Susan Laura Lugo
Timeline Entry - Historical
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Timeline Entry - Historical

The Library of Ashurbanipal

 
 
ca. 650 B.C.:  Ashurbanipal's Royal Library at Nineveh comprised of cuneiform tablets is developed as the world's largest collection for reference and research using methodologies for collection, arrangement and cataloguing that would not be duplicated in Europe for almost two thousand years.

Ashurbanipal (668-626 B.C.), King of Assyria, expands his great-grandfather's library holdings at Nineveh to include not only archival records but also a current source of reference materials, contributing to the education of future generations.  The Royal Library at Nineveh was the greatest library, some say the first documented functioning library, of its time, and its collection is believed to have consisted of 30,000 clay tablets, over 20,000 of which were collected, organized, marked, arranged and often translated during Arshurbanipal's reign.  A "keeper of the books" functioned as the first "librarian" in recorded history.

Resources:

An encyclopedic treatment of Ashurbanipal's library may be found at the  Encyclopedia Brittannica online Web site .

See also:


 

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Susan Laura Lugo
GSLIS MS Candidate