This is fascinating stuff! It’s amazing to me that the book survived, much less is readable (after 9 years!)
This is about an ancient book called The Archimedes Codex, bought for $2.2 million in October, 1998, at an auction in New York City by an anonymous collector who sent it to the Walters Art Museum, here to be restored, conserved, and probed for its content. It was thought to contain mathematical theses conceived by the genius of Syracuse (287-212 BC), whose name it bears, ideas not found anywhere else in the world.
The Walters faced a daunting task: what arrived was a clump of folios, crushed, torn, punctured by worm holes, in the inflexible grip of old carpenter’s glue, charred at its edges, and covered with mold and water stains.
It’s a miracle it still exists.
It took four years just to remove the glue, and open the book sufficiently to allow experts on ancient Greek texts to access much of its content and, with the help of ultra sophisticated imaging systems, to read it.
Modern technology is opening its information to us.
Imagine being the man who is in charge of this (for nine years).
The Archimedes texts were copied in the 10th century by an unknown scribe in Constantinople, then a major center of the Christian world eventually to become a center of the Islamic world. Three centuries later, another scribe washed, scraped, and otherwise tried to remove the text from the book’s parchment. This person undid the book, rebound it in the opposite direction, then, on the imperfectly cleared pages, wrote his Christian prayers in Greek over the original text, which was also in Greek, and still discernible in a faint rust-colored thread running beneath. This procedure was common in medieval times: Parchment was scarce. Thus, the Archimedes Codex became a palimpsest, a twice-used book.
The findings gleaned from it have raised Archimedes’s status as a thinker higher than anyone might have expected. Noel describes him as “the most important scientist who ever lived.”
Karin
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2 comments ↓
It’s a fascinating albeit terribly taxing process! There has to be monitoring through an UV light to access possible scrible under the materials that cover it ifa pelimpsest (dirt, glue, other writing etc), then very careful “cleaning”, not to mention the linguistic process of hypothesizing what the missing letters/words are and accessing the continuum of sentences…
Same happened more or less with Dead Sea manuscripts, Judas’s gospel etc.
I think it would be too taxing for me!
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