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Herculaneum papyri

The Herculaneum papyri are more than 1,800 papyrus scrolls discovered in the 18th century in the Villa of the Papyri in Herculaneum. They had been carbonized when the villa was engulfed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.

Photos of the papyrus fragments PHerc.1103 (a) and PHerc.110 (b,c). Image contrast and brightness were enhanced to better visualize the details visible to the naked eye on their external surface.[1]

The papyri, containing a number of Greek philosophical texts, come from the only surviving library from antiquity that exists in its entirety.[2] However, reading the scrolls is extremely difficult, and can risk destroying them. The evolution of techniques to do this continues.

The majority of classical texts referred to by other classical authors are lost, and there is hope that the continuing work on the library scrolls will discover some of these. For example, as many as 44 works discovered were written by the 1st-century BC Epicurean philosopher and poet Philodemus, a resident of Herculaneum, who possibly formed the library, or whose library was incorporated in it.

Discovery edit

 
Dionysus, Plato, or Poseidon sculpture excavated at the Villa of the Papyri.
 
A map of the Villa of the Papyri.

Due to the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, bundles of scrolls were carbonized by the intense heat of the pyroclastic flows.[3] This intense parching took place over an extremely short period of time, in a room deprived of oxygen, resulting in the scrolls' carbonization into compact and highly fragile blocks.[2] They were then preserved by the layers of cement-like rock.[3]

In 1752, workmen of the Bourbon royal family accidentally discovered what is now known as the Villa of the Papyri.[2][4] There may still be a lower section of the Villa's collection that remains buried.[3]

Ethel Ross Barker noted in her 1908 Buried Herculaneum:[5]

Appearance of the rolls. — A large number of papyri, after being buried eighteen centuries, have been found in the Villa named after them. In appearance the rolls resembled lumps of charcoal; and many were thrown away as such. Some were much lighter in colour. Finally, a faint trace of letters was seen on one of the blackened masses, which was found to be a roll of papyrus, disintegrated by decay and damp, full of holes, cut, crushed, and crumpled. The papyri were found at a depth of about 120 feet (37 metres).

The woodwork of some of the presses that had contained them dropped to dust on exposure and many rolls were found lying about loosely. Others were still on the shelves. Locality of the discovery. — They were found in four places on four occasions. The first were found in the autumn of 1752, fourteen years after the first discovery of Herculaneum, in and near the tablinum, and only numbered some 21 volumes and fragments, contained in two wooden cases. In the spring of 1753, 11 papyri were found in a room just south of the tablinum, and in the summer of the same year, 250 were found in a room to the north. In the spring and summer of the following year, 337 Greek papyri and 18 Latin papyri were found in the Library. Nothing of any importance was discovered after this date.

The numbers given here exclude mere fragments. Including every tiny fragment found, the catalogues give 1756 manuscripts discovered up to 1855, while subsequent discoveries bring the total up to 1806. Of these, 341 were found almost entire, 500 were merely charred fragments, and the remaining 965 were in every intermediate state of disintegration.

Treatment of the rolls. — No one knew how to deal with such strange material. Weber, the engineer, and Paderni, the keeper of the Museum at Portici, were not experts in palaeography and philology, which sciences were, indeed, almost in their infancy one hundred and fifty years ago. There were no official publications concerning the papyri till forty years after their discovery, and our information is of necessity incomplete, inexact and contradictory.

Father Antonio Piaggio's machine. — Through this inevitable ignorance of the time, a larger number of the rolls were destroyed than the difficulties of the case necessitated. Many had been thrown away as mere charcoal; some were destroyed in extracting them from the lava in which they were embedded. In the attempt to discover their contents, several were split in two longitudinally. Finally, that ingenious Italian monk. Father Piaggio, invented a very simple machine for unrolling the manuscripts by means of silk threads attached to the edge of the papyrus. Of course this method destroyed the beginning of all the papyri, sometimes the end could not be found, and the papyri were in a terrible state of decay.

Excavations edit

Anybody who focuses on the ancient world is always going to be excited to get even one paragraph, one chapter, more... The prospect of getting hundreds of books more is staggering.

— Roger Macfarlane[3]

In the 18th century, the first digs began. The excavation appeared closer to mining projects, as mineshafts were dug, and horizontal subterranean galleries were installed. Workers would place objects in baskets and send them back up.[2]

With the backing of Charles VII of Naples (1716–1788), Roque Joaquín de Alcubierre headed the systematic excavation of Herculaneum with Karl Jakob Weber.[6]

Barker noted in her 1908 Buried Herculaneum, "By the orders of Francis I land was purchased, and in 1828 excavations were begun in two parts 150 feet [46 m] apart, under the direction of the architect. Carlo Bonucci. In the year 1868 still further purchases of land were made, and excavations were carried on in an eastward direction till 1875. The total area now open measures 300 by 150 perches (1510 by 756 meters). The limits of the excavations to the north and east respectively are the modern streets of Vico di Mare and Vico Ferrara. It is here only that any portion of ancient Herculaneum may be seen in the open day."[5]

It is uncertain how many papyri were originally found as many of the scrolls were destroyed by workmen or when scholars extracted them from the volcanic tuff.[7]

The official list amounts to 1,814 rolls and fragments, of which 1,756 had been discovered by 1855. In the 90s it was reported that the inventory now comprises 1,826 papyri,[8] with more than 340 are almost complete, about 970 are partly decayed and partly decipherable, and more than 500 are merely charred fragments.[4]

In a 2016 open letter, academics asked the Italian authorities to consider new excavations, since it is assumed that many more papyri may be buried at the site. Authors argue that "the volcano may erupt again and put the villa effectively beyond reach" and "Posterity will not forgive us if we squander this chance. The excavation must proceed".[9]

Post-excavation history edit

In 1802, King Ferdinand IV of Naples offered six rolls to Napoleon Bonaparte in a diplomatic move. In 1803, along with other treasures, the scrolls were transported by Francesco Carelli. Upon receiving the gift, Bonaparte then gave the scrolls to Institut de France under charge of Gaspard Monge and Vivant Denon.[2]

In 1810, eighteen unrolled papyri were given to George IV, four of which he presented to the Bodleian Library; the rest are now mainly in the British Library.[4]

Unrolling edit

 
Carbonized paper, found with other images in an 1858 published book by Giacomo Castrucci.[10]

Since their discovery, previous attempts used rose water, liquid mercury, vegetable gas, sulfuric compounds, papyrus juice, or a mixture of ethanol, glycerin, and warm water, in hopes to make scrolls readable.[11] According to Antonio de Simone and Richard Janko, at first the papyri were mistaken for carbonized tree branches, some perhaps were even thrown away or burnt to make heat.[12]

What we see is that the ink, which was essentially carbon based, is not very different from the carbonised papyrus.

— Dr. Vito Mocella[13]

Opening a scroll would often damage or destroy the scroll completely. If a scroll had been successfully opened, the original ink – exposed to air – would begin to fade. In addition, this form of unrolling often would leave pages stuck together, omitting or destroying additional information.[3]

With X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT), no ink can be seen, as carbon-based ink is not visible on carbonized papyrus.[3]

Physical unrolling edit

Early attempts edit

 
Abbot Piaggio's machine was used to unroll scrolls as early as 1756 in the Vatican Library.

