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Author’s Introduction
The scope of this book may be summed up
under three main headings. First, it analyses the motives that prompted
the peoples of the Mediterranean and the West to establish and maintain
libraries, that is to say special buildings or parts of buildings
designated as repositories of their oral traditions, their literary works
and their accumulated knowledge in every branch of human learning,
recorded on tablets or in books, from 3000 b.c.
to the beginning of the sixteenth century a.d.
Secondly, it outlines the development of libraries through the ages and
the ways in which their evolution was affected by intellectual trends and
historical circumstances in general. Thirdly, it examines the factors that
influenced not only the spread of libraries through the civilized world
but also their design and layout, by which I mean their furniture and
fittings as well as their overall architectural style. Two points should
be made clear at the outset: archives are deliberately excluded except in
the chapter on Mesopotamia, where no clear-cut dividing line can be drawn
between archival and literary collections; and there are no chapters on
Jewish libraries or those in Persia and the Islamic world, which I hope to
cover in a separate book.
Bibliotheke
is a Greek word which, as Pompeius Festus informs us, was used by both
the Greeks and the Romans to denote either a large collection of books
or a room or building in which books were kept. The Sumerians spoke of
a ‘House of Tablets’ and the Egyptians a ‘House of Books’ to mean a place
used for the collection, classification and storage of written accounts
of historical events (the happenings dealt to them by the gods, as Homer
put it) and of their knowledge gained from the observation of nature,
human conduct and human creative enterprise.
This accumulated knowledge – inscribed
on commemorative stelae or tombstones, written in books made of papyrus,
parchment or paper, or later printed on paper, and expressed in thousands
of different languages and dialects – is the repository of all the
fruits of human intellectual endeavour. Whether it is to be found in a
humble fragment of an anonymous written work or in a sumptuous parchment
codex, it is an irreplaceable part of an ageless book such as the Book of Mankind said to have been compiled by Hermes Trismegistus,
which, according to the priests of Thoth, was composed of 36,525 separate
books.
In the pages of this book, this ‘world
library’ acquires an aura of the supernatural through the presentation
of such a vast wealth of material. Every book ever written is shown to be
connected with every other, so that all together form a colossal pyramid
of knowledge founded on the work of some ordinary, anonymous person who
piously sifted through the records left by his ancestors in order to study
their achievements.
The first person in the history of books
and libraries who encouraged his fellow-men to respect the words and deeds
of their forefathers was Aristotle. If he takes the credit for according
due recognition to the authors of creative work, it is because he was
moved more by what he considered a moral imperative than by his thirst for
knowledge as such. This led him to institute a roll of honour on which
every author of work that contributes to the advancement of knowledge has
a rightful place. Following Aristotle’s example, his beloved pupil
Theophrastus set out to record the beliefs of earlier philosophers so as
to ensure that their names would not be forgotten by posterity. Aristotle
himself, rejecting the contention of Socrates and Plato that the written
word does nothing to promote constructive dialogue, spent his life
rereading and revising his own philosophical and scientific works: as
Theophrastus remarked, ‘Reading begets corrections.’ What is more, on
reading Aristotle’s work one has the feeling that he was trying to
determine the parameters of a planned world beyond the grasp of the human
mind, a world susceptible to any number of different interpretations.
This moral dimension of the transmission
of knowledge from generation to generation obeys an unwritten universal
law and is clearly discernible in the world of libraries, as it transcends
time, national and cultural differences and peculiarities, longitude and
latitude, social, political and economic conditions and even linguistic
differences. It brings into being a worldwide company of men and women
with a common interest, a company whose members are constantly
multiplying, and thus it accords absolutely with Mallarmé’s dictum:
‘The world exists to end up in a book.’
Of the anonymous ‘Scribe of the House
of Books’, who lived in Egypt around 2400 b.c.,
practically nothing is known, and the same is true of the author of the
Creation epic written probably in the second millennium b.c. Nor do we know the identity of the scribes whom
Assurbanipal sent out to the farthest corners of his empire to record any
information that was not to be found in his extensive library at Nineveh.
Very little is known even about Callimachus, the librarian of the Great
Library of Alexandria and the only person of whom it is fair to say that
he had almost all the books in the world through his hands and catalogued
them. On the other hand, we do know that his catalogue entitled
‘Tables’ (Pinakes) long
remained unsurpassed in its field: it laid the foundations of scientific
librarianship and prompted Cicero to comment that happiness was to be
found there (i.e. in Callimachus’s well-organized library) and nowhere
else. We also know that the German humanist Johannes Cuno kept a
collection of proofs from the press of Aldus Manutius, even including bad
copies, as he believed that every written or printed document could be of
use in seeking out philosophical truth. We know, too, that August, Duke of
Saxony in the sixteenth century, collected in his library all the printed
works available in Europe and spent much of his time writing the
particulars of every book in his possession on the spine, in his own hand.
Lastly, we know about the Emperor Maximilian II’s librarian Hugo Blotius,
who, despite his extreme poverty, refused to betray the ‘sacred trust’
reposed in him and did all he could to ensure that the priceless treasures
in his care should not be lost through carelessness, wear and tear or the
overgenerous lending policy of the imperial court.
All these, from Assurbanipal to
Aristotle, Tyrannio, Ptolemy, Cicero, Libanius, Tychicus, Photios, Cosimo
de’ Medici, Palla Strozzi, Aldus Manutius and Johannes Cuno, and many
others from all walks of life whose names are mentioned in the pages that
follow, are the principal characters in the history of books and
libraries: they are the members of the worldwide company mentioned above.
The mystical bond that unites them was perfectly summed up by Léon Bloy
(in L’âme de Napoléon) when
he wrote that every human being has contributed by his or her work to the
composition of a vast book of the history of mankind, in which commas and
accents have the same value as chapters and clauses – a value that is
hidden out of sight and can never be proved.
In conclusion, I wish to express my
gratitude to Hélène Glykatzi-Ahrweiler for honouring me with a foreword
to this volume. I must also put it on record that the English edition of
this book would probably never have seen the light of day had it not been
for the personal interest taken by Mr. Robert Fleck and Mr. J. Lewis von
Hoelle, to whom I wish to express my gratitude once again. Their
enterprise in publishing the fascinating story of libraries in the lingua
franca of our time, thus making it accessible to readers all over the
world at the dawn of the new millennium, is yet another example of the
humanistic philosophy that makes books such an irreplaceable and
inexhaustible source of knowledge. Lastly, I should like to express my
enormous appreciation of the support given to me by Mr. Dimitri Contomina,
a friend and now a comrade-in-arms in my writing projects and indeed in
anything relating to cultural activities with a broader social dimension.
Konstantinos
Sp. Staikos |