"To this land, 2300 years ago, in 331 BCE, Alexander the Great, Aristotle’s pupil, brought his dream of culture and conquest, of uniting the world and launching a new era. Alexander selected the site for a new capital: Alexandria. His successors in Egypt, the Ptolemies, built Alexandria, and made it the intellectual capital of the world."
"A greater legacy was the Ancient Library of Alexandria. Launched in 288 BC[E] by Ptolemy I (Soter) under the guidance of Demetrius of Phaleron, the Mouseion, or temple to the muses, was part academy, part research center, and part library.
The great thinkers of the age, scientists, mathematicians, poets from all cultures came to study and exchange ideas.
The 700,000 scrolls, an equivalent of more than 100,000 modern printed books, filled the shelves. The Library was open to scholars from all cultures. Girls and boys studied regularly at the Ancient Library. On this very spot:
They, and many others, were all members of that amazing community of scholars, who mapped the heavens, organized the calendar, established the foundations of science and pushed the boundaries of our knowledge as they unleashed the human mind on myriad quests.
They opened up the cultures of the world, established a true dialogue of civilizations, promoted rationality, tolerance and understanding and organized universal knowledge.
For over six centuries the Ancient Library of Alexandria epitomized the zenith of learning. To this day it symbolizes the noblest aspirations of the human mind, global ecumenism, and the greatest achievements of the intellect. The library was destroyed over sixteen hundred years ago ... but it continues to inspire scientists and scholars everywhere.
It disappeared slowly, suffering a gradual decline from the time of Caesar and Cleopatra. Indeed, the first disaster was in 48 BCE, when part of the Library was accidentally set a fire during the Alexandrian War of Julius Caesar.
Marc Anthony offered Cleopatra 200,000 scrolls to make amends for the losses. Yet, subsequent upheavals within the Roman Empire resulted in the gradual neglect and ultimate destruction of the Library.
By 400 CE, the Library had vanished, and the era of Alexandrian scholarship came to an end a few years later. Yet, the memory of the Ancient Library of Alexandria lived on" (www.bibalex.org).
Rib′i Yәho•shu′a was educated in Egypt, almost certainly in the original Great Library of Alexandria, which was also the Great University of Alexandria, ca. 13 C.E., about 60 years after Julius Caesar inadvertently burned down much of it, and many of its scrolls.