Posted on 04/03/2002 2:27:07 PM PST by blam
Shouldn't Italy be funding this with whatever it costs?
This one wouldn't be it. ;')
Likely nothing. The main enterprise at the library was copying scrolls. Whatver they had would have eventually been loaned out in copy and would possibly be found elsewhere such as at Naples, and most of what they had postdated Alexander.
SunkenCiv gets bored -- Mouldy-oldie week for the GGG list.
you're onto me.
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Just updating the GGG info, not sending a general distribution. |
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In 1738, it was rediscovered and the excavators removed statues and objets d'art. In the process, they threw away many lumps of what they took to be coal or charcoal. It was not until 1752 when they discovered the villa's library - neatly lined with 1800 rolls of papyrus - that they realised the discarded material had been books.
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