourished the great philosophers and writers of old, shaping world culture into our own time. But, as Casson ably shows, the enemies of books are many, among them floods, fires, insects, and intolerance. As it is today, so it was in the past, and contending empires and ideologies too often expressed themselves by sacking and burning the collections of their enemies--by reason of which we have only a few of the works that engaged readers in the distant past.

Casson's slender book enhances our understanding of the role of books and their collectors in the ancient world, and bibliophiles and historians alike will find much of value in its pages. --Gregory McNamee

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:20 -0400)

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