Following the discovery of the Herculaneum papyri in 1752, per the advice from Bernardo Tanucci, King Charles VII of Naples established a commission to study them.[14]

Possibly the first attempts to read the scrolls were done by the artist Camillo Paderni who was in charge of recovered items. Paderni used the method of slicing scrolls in half, copying readable text, by removing papyri layers. This transcription procedure was used for hundreds of scrolls, and in the process destroyed them.[15]

In 1756, Abbot Piaggio, conserver of ancient manuscripts in the Vatican Library, used a machine he also invented,[10] to unroll the first scroll, which took four years (millimeters per day).[16][12] The results were then copied (since the writing disappeared: see above), reviewed by Hellenist academics, and then corrected once more, if necessary, by the unrolling/copying team.[2]

In 1802, King Ferdinand IV of Naples appointed Rev. John Hayter to assist the process.[2]

From 1802 to 1806, Hayter unrolled and partly deciphered some 200 papyri.[4] These copies are held in the Bodleian Library, where they are known as the "Oxford Facsimiles of the Herculaneum Papyri".[2]

In January 1816, Pierre-Claude Molard and Raoul Rochette led an attempt to unroll one papyrus with a replica of Abbot Piaggio's machine. However, the entire scroll was destroyed without any information being obtained.[2]

From 1819 until 1820, Humphry Davy was commissioned by the prince regent George IV to work on the Herculaneum papyri. Although it is considered that he had only limited success, Davy's chemical method, which used chlorine, managed to partially unroll 23 manuscripts.[17]

In 1877, a papyrus was taken to a laboratory in the Louvre. An attempt to unravel it was made with a "small mill", but it was unsuccessful and was partially destroyed, leaving only a quarter intact.[2]

By the middle of the 20th century, only 585 rolls or fragments had been completely unrolled, and 209 unrolled in part. Of the unrolled papyri, about 200 had been deciphered and published, and about 150 only deciphered.[4]

 
 
Heruclaneum Papyrus 1521, British Library. The seven fragments, recovered and published in Piaggio’s workshop in Italy, were part of a gift containing a number of scrolls that King Ferdinand IV of Naples had sent to George IV of Britain in exchange for a royal giraffe for his private zoo. The scroll contains a portion of a work by the ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus (341–270 BCE).[18]

Modern attempts edit

 
Herculaneum papyrus 1425 (De poem), drawn by Giuseppe Casanova, ca. 1807
 
A copy of identifiable text of papyrus 152-157

The bulk of the preserved manuscripts are housed in the Office of Herculaneum papyri in National Library of Naples.[19]

In 1969, Marcello Gigante founded the creation of the International Center for the Study of the Herculaneum Papyri (Centro Internazionale per lo Studio dei Papiri Ercolanesi; CISPE).[20] With the intention of working toward the resumption of the excavation of the Villa of the Papyri, and promoting the renewal of studies of the Herculaneum texts, the institution began a new method of unrolling. Using the 'Oslo' peeling method, the CISPE team separated individual layers of the papyri. One of the scrolls exploded into 300 parts, and another did similarly but to a lesser extent.[2]

Since 1999, the unrolled papyri have been digitized at the Brigham Young University by applying multi-spectral imaging (MSI). International experts and prominent scholars participated in the project. On 4 June 2011 it was announced the task of digitizing 1,600 Herculaneum papyri had been completed.[21][22] MSI helps spot ink because the ink and the charred papyrus have different reflectivities in the 950 nm infrared band. The images are not actually "multispectral", but consist only of data in this 950-nm band.[23]

In 2019, a multinational European team reported that SWIR HSI (shortwave-infrared hyperspectral imaging), which combines several bands in the 1000-2500 nm range, detects ink on unrolled papyri better than the 950 nm technique does.[23]

Virtual unrolling edit

Several research groups proposed to unroll the scrolls virtually, using X-ray phase-contrast tomography (XPCT, "phase-contrast CT"), possibly with a synchrotron light source. Proposed method has three steps: volumetric scanning, segmentation, layered texture generation and restoration.[24][25][26][3][27]

Since 2007, a team working with Institut de Papyrologie and a group of scientists from Kentucky have been using X-rays and nuclear magnetic resonance to analyze the artifacts.[2]

In 2009, the Institut de France in conjunction with the French National Center for Scientific Research imaged two intact Herculaneum papyri using X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) to reveal the interior structures of the scrolls.[28][29] The team heading the project estimated that if the scrolls were fully unwound they would be between 11 and 15 metres (36 and 49 ft) long.[3] The internal structure of the rolls was revealed to be extremely compact and convoluted, defeating the automatic unwrapping computer algorithms which the team had developed. Unfortunately, no ink could be seen on the small samples imaged, because carbon-based inks are not visible on the carbonized scrolls.[3] However, some scrolls were written with ink containing lead.[30]

In September 2016, Brent Seales, a computer scientist at the University of Kentucky, successfully used virtual unrolling to read the text of a charred parchment from Israel, the En-Gedi Scroll.[31][32]

Process edit

The virtual unwrapping process begins with using a volumetric scan to scan the damaged scroll. These scans are non-invasive, and generate a 3D mapping which differentiates between the ink and the paper. The virtual unwrapping process is independent of which type of volumetric scan is used, which allows scientists to test out different scanning methods to find which distinguishes ink from paper best and which easily accommodates scanning upgrades. The only data needed for the virtual unwrapping process is this volumetric scan, so after this point the scroll is safely returned to the archive. In the case of the Herculaneum papyri, the volumetric scan used phase-contrast CT.[24]

This method of volumetric scanning was chosen because Herculaneum papyri have carbon-based ink, which will have the same material characteristics as the carbon-based papyrus. This makes it difficult to image using many of the traditional imaging techniques, which often use differences in the light absorption/emission characteristics of different materials to create these volumetric scans. XPCT, on the other hand, examines the phase of X-ray radiation after it emerges from the scroll to determine its composition. Because the ink is raised relative to the papyrus, the radiation will be traveling in the material of the scroll slightly longer when it passes through a spot with ink than when it passes through a spot with a blank space.[33]

This means that when the radiation emerges from the paper, its phase will be slightly different than that of the empty space, allowing researchers to distinguish ink-covered spots from blank spots.[34] While this technique does allow researchers to visualize places with ink, it is much less clear than techniques such as CT scans which distinguish between different materials because slight changes (thinner ink, thicker papyrus, folds in the papyrus) all contribute to noise in the volumetric scan.

The volumetric scan is used to associate the composition of the scroll with corresponding positions, called voxels or volume-pixels. The goal of the virtual unwrapping process is to determine the layered structure of the scroll and try to peel back each layer while keeping track of which voxel. By transforming the voxels from a 3D volumetric scan to a 2D image, the writing on this inside can be revealed. This process happens in three steps: segmentation, texturing and flattening.

The first stage of the virtual unwrapping process, segmentation, involves identifying geometric models for the structures within the virtual scan of the scroll. Because of the extensive damage, the parchment has become deformed and no longer has a clearly cylindrical geometry. Instead, some portions may look planar, some conical, some triangular, etc.[35] Therefore, the most efficient way to assign a geometry to the layer is to do so in a piecewise fashion. Rather than modeling the complex geometry of the entire layer of the scroll, the piecewise model breaks each layer into more regular shapes that are easy to work with. This makes it easy to virtually lift off each piece of the layer one at a time. Because each voxel is ordered, peeling off each layer will preserve the continuity of the scroll structure.[24]

The second stage, texturing, focuses on identifying intensity values that correspond with each voxel using texture mapping. From the volumetric scan, each voxel has a corresponding composition. After virtually peeling off the layers during the segmentation process, the texturing step matches the voxels of each geometric piece to their corresponding compositions so that an observer is able to see the text written on each piece. In ideal cases, the scanned volume will match perfectly with the surface of each geometric piece and yield perfectly rendered text, but there are often small errors in the segmentation process that generate noise in the texturing process.[24] Because of this, the texturing process usually includes nearest-neighbor interpolation texture filtering to reduce the noise and sharpen the lettering.

