Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
BBC History Magazine

Wisdom on the bonfire

Burning the Books: A History of Knowledge Under Attack by Richard Ovenden John Murray, 320 pages, £20

In the late 10th century, a golden age of Islamic culture, the Baghdad bibliographer Al-Nadim told a legend of a wonderful library beyond the eastern edge of the Muslim world. It was: “a treasury of books in which are preserved all the sciences of Earth and heaven, the chronology of times past and times future… a place barred to all save those of the highest wisdom. Anyone permitted to see it is seized with a violent emotion in which impatience, sadness and a longing that captivates the heart

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC History Magazine

BBC History Magazine3 min read
Marie Curie 1867–1934
Nasa’s Head of Science Nicola Fox chooses Marie Curie, born Maria Skłodowska in Warsaw, was a naturalised-French physicist and chemist. She conducted groundbreaking research into radioactivity, and was the first person to win two Nobel Prizes – in ph
BBC History Magazine2 min read
The Man Behind The Regency Mask
What happens when there is scant clear historical detail about a person, but instead a litany of material that crafts a particularly engineered idea about them? That’s a question that Mary L Shannon explores in her biography of William ‘Billy’ Waters
BBC History Magazine2 min read
Love And Death
Your new novel is set in Assyria in the ninth century BC. What inspired you to write about that place and time? What drew me to the setting was how culturally rich the world of ancient Mesopotamia was. This was the place where writing was invented; w

Related Books & Audiobooks