28 July 2009

Cat Scan to the Past!


This economist piece shows how technology is helping to reintegrate little pieces of the world's OLDEST bible. Money quote:

Through a number of odd historical circumstances, the constituent parts of the world’s oldest manuscript of the Bible—usually dated to the mid-fourth century—are located in four different places. They are the British Library in London, the University Library in Leipzig, the National Library of Russia in St Petersburg and the ancient monastery of St Catherine’s on the slopes of Mount Sinai, the Bible’s original home.

But as of this month, the manuscript has been “reunited” in cyberspace, thanks to a joint effort by the four institutions. The monastery agreed to collaborate only after making clear that by doing so it was not compromising its claim to be the moral owner of the whole text, known as the Codex Sinaiticus; all sides agreed to investigate the recent history of the text more deeply. So now anybody can read a more or less intact manuscript, complete with selected translation and commentary, on a website (www.codexsinaiticus.org) which has already proved hugely popular—and hence is a little slow.


Some time back, the WSJ featured some of the new research being done super important sources for history. Here is the multimedia and the article.

What's most fascinating is how some scholars are using MRI technology to digitally unravel scriptural scrolls that have shrunk and withered like an old cigar. How much knowledge of history is beyond our ability to reconstruct it? How much can we revive?



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