After segmentation and texturing, each piece of the virtually deconstructed scroll is ordered and has its corresponding text visualized on its surface. This is, in practice, enough to 'read' the inside of the scroll, but it is often best to convert this to a 2D flat image to demonstrate what the scroll's parchment would have looked like if they could physically unravel without damage. This requires the virtual unwrapping process to include a step that converts the curved 3D geometric pieces into flat 2D planes.[24]

After segmenting, textualizing, and flattening the scroll to obtain 2D text fragments, the last step is a merge step meant to reconcile each individual segment to visualize the unwrapped parchment as a whole. This involves two parts: texture merging and mesh merging. Texture merging aligns the textures from each segment to create a composite. This process gives feedback on the quality of the segmentation and alignment of each piece.[24] Mesh merging is more precise and is the final step in visualizing the unwrapped scroll. This type of merging recombines each point on the surface of each segment with the corresponding point on its neighbor segment to remove the distortions due to individual flattening. This step also re-flattens and re-textures the image to create the final visualization of the unwrapped scroll.

These techniques, while successful at isolating the layers of the papyri, had difficulty detecting text clearly due to the complex geometry of the sheets, such as the criss-cross structure of the papyrus fibres and the sheets, pleats, holes, tears, and contamination from the extensive damage. One potential source of error might be the 3D volumetric scan itself or the flattening procedure used to read it since the algorithms are not able to perfectly prevent distortions in the reading of these papyri. [24]

Seales presented in 2018 readability of parts of a Herculaneum papyri (P.Herc. 118) from the Bodleian Libraries, at Oxford University, which was given by King Ferdinand of Naples to the Prince of Wales in 1810. The imaging method Seales used involved a hand-held 3-D scanner called an Artec Space Spider.[15] The same year he demonstrated readability success of another Herculaneum scroll, with help of the particle accelerator Diamond Light Source, through a powerful X-ray imaging technique, letter ink which contains trace amounts of lead was detected.[15] Prior to this he demonstrated successful virtual unrolling without detecting ink on Herculaneum scrolls.[36]

Vesuvius Challenge edit

In 2023, Nat Friedman, Daniel Gross, and computer scientist Brent Seales announced the Vesuvius Challenge, a competition to "decipher Herculaneum scrolls using 3D X-ray software."[37][38] The Vesuvius Challenge will award a $700,000 grand prize to the first team that can extract four passages of text from two intact scrolls using 3D X-ray scans.[39][40]

On 12 October 2023, the project awarded $40,000 to Luke Farritor, a 21-year-old computer student at the University of Nebraska, for successfully detecting the first word in an unopened scroll: porphyras (Ancient Greek: ΠΟΡΦΥΡΑϹ, lit.'purple').[41][42][43] With this milestone "first word" award included, the project has awarded $260,000 in total for segmentation tooling and ink detection (from segmented volumes).[44]

On 5 February 2024, the project awarded its 2023 Grand Prize of $700,000 to the winning team and $50,000 each to three runner-up teams for successfully revealing 5% of one scroll, and announced its goal for 2024 of revealing 90% of the four scrolls that it has fully scanned.[45] The uncovered text is believed to be a previously unknown text of Philodemus, "centered on the pleasures of music and food and their effects on the senses".[46]

Significance edit

 
A papyrus copy depicting the Epicurean tetrapharmakos in Philodemus' Adversus Sophistas – (P.Herc.1005), col. 5

Until the middle of the 18th century, the only papyri known were a few survivals from medieval times.[47] Most likely, these rolls never would have survived the Mediterranean climate and would have crumbled or been lost. Indeed, all these rolls have come from the only surviving library from antiquity that exists in its entirety.[2]

These papyri contain a large number of Greek philosophical texts. Large parts of Books XIV, XV, XXV, and XXVIII of the magnum opus of Epicurus, On Nature and works by early followers of Epicurus are also represented among the papyri.[20] Of the rolls, 44[citation needed] have been identified as the work of Philodemus of Gadara, an Epicurean philosopher and poet. The manuscript "PHerc.Paris.2" contains part of Philodemus' On Vices and Virtues.[2]

The Stoic philosopher Chrysippus is attested to have written over 700 works,[48] all of them lost, with the exception of a few fragments quoted by other authors.[49] Segments of his works On Providence and Logical Questions were found among the papyri;[49] a third work of his may have been recovered from the charred rolls.[50]

Parts of a poem on the Battle of Actium have also survived in the library.[51]

In May 2018, it was reported that fragments of the lost work Histories by Seneca the Elder had been found on a papyrus scroll (PHerc. 1067).[52]

