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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group

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To: epicure who wrote (15966)1/9/2002 6:15:19 PM
From: Climber  Read Replies (3) of 281500
 
It was reported to have been destroyed several times.

"Originally built to house the massive collection of books accumulated by the Ptolemaic rulers of Egypt, the library had been devastated by fire several times. During Julius Caesar's Alexandrian campaign in 47 B. C., Caesar set fire to ships in the port. The fire spread to the library, which was called the Museum at that time.

In A. D. 391, riots instigated by fanatical Christians damaged the collection heavily. During the years between disastrous events, the library collection had been gradually restored.

In 641, the Caliph of Baghdad exhibited the same spirit of religious fanaticism in ordering Amrou to burn the books stored there. The loss of the library at Alexandria was a particularly grievous blow because the works of so many Roman scholars, literary geniuses, and historians were destroyed."

mediahistory.umn.edu

Climber
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