The Library of Alexandria and the Mystery of Its Destruction
Imagine a single place that held all the knowledge of the ancient world—scrolls filled with the secrets of the stars, medicine, mathematics, literature, and philosophy. That place was real. It was the Library of Alexandria, and its mysterious destruction remains one of history’s greatest tragedies. A Dream Born of Curiosity Founded in the 3rd century BCE in the Egyptian city of Alexandria by order of Ptolemy I (a general of Alexander the Great), the Library aimed to collect every written work in existence . Scholars estimate it once held between 40,000 and 400,000 scrolls , sourced from across the known world—Greece, India, Egypt, Mesopotamia, and beyond. It wasn’t just a collection of books. It was a research institute , a think tank where great minds like Euclid , Archimedes , and Eratosthenes studied and shared ideas. They measured Earth’s circumference, developed early geometry, and wrote theories that still echo through classrooms today. Who Burned the Library? That’s the big que...