In February 2023, classical scholar Richard Janko announced that he and Seales' team, assisted by artificial intelligence, had managed to read a small part of one heavily damaged, previously unreadable Herculaneum papyrus. The text appeared to be part of a lost work about Alexander the Great and the Diadochi.[53]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Interview with Daniel Delattre: the Herculaneum scrolls given to Consul Bonaparte (2010), Napoleon.org 2015-10-30 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "History, Travel, Arts, Science, People, Places - Smithsonian". smithsonianmag.com.
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  6. ^ . google.com. Archived from the original on 25 November 2015. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
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  13. ^ Jonathan Webb X-ray technique reads burnt Vesuvius scroll BBC News, Science & Environment, 20 January 2015
  14. ^ Jade Koekoe (2017). "Herculaneum: Villa of the Papyri". Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  15. ^ a b c Jo Marchant (2018). "Buried by the Ash of Vesuvius, These Scrolls Are Being Read for the First Time in Millennia". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
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  19. ^ Marino Zorzi (2001). National Libraries of Italy. National Library of Naples (International Dictionary of Library Histories ed.). Routledge. p. 478. ISBN 9781136777851.
  20. ^ a b CISPE 2015-07-21 at the Wayback Machine Il Centro Internazionale per lo Studio dei Papiri Ercolanesi
  21. ^ . Insights: The Newsletter of the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship. 22 (6). January 2002. Archived from the original on 1 July 2013.
  22. ^ . Insights: The Newsletter of the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship. 30 (1). January 2010. Archived from the original on 1 July 2013.
  23. ^ a b Tournié, A; Fleischer, K; Bukreeva, I; Palermo, F; Perino, M; Cedola, A; Andraud, C; Ranocchia, G (October 2019). "Ancient Greek text concealed on the back of unrolled papyrus revealed through shortwave-infrared hyperspectral imaging". Science Advances. 5 (10): eaav8936. Bibcode:2019SciA....5.8936T. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aav8936. PMC 6777967. PMID 31620553.
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  25. ^ Vergano, Dan (22 January 2015). . National Geographic. Archived from the original on 21 January 2015.
  26. ^ Mocella, Vito; Brun, Emmanuel; Ferrero, Claudio; Delattre, Daniel (2015). "Revealing letters in rolled Herculaneum papyri by X-ray phase-contrast imaging". Nature Communications. 6: 5895. Bibcode:2015NatCo...6.5895M. doi:10.1038/ncomms6895. PMID 25603114.
  27. ^ Bukreeva, I.; et al. (2016). "Enhanced X-ray-phase-contrast-tomography brings new clarity to the 2000-year-old 'voice' of Epicurean philosopher Philodemus". arXiv:1602.08071 [physics.soc-ph].
  28. ^ EDUCE: Imaging the Herculaneum Scrolls (Video). Center for Visualization & Virtual Environments, U. Kentucky. 2011.
  29. ^ W. Brent Seales, James Griffioen, Ryan Baumann, Matthew Field (2011) ANALYSIS OF HERCULANEUM PAPYRI WITH X-RAY COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY Center for Visualization & Virtual Environments; U. Kentucky
  30. ^ Brun; et al. (2016). "Revealing metallic ink in Herculaneum papyri". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 113 (14): 3751–3754. Bibcode:2016PNAS..113.3751B. doi:10.1073/pnas.1519958113. PMC 4833268. PMID 27001841.
  31. ^ Wade, Nicholas (21 September 2016). "Modern Technology Unlocks Secrets of a Damaged Biblical Scroll". The New York Times.
  32. ^ Seales, William Brent; Parker, Clifford Seth; Segal, Michael; Tov, Emanuel; Shor, Pnina; Porath, Yosef (2 September 2016). "From damage to discovery via virtual unwrapping: Reading the scroll from En-Gedi". Science Advances. 2 (9): e1601247. Bibcode:2016SciA....2E1247S. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1601247. PMC 5031465. PMID 27679821.
  33. ^ Baumann, Ryan; Porter, Dorothy; Seales, W. (2008). The use of micro-CT in the study of archaeological artifacts. 9th International Conference on NDT of Art. Jerusalem.
  34. ^ Baumann, Ryan; Porter, Dorothy; Seales, W. (2008). The use of micro-CT in the study of archaeological artifacts. 9th International Conference on NDT of Art. Jerusalem.
  35. ^ Bukreeva, Inna; Alessandrelli, Michele; Formoso, Vincenzo; Ranocchia, Graziano; Cedola, Alessia (2017). "Investigating Herculaneum papyri: An innovative 3D approach for the virtual unfolding of the rolls". arXiv:1706.09883 [physics.ins-det].
  36. ^ W. Brent Seales (2011). (PDF). International Conference on nondestructive investigations and microanalysis for the diagnostics and conservation of cultural and environmental heritage. S2CID 7667891. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2019.
  37. ^ "Vesuvius Challenge". scrollprize.org. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  38. ^ Sample, Ian (15 March 2023). "Contest launched to decipher Herculaneum scrolls using 3D X-ray software". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  39. ^ "$700,000 grand prize (December 31st)". scrollprize.org. Vesuvius Challenge. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  40. ^ Parker, Christopher (24 March 2023). "You Could Win $1 Million by Deciphering These Ancient Roman Scrolls". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  41. ^ "First word discovered in unopened Herculaneum scroll by 21yo computer science student". scrollprize.org. Vesuvius Challenge. 12 October 2023. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  42. ^ Wade, Nicholas (12 October 2023). "Scrolls That Survived Vesuvius Divulge Their First Word". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  43. ^ Sample, Ian (12 October 2023). "Researchers use AI to read word on ancient scroll burned by Vesuvius". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  44. ^ "Prize Winners". Vesuvius Challenge. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  45. ^ "Vesuvius Challenge 2023 Grand Prize awarded: we can read the first scroll!". Vesuvius Challenge. 5 February 2024. Retrieved 5 February 2024. Of the remaining submissions, the scores from our team of papyrologists identify a three-way tie for runner up.
  46. ^ Marchant, Jo (5 February 2024). "First passages of rolled-up Herculaneum scroll revealed". Nature. 626 (7999): 461–462. Bibcode:2024Natur.626..461M. doi:10.1038/d41586-024-00346-8. PMID 38316998. S2CID 267497364.
  47. ^ Frederic G. Kenyon, Palaeography of Greek papyri (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1899), p. 3.
  48. ^ Diogenes Laërtius, Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, vii. 180
  49. ^ a b John Sellars, Stoicism. University of California Press, 2007. - p. 8
  50. ^ Fitzgerald, John T. (2004). "Philodemus and the Papyri from Herculaneum". In Fitzgerald, John T.; Obbink, Dirk; Holland, Glenn Stanfield (eds.). Philodemus and the New Testament world Philosophy. Brill. p. 11. ISBN 9004114602. The first of Chrysippus' partially preserved two or three works is his Logical Questions, contained in PHerc. 307 ... The second work is his On Providence, preserved in PHerc 1038 and 1421 ... A third work, most likely by Chrysippus is preserved in PHerc. 1020,
  51. ^ Gregory Hays, "Keeping Things Platonic: A new discovery of a possible lost book by Apuleius on Plato" [review of Justin A Stover, A New Work by Apuleius], Times Literary Supplement 20 May 2016 p. 29. 2020-09-20 at the Wayback Machine.
  52. ^ Marino, Carlo (21 May 2018). . European News Agency. Archived from the original on 25 May 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  53. ^ Owen Jarus (7 February 2023). "AI is deciphering a 2,000-year-old 'lost book' describing life after Alexander the Great". livescience.com. Retrieved 10 January 2024.

Further reading edit

  • Armstrong, David (2011). "Epicurean virtues, Epicurean friendship: Cicero vs the Herculaneum papyri". In Fish, Jeffrey; Sanders, Kirk R. (eds.). Epicurus and the Epicurean Tradition. Cambridge University Press. pp. 105–128. doi:10.1017/cbo9780511921704.006. ISBN 978-0-521-19478-5.
  • Blank, David (1999). "Reflections on Re-reading Piaggio and the Early History of the Herculaneum Papyri". Cronache Ercolanesi. 29: 55–82.
  • Booras, Steven W.; Seely, David R. (1999). "Multispectral Imaging of the Herculaneum Papyri". Cronache Ercolanesi. 29: 95–100.
  • Houston, George W. (2013). "Thenon-Philodemusbookcollection in the Villa of the Papyri". In Woolf, Greg; König, Jason; Oikonomopoulou, Katerina (eds.). Ancient Libraries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 183–208. doi:10.1017/cbo9780511998386.014. ISBN 978-1-107-01256-1.
  • Janko, Richard (1992). "Colloquium 8: Philodemus Resartus: Progress in Reconstructing the Philosophical Papyri From Herculaneum 1". Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy. 7 (1): 271–308. doi:10.1163/2213441791X00150. ISSN 2213-4417.
  • Janko, Richard; Blank, David (1998). "Two New Manuscript Sources for the Texts of the Herculaneum Papyri". Cronache Ercolanesi. 28: 173–184.
  • Kleve, Knut (1996). "How to Read an Illegible Papyrus: Towards an Edition of PHerc. 78, Caecilius Statius, Obolostates sive faenerator". Cronache Ercolanesi. 26: 5–14.
  • Seales, W. Brent; Griffioen, Jim; Jacops, David (2010). "Virtual Conservation: Experience with Micro-CT and Manuscripts". In Vahtikari, Vesa; Hakkarainen, Mika; Nurminen, Antti (eds.). EIKONOPOIIA. Digital Imaging of Ancient Textual Heritage: Proceedings of the International Conference, Helsinki, 28–29 November 2010. Commentationes Humanarum Litterarum. Vol. 129. Helsinki: Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters. ISBN 978-951-653-386-8.
  • Sider, David (2005). The Library of the Villa dei Papiri at Herculaneum. Los Angeles: Getty Publications. ISBN 978-0-89236-799-3.
  • Vassallo, Christian (2021). The Presocratics at Herculaneum: A Study of Early Greek Philosophy in the Epicurean Tradition. With an Appendix on Diogenes of Oinoanda's Criticism of Presocratic Philosophy. Studia Praesocratica. Vol. 11. De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110727661. ISBN 978-3-11-072766-1.
  • Zarmakoupi, Mantha, ed. (2011). The Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum: Archaeology, Reception, and Digital Reconstruction. De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110215434. ISBN 9783110203882.

External links edit

  • Out of the Ashes: Recovering the Lost Library of Herculaneum – documentary film distributed by Brigham Young University
  • Würzburg Center for Epicurean Studies, including transcribed texts of many papyri
  • Porter, James I.,
  • UCLA Department of Classics: The Philodemus Project, at the Wayback Machine on 25 August 2011.
  • The Friends of Herculaneum Society
  • An incomplete list of papyri from Herculaneum with high resolution photographs 2014-07-15 at the Wayback Machine.
  • A Guide to Editions and Translations of the Principal Works Discovered at Herculaneum and Related Texts
  • The Digital Restoration Initiative at the University of Kentucky

herculaneum, papyri, more, than, papyrus, scrolls, discovered, 18th, century, villa, papyri, herculaneum, they, been, carbonized, when, villa, engulfed, eruption, mount, vesuvius, photos, papyrus, fragments, pherc, 1103, pherc, image, contrast, brightness, wer. The Herculaneum papyri are more than 1 800 papyrus scrolls discovered in the 18th century in the Villa of the Papyri in Herculaneum They had been carbonized when the villa was engulfed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD Photos of the papyrus fragments PHerc 1103 a and PHerc 110 b c Image contrast and brightness were enhanced to better visualize the details visible to the naked eye on their external surface 1 The papyri containing a number of Greek philosophical texts come from the only surviving library from antiquity that exists in its entirety 2 However reading the scrolls is extremely difficult and can risk destroying them The evolution of techniques to do this continues The majority of classical texts referred to by other classical authors are lost and there is hope that the continuing work on the library scrolls will discover some of these For example as many as 44 works discovered were written by the 1st century BC Epicurean philosopher and poet Philodemus a resident of Herculaneum who possibly formed the library or whose library was incorporated in it Contents 1 Discovery 1 1 Excavations 1 2 Post excavation history 2 Unrolling 2 1 Physical unrolling 2 1 1 Early attempts 2 1 2 Modern attempts 2 2 Virtual unrolling 2 2 1 Process 2 2 2 Vesuvius Challenge 3 Significance 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDiscovery edit nbsp Dionysus Plato or Poseidon sculpture excavated at the Villa of the Papyri nbsp A map of the Villa of the Papyri Due to the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD bundles of scrolls were carbonized by the intense heat of the pyroclastic flows 3 This intense parching took place over an extremely short period of time in a room deprived of oxygen resulting in the scrolls carbonization into compact and highly fragile blocks 2 They were then preserved by the layers of cement like rock 3 In 1752 workmen of the Bourbon royal family accidentally discovered what is now known as the Villa of the Papyri 2 4 There may still be a lower section of the Villa s collection that remains buried 3 Ethel Ross Barker noted in her 1908 Buried Herculaneum 5 Appearance of the rolls A large number of papyri after being buried eighteen centuries have been found in the Villa named after them In appearance the rolls resembled lumps of charcoal and many were thrown away as such Some were much lighter in colour Finally a faint trace of letters was seen on one of the blackened masses which was found to be a roll of papyrus disintegrated by decay and damp full of holes cut crushed and crumpled The papyri were found at a depth of about 120 feet 37 metres The woodwork of some of the presses that had contained them dropped to dust on exposure and many rolls were found lying about loosely Others were still on the shelves Locality of the discovery They were found in four places on four occasions The first were found in the autumn of 1752 fourteen years after the first discovery of Herculaneum in and near the tablinum and only numbered some 21 volumes and fragments contained in two wooden cases In the spring of 1753 11 papyri were found in a room just south of the tablinum and in the summer of the same year 250 were found in a room to the north In the spring and summer of the following year 337 Greek papyri and 18 Latin papyri were found in the Library Nothing of any importance was discovered after this date The numbers given here exclude mere fragments Including every tiny fragment found the catalogues give 1756 manuscripts discovered up to 1855 while subsequent discoveries bring the total up to 1806 Of these 341 were found almost entire 500 were merely charred fragments and the remaining 965 were in every intermediate state of disintegration Treatment of the rolls No one knew how to deal with such strange material Weber the engineer and Paderni the keeper of the Museum at Portici were not experts in palaeography and philology which sciences were indeed almost in their infancy one hundred and fifty years ago There were no official publications concerning the papyri till forty years after their discovery and our information is of necessity incomplete inexact and contradictory Father Antonio Piaggio s machine Through this inevitable ignorance of the time a larger number of the rolls were destroyed than the difficulties of the case necessitated Many had been thrown away as mere charcoal some were destroyed in extracting them from the lava in which they were embedded In the attempt to discover their contents several were split in two longitudinally Finally that ingenious Italian monk Father Piaggio invented a very simple machine for unrolling the manuscripts by means of silk threads attached to the edge of the papyrus Of course this method destroyed the beginning of all the papyri sometimes the end could not be found and the papyri were in a terrible state of decay Excavations edit Anybody who focuses on the ancient world is always going to be excited to get even one paragraph one chapter more The prospect of getting hundreds of books more is staggering Roger Macfarlane 3 In the 18th century the first digs began The excavation appeared closer to mining projects as mineshafts were dug and horizontal subterranean galleries were installed Workers would place objects in baskets and send them back up 2 With the backing of Charles VII of Naples 1716 1788 Roque Joaquin de Alcubierre headed the systematic excavation of Herculaneum with Karl Jakob Weber 6 Barker noted in her 1908 Buried Herculaneum By the orders of Francis I land was purchased and in 1828 excavations were begun in two parts 150 feet 46 m apart under the direction of the architect Carlo Bonucci In the year 1868 still further purchases of land were made and excavations were carried on in an eastward direction till 1875 The total area now open measures 300 by 150 perches 1510 by 756 meters The limits of the excavations to the north and east respectively are the modern streets of Vico di Mare and Vico Ferrara It is here only that any portion of ancient Herculaneum may be seen in the open day 5 It is uncertain how many papyri were originally found as many of the scrolls were destroyed by workmen or when scholars extracted them from the volcanic tuff 7 The official list amounts to 1 814 rolls and fragments of which 1 756 had been discovered by 1855 In the 90s it was reported that the inventory now comprises 1 826 papyri 8 with more than 340 are almost complete about 970 are partly decayed and partly decipherable and more than 500 are merely charred fragments 4 In a 2016 open letter academics asked the Italian authorities to consider new excavations since it is assumed that many more papyri may be buried at the site Authors argue that the volcano may erupt again and put the villa effectively beyond reach and Posterity will not forgive us if we squander this chance The excavation must proceed 9 Post excavation history edit In 1802 King Ferdinand IV of Naples offered six rolls to Napoleon Bonaparte in a diplomatic move In 1803 along with other treasures the scrolls were transported by Francesco Carelli Upon receiving the gift Bonaparte then gave the scrolls to Institut de France under charge of Gaspard Monge and Vivant Denon 2 In 1810 eighteen unrolled papyri were given to George IV four of which he presented to the Bodleian Library the rest are now mainly in the British Library 4 Unrolling edit nbsp Carbonized paper found with other images in an 1858 published book by Giacomo Castrucci 10 Since their discovery previous attempts used rose water liquid mercury vegetable gas sulfuric compounds papyrus juice or a mixture of ethanol glycerin and warm water in hopes to make scrolls readable 11 According to Antonio de Simone and Richard Janko at first the papyri were mistaken for carbonized tree branches some perhaps were even thrown away or burnt to make heat 12 What we see is that the ink which was essentially carbon based is not very different from the carbonised papyrus Dr Vito Mocella 13 Opening a scroll would often damage or destroy the scroll completely If a scroll had been successfully opened the original ink exposed to air would begin to fade In addition this form of unrolling often would leave pages stuck together omitting or destroying additional information 3 With X ray micro computed tomography micro CT no ink can be seen as carbon based ink is not visible on carbonized papyrus 3 Physical unrolling edit Early attempts edit nbsp Abbot Piaggio s machine was used to unroll scrolls as early as 1756 in the Vatican Library Following the discovery of the Herculaneum papyri in 1752 per the advice from Bernardo Tanucci King Charles VII of Naples established a commission to study them 14 Possibly the first attempts to read the scrolls were done by the artist Camillo Paderni who was in charge of recovered items Paderni used the method of slicing scrolls in half copying readable text by removing papyri layers This transcription procedure was used for hundreds of scrolls and in the process destroyed them 15 In 1756 Abbot Piaggio conserver of ancient manuscripts in the Vatican Library used a machine he also invented 10 to unroll the first scroll which took four years millimeters per day 16 12 The results were then copied since the writing disappeared see above reviewed by Hellenist academics and then corrected once more if necessary by the unrolling copying team 2 In 1802 King Ferdinand IV of Naples appointed Rev John Hayter to assist the process 2 From 1802 to 1806 Hayter unrolled and partly deciphered some 200 papyri 4 These copies are held in the Bodleian Library where they are known as the Oxford Facsimiles of the Herculaneum Papyri 2 In January 1816 Pierre Claude Molard and Raoul Rochette led an attempt to unroll one papyrus with a replica of Abbot Piaggio s machine However the entire scroll was destroyed without any information being obtained 2 From 1819 until 1820 Humphry Davy was commissioned by the prince regent George IV to work on the Herculaneum papyri Although it is considered that he had only limited success Davy s chemical method which used chlorine managed to partially unroll 23 manuscripts 17 In 1877 a papyrus was taken to a laboratory in the Louvre An attempt to unravel it was made with a small mill but it was unsuccessful and was partially destroyed leaving only a quarter intact 2 By the middle of the 20th century only 585 rolls or fragments had been completely unrolled and 209 unrolled in part Of the unrolled papyri about 200 had been deciphered and published and about 150 only deciphered 4 nbsp nbsp Heruclaneum Papyrus 1521 British Library The seven fragments recovered and published in Piaggio s workshop in Italy were part of a gift containing a number of scrolls that King Ferdinand IV of Naples had sent to George IV of Britain in exchange for a royal giraffe for his private zoo The scroll contains a portion of a work by the ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus 341 270 BCE 18 Modern attempts edit nbsp Herculaneum papyrus 1425 De poem drawn by Giuseppe Casanova ca 1807 nbsp A copy of identifiable text of papyrus 152 157The bulk of the preserved manuscripts are housed in the Office of Herculaneum papyri in National Library of Naples 19 In 1969 Marcello Gigante founded the creation of the International Center for the Study of the Herculaneum Papyri Centro Internazionale per lo Studio dei Papiri Ercolanesi CISPE 20 With the intention of working toward the resumption of the excavation of the Villa of the Papyri and promoting the renewal of studies of the Herculaneum texts the institution began a new method of unrolling Using the Oslo peeling method the CISPE team separated individual layers of the papyri One of the scrolls exploded into 300 parts and another did similarly but to a lesser extent 2 Since 1999 the unrolled papyri have been digitized at the Brigham Young University by applying multi spectral imaging MSI International experts and prominent scholars participated in the project On 4 June 2011 it was announced the task of digitizing 1 600 Herculaneum papyri had been completed 21 22 MSI helps spot ink because the ink and the charred papyrus have different reflectivities in the 950 nm infrared band The images are not actually multispectral but consist only of data in this 950 nm band 23 In 2019 a multinational European team reported that SWIR HSI shortwave infrared hyperspectral imaging which combines several bands in the 1000 2500 nm range detects ink on unrolled papyri better than the 950 nm technique does 23 Virtual unrolling edit Several research groups proposed to unroll the scrolls virtually using X ray phase contrast tomography XPCT phase contrast CT possibly with a synchrotron light source Proposed method has three steps volumetric scanning segmentation layered texture generation and restoration 24 25 26 3 27 Since 2007 a team working with Institut de Papyrologie and a group of scientists from Kentucky have been using X rays and nuclear magnetic resonance to analyze the artifacts 2 In 2009 the Institut de France in conjunction with the French National Center for Scientific Research imaged two intact Herculaneum papyri using X ray micro computed tomography micro CT to reveal the interior structures of the scrolls 28 29 The team heading the project estimated that if the scrolls were fully unwound they would be between 11 and 15 metres 36 and 49 ft long 3 The internal structure of the rolls was revealed to be extremely compact and convoluted defeating the automatic unwrapping computer algorithms which the team had developed Unfortunately no ink could be seen on the small samples imaged because carbon based inks are not visible on the carbonized scrolls 3 However some scrolls were written with ink containing lead 30 In September 2016 Brent Seales a computer scientist at the University of Kentucky successfully used virtual unrolling to read the text of a charred parchment from Israel the En Gedi Scroll 31 32 Process edit The virtual unwrapping process begins with using a volumetric scan to scan the damaged scroll These scans are non invasive and generate a 3D mapping which differentiates between the ink and the paper The virtual unwrapping process is independent of which type of volumetric scan is used which allows scientists to test out different scanning methods to find which distinguishes ink from paper best and which easily accommodates scanning upgrades The only data needed for the virtual unwrapping process is this volumetric scan so after this point the scroll is safely returned to the archive In the case of the Herculaneum papyri the volumetric scan used phase contrast CT 24 This method of volumetric scanning was chosen because Herculaneum papyri have carbon based ink which will have the same material characteristics as the carbon based papyrus This makes it difficult to image using many of the traditional imaging techniques which often use differences in the light absorption emission characteristics of different materials to create these volumetric scans XPCT on the other hand examines the phase of X ray radiation after it emerges from the scroll to determine its composition Because the ink is raised relative to the papyrus the radiation will be traveling in the material of the scroll slightly longer when it passes through a spot with ink than when it passes through a spot with a blank space 33 This means that when the radiation emerges from the paper its phase will be slightly different than that of the empty space allowing researchers to distinguish ink covered spots from blank spots 34 While this technique does allow researchers to visualize places with ink it is much less clear than techniques such as CT scans which distinguish between different materials because slight changes thinner ink thicker papyrus folds in the papyrus all contribute to noise in the volumetric scan The volumetric scan is used to associate the composition of the scroll with corresponding positions called voxels or volume pixels The goal of the virtual unwrapping process is to determine the layered structure of the scroll and try to peel back each layer while keeping track of which voxel By transforming the voxels from a 3D volumetric scan to a 2D image the writing on this inside can be revealed This process happens in three steps segmentation texturing and flattening The first stage of the virtual unwrapping process segmentation involves identifying geometric models for the structures within the virtual scan of the scroll Because of the extensive damage the parchment has become deformed and no longer has a clearly cylindrical geometry Instead some portions may look planar some conical some triangular etc 35 Therefore the most efficient way to assign a geometry to the layer is to do so in a piecewise fashion Rather than modeling the complex geometry of the entire layer of the scroll the piecewise model breaks each layer into more regular shapes that are easy to work with This makes it easy to virtually lift off each piece of the layer one at a time Because each voxel is ordered peeling off each layer will preserve the continuity of the scroll structure 24 The second stage texturing focuses on identifying intensity values that correspond with each voxel using texture mapping From the volumetric scan each voxel has a corresponding composition After virtually peeling off the layers during the segmentation process the texturing step matches the voxels of each geometric piece to their corresponding compositions so that an observer is able to see the text written on each piece In ideal cases the scanned volume will match perfectly with the surface of each geometric piece and yield perfectly rendered text but there are often small errors in the segmentation process that generate noise in the texturing process 24 Because of this the texturing process usually includes nearest neighbor interpolation texture filtering to reduce the noise and sharpen the lettering After segmentation and texturing each piece of the virtually deconstructed scroll is ordered and has its corresponding text visualized on its surface This is in practice enough to read the inside of the scroll but it is often best to convert this to a 2D flat image to demonstrate what the scroll s parchment would have looked like if they could physically unravel without damage This requires the virtual unwrapping process to include a step that converts the curved 3D geometric pieces into flat 2D planes 24 After segmenting textualizing and flattening the scroll to obtain 2D text fragments the last step is a merge step meant to reconcile each individual segment to visualize the unwrapped parchment as a whole This involves two parts texture merging and mesh merging Texture merging aligns the textures from each segment to create a composite This process gives feedback on the quality of the segmentation and alignment of each piece 24 Mesh merging is more precise and is the final step in visualizing the unwrapped scroll This type of merging recombines each point on the surface of each segment with the corresponding point on its neighbor segment to remove the distortions due to individual flattening This step also re flattens and re textures the image to create the final visualization of the unwrapped scroll These techniques while successful at isolating the layers of the papyri had difficulty detecting text clearly due to the complex geometry of the sheets such as the criss cross structure of the papyrus fibres and the sheets pleats holes tears and contamination from the extensive damage One potential source of error might be the 3D volumetric scan itself or the flattening procedure used to read it since the algorithms are not able to perfectly prevent distortions in the reading of these papyri 24 Seales presented in 2018 readability of parts of a Herculaneum papyri P Herc 118 from the Bodleian Libraries at Oxford University which was given by King Ferdinand of Naples to the Prince of Wales in 1810 The imaging method Seales used involved a hand held 3 D scanner called an Artec Space Spider 15 The same year he demonstrated readability success of another Herculaneum scroll with help of the particle accelerator Diamond Light Source through a powerful X ray imaging technique letter ink which contains trace amounts of lead was detected 15 Prior to this he demonstrated successful virtual unrolling without detecting ink on Herculaneum scrolls 36 Vesuvius Challenge edit In 2023 Nat Friedman Daniel Gross and computer scientist Brent Seales announced the Vesuvius Challenge a competition to decipher Herculaneum scrolls using 3D X ray software 37 38 The Vesuvius Challenge will award a 700 000 grand prize to the first team that can extract four passages of text from two intact scrolls using 3D X ray scans 39 40 On 12 October 2023 the project awarded 40 000 to Luke Farritor a 21 year old computer student at the University of Nebraska for successfully detecting the first word in an unopened scroll porphyras Ancient Greek PORFYRAϹ lit purple 41 42 43 With this milestone first word award included the project has awarded 260 000 in total for segmentation tooling and ink detection from segmented volumes 44 On 5 February 2024 the project awarded its 2023 Grand Prize of 700 000 to the winning team and 50 000 each to three runner up teams for successfully revealing 5 of one scroll and announced its goal for 2024 of revealing 90 of the four scrolls that it has fully scanned 45 The uncovered text is believed to be a previously unknown text of Philodemus centered on the pleasures of music and food and their effects on the senses 46 Significance edit nbsp A papyrus copy depicting the Epicurean tetrapharmakos in Philodemus Adversus Sophistas P Herc 1005 col 5Until the middle of the 18th century the only papyri known were a few survivals from medieval times 47 Most likely these rolls never would have survived the Mediterranean climate and would have crumbled or been lost Indeed all these rolls have come from the only surviving library from antiquity that exists in its entirety 2 These papyri contain a large number of Greek philosophical texts Large parts of Books XIV XV XXV and XXVIII of the magnum opus of Epicurus On Nature and works by early followers of Epicurus are also represented among the papyri 20 Of the rolls 44 citation needed have been identified as the work of Philodemus of Gadara an Epicurean philosopher and poet The manuscript PHerc Paris 2 contains part of Philodemus On Vices and Virtues 2 The Stoic philosopher Chrysippus is attested to have written over 700 works 48 all of them lost with the exception of a few fragments quoted by other authors 49 Segments of his works On Providence and Logical Questions were found among the papyri 49 a third work of his may have been recovered from the charred rolls 50 Parts of a poem on the Battle of Actium have also survived in the library 51 In May 2018 it was reported that fragments of the lost work Histories by Seneca the Elder had been found on a papyrus scroll PHerc 1067 52 In February 2023 classical scholar Richard Janko announced that he and Seales team assisted by artificial intelligence had managed to read a small part of one heavily damaged previously unreadable Herculaneum papyrus The text appeared to be part of a lost work about Alexander the Great and the Diadochi 53 Gallery edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp See also editAfghan Geniza collection of Jewish papyri fragments found in Afghanistan Ancient Greek literature Cairo Geniza similar cache of ancient religious and secular documents Conservation issues of Pompeii and Herculaneum Ercolano Dunhuang manuscripts similar cache of ancient religious and secular documents Elephantine papyri and ostraca similar cache of ancient religious and secular documents Friends of Herculaneum Society Oxyrhynchus Papyri Timbuktu manuscriptsReferences edit Stabile Sara Palermo Francesca Bukreeva Inna Mele Daniela Formoso Vincenzo Bartolino Roberto Cedola Alessia 18 January 2021 A computational platform for the virtual unfolding of Herculaneum Papyri Scientific Reports 11 1 1695 Bibcode 2021NatSR 11 1695S doi 10 1038 s41598 020 80458 z PMC 7813886 PMID 33462265 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Interview with Daniel Delattre the Herculaneum scrolls given to Consul Bonaparte 2010 Napoleon org Archived 2015 10 30 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h i History Travel Arts Science People Places Smithsonian smithsonianmag com a b c d e Diringer David 1982 The Book Before Printing Ancient Medieval and Oriental New York Dover Publications pp 252 6 ISBN 978 0 486 24243 9 a b Ethel Ross Barker 1908 Buried Herculaneum London A amp C Black Since the Re discovery AD79eruption google com Archived from the original on 25 November 2015 Retrieved 8 September 2015 Banerji Robin 20 December 2013 Unlocking the scrolls of Herculaneum BBC News British Broadcasting Company Retrieved 5 January 2017 Iv The Herculaneum Papyri Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 33 36 45 1986 doi 10 1111 j 2041 5370 1986 tb01374 x Further exploration at Herculaneum could stagger the imagination The Art Newspaper International art news and events 18 May 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2022 a b Giacomo Castrucci 1858 Tesoro letterario di Ercolano ossia La reale officina dei papiri ercolanesi Napoli Fibreno The Invisible Library The New Yorker 2015 a b Out of the Ashes Recovering the Lost Library of the Herculaneum PBS 2004 Jonathan Webb X ray technique reads burnt Vesuvius scroll BBC News Science amp Environment 20 January 2015 Jade Koekoe 2017 Herculaneum Villa of the Papyri Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b c Jo Marchant 2018 Buried by the Ash of Vesuvius These Scrolls Are Being Read for the First Time in Millennia Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 19 January 2019 Herculaneum Papyri in the National Library in Naples The Phraser 2015 Page 203 of Davy Humphry 1821 Some Observations and Experiments on the Papyri Found in the Ruins of Herculaneum Philosophical Transactions 111 191 208 Bibcode 1821RSPT 111 191D doi 10 1098 rstl 1821 0016 Charred scroll fragments from Herculaneum British Library Retrieved 7 May 2023 Marino Zorzi 2001 National Libraries of Italy National Library of Naples International Dictionary of Library Histories ed Routledge p 478 ISBN 9781136777851 a b CISPE Archived 2015 07 21 at the Wayback Machine Il Centro Internazionale per lo Studio dei Papiri Ercolanesi Digitization of Herculaneum Papyri Completed Insights The Newsletter of the Neal A Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship 22 6 January 2002 Archived from the original on 1 July 2013 BYU Herculaneum Project Honored with Mommsen Prize Insights The Newsletter of the Neal A Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship 30 1 January 2010 Archived from the original on 1 July 2013 a b Tournie A Fleischer K Bukreeva I Palermo F Perino M Cedola A Andraud C Ranocchia G October 2019 Ancient Greek text concealed on the back of unrolled papyrus revealed through shortwave infrared hyperspectral imaging Science Advances 5 10 eaav8936 Bibcode 2019SciA 5 8936T doi 10 1126 sciadv aav8936 PMC 6777967 PMID 31620553 a b c d e f g Bukreeva I et al 2016 Virtual unrolling and deciphering of Herculaneum papyri by X ray phase contrast tomography Scientific Reports 6 30364 Bibcode 2016NatSR 630364B doi 10 1038 srep30364 PMC 5016987 PMID 27608927 Vergano Dan 22 January 2015 X Rays Reveal Snippets From Papyrus Scrolls That Survived Mount Vesuvius National Geographic Archived from the original on 21 January 2015 Mocella Vito Brun Emmanuel Ferrero Claudio Delattre Daniel 2015 Revealing letters in rolled Herculaneum papyri by X ray phase contrast imaging Nature Communications 6 5895 Bibcode 2015NatCo 6 5895M doi 10 1038 ncomms6895 PMID 25603114 Bukreeva I et al 2016 Enhanced X ray phase contrast tomography brings new clarity to the 2000 year old voice of Epicurean philosopher Philodemus arXiv 1602 08071 physics soc ph EDUCE Imaging the Herculaneum Scrolls Video Center for Visualization amp Virtual Environments U Kentucky 2011 W Brent Seales James Griffioen Ryan Baumann Matthew Field 2011 ANALYSIS OF HERCULANEUM PAPYRI WITH X RAY COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY Center for Visualization amp Virtual Environments U Kentucky Brun et al 2016 Revealing metallic ink in Herculaneum papyri Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113 14 3751 3754 Bibcode 2016PNAS 113 3751B doi 10 1073 pnas 1519958113 PMC 4833268 PMID 27001841 Wade Nicholas 21 September 2016 Modern Technology Unlocks Secrets of a Damaged Biblical Scroll The New York Times Seales William Brent Parker Clifford Seth Segal Michael Tov Emanuel Shor Pnina Porath Yosef 2 September 2016 From damage to discovery via virtual unwrapping Reading the scroll from En Gedi Science Advances 2 9 e1601247 Bibcode 2016SciA 2E1247S doi 10 1126 sciadv 1601247 PMC 5031465 PMID 27679821 Baumann Ryan Porter Dorothy Seales W 2008 The use of micro CT in the study of archaeological artifacts 9th International Conference on NDT of Art Jerusalem Baumann Ryan Porter Dorothy Seales W 2008 The use of micro CT in the study of archaeological artifacts 9th International Conference on NDT of Art Jerusalem Bukreeva Inna Alessandrelli Michele Formoso Vincenzo Ranocchia Graziano Cedola Alessia 2017 Investigating Herculaneum papyri An innovative 3D approach for the virtual unfolding of the rolls arXiv 1706 09883 physics ins det W Brent Seales 2011 Analysis Of Herculaneum Papyri With X ray Computed Tomography PDF International Conference on nondestructive investigations and microanalysis for the diagnostics and conservation of cultural and environmental heritage S2CID 7667891 Archived from the original PDF on 20 January 2019 Vesuvius Challenge scrollprize org Retrieved 17 March 2023 Sample Ian 15 March 2023 Contest launched to decipher Herculaneum scrolls using 3D X ray software The Guardian Retrieved 17 March 2023 700 000 grand prize December 31st scrollprize org Vesuvius Challenge Retrieved 13 October 2023 Parker Christopher 24 March 2023 You Could Win 1 Million by Deciphering These Ancient Roman Scrolls Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 13 October 2023 First word discovered in unopened Herculaneum scroll by 21yo computer science student scrollprize org Vesuvius Challenge 12 October 2023 Retrieved 13 October 2023 Wade Nicholas 12 October 2023 Scrolls That Survived Vesuvius Divulge Their First Word The New York Times Retrieved 13 October 2023 Sample Ian 12 October 2023 Researchers use AI to read word on ancient scroll burned by Vesuvius The Guardian Retrieved 13 October 2023 Prize Winners Vesuvius Challenge Retrieved 13 October 2023 Vesuvius Challenge 2023 Grand Prize awarded we can read the first scroll Vesuvius Challenge 5 February 2024 Retrieved 5 February 2024 Of the remaining submissions the scores from our team of papyrologists identify a three way tie for runner up Marchant Jo 5 February 2024 First passages of rolled up Herculaneum scroll revealed Nature 626 7999 461 462 Bibcode 2024Natur 626 461M doi 10 1038 d41586 024 00346 8 PMID 38316998 S2CID 267497364 Frederic G Kenyon Palaeography of Greek papyri Oxford Clarendon Press 1899 p 3 Diogenes Laertius Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers vii 180 a b John Sellars Stoicism University of California Press 2007 p 8 Fitzgerald John T 2004 Philodemus and the Papyri from Herculaneum In Fitzgerald John T Obbink Dirk Holland Glenn Stanfield eds Philodemus and the New Testament world Philosophy Brill p 11 ISBN 9004114602 The first of Chrysippus partially preserved two or three works is his Logical Questions contained in PHerc 307 The second work is his On Providence preserved in PHerc 1038 and 1421 A third work most likely by Chrysippus is preserved in PHerc 1020 Gregory Hays Keeping Things Platonic A new discovery of a possible lost book by Apuleius on Plato review of Justin A Stover A New Work by Apuleius Times Literary Supplement 20 May 2016 p 29 Archived 2020 09 20 at the Wayback Machine Marino Carlo 21 May 2018 Lucius Anneus Seneca the Elder s Histories European News Agency Archived from the original on 25 May 2019 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Owen Jarus 7 February 2023 AI is deciphering a 2 000 year old lost book describing life after Alexander the Great livescience com Retrieved 10 January 2024 Further reading editArmstrong David 2011 Epicurean virtues Epicurean friendship Cicero vs the Herculaneum papyri In Fish Jeffrey Sanders Kirk R eds Epicurus and the Epicurean Tradition Cambridge University Press pp 105 128 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511921704 006 ISBN 978 0 521 19478 5 Blank David 1999 Reflections on Re reading Piaggio and the Early History of the Herculaneum Papyri Cronache Ercolanesi 29 55 82 Booras Steven W Seely David R 1999 Multispectral Imaging of the Herculaneum Papyri Cronache Ercolanesi 29 95 100 Houston George W 2013 Thenon Philodemusbookcollection in the Villa of the Papyri In Woolf Greg Konig Jason Oikonomopoulou Katerina eds Ancient Libraries Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 183 208 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511998386 014 ISBN 978 1 107 01256 1 Janko Richard 1992 Colloquium 8 Philodemus Resartus Progress in Reconstructing the Philosophical Papyri From Herculaneum 1 Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy 7 1 271 308 doi 10 1163 2213441791X00150 ISSN 2213 4417 Janko Richard Blank David 1998 Two New Manuscript Sources for the Texts of the Herculaneum Papyri Cronache Ercolanesi 28 173 184 Kleve Knut 1996 How to Read an Illegible Papyrus Towards an Edition of PHerc 78 Caecilius Statius Obolostates sive faenerator Cronache Ercolanesi 26 5 14 Seales W Brent Griffioen Jim Jacops David 2010 Virtual Conservation Experience with Micro CT and Manuscripts In Vahtikari Vesa Hakkarainen Mika Nurminen Antti eds EIKONOPOIIA Digital Imaging of Ancient Textual Heritage Proceedings of the International Conference Helsinki 28 29 November 2010 Commentationes Humanarum Litterarum Vol 129 Helsinki Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters ISBN 978 951 653 386 8 Sider David 2005 The Library of the Villa dei Papiri at Herculaneum Los Angeles Getty Publications ISBN 978 0 89236 799 3 Vassallo Christian 2021 The Presocratics at Herculaneum A Study of Early Greek Philosophy in the Epicurean Tradition With an Appendix on Diogenes of Oinoanda s Criticism of Presocratic Philosophy Studia Praesocratica Vol 11 De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110727661 ISBN 978 3 11 072766 1 Zarmakoupi Mantha ed 2011 The Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum Archaeology Reception and Digital Reconstruction De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110215434 ISBN 9783110203882 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Herculaneum papyri Out of the Ashes Recovering the Lost Library of Herculaneum documentary film distributed by Brigham Young University Wurzburg Center for Epicurean Studies including transcribed texts of many papyri Porter James I Hearing Voices The Herculaneum Papyri and Classical Scholarship UCLA Department of Classics The Philodemus Project Archived at the Wayback Machine on 25 August 2011 The Friends of Herculaneum Society An incomplete list of papyri from Herculaneum with high resolution photographs Archived 2014 07 15 at the Wayback Machine A Guide to Editions and Translations of the Principal Works Discovered at Herculaneum and Related Texts The Digital Restoration Initiative at the University of Kentucky Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herculaneum papyri amp oldid 1216418400, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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