June 19, 2007
More manuscript digitization
After a thousand years stuck on a dusty library shelf, the oldest copy of Homer's Iliad is about to go into digital circulation.Perhaps best of all:A team of scholars traveled to a medieval library in Venice to create an ultra-precise 3-D copy of the ancient manuscript -- complete with every wrinkle, rip and imperfection -- using a laser scanner mounted on a robot arm. . .
The Venetus A is the oldest existing copy of Homer's Iliad and the primary source for all modern editions of the poem. It lives in Venice at the ancient Public Library of St. Mark. It is easily damaged. Few people have seen it. The last photographic copy was made in 1901.
A high-resolution, 3-D copy of the entire 645-page parchment book, plus a searchable transcription, will be made available online under a Creative Commons license.Full story here. More on the manuscript (aka codex Marcianus Graecus 454) here.
Posted by David on June 19, 2007 4:02 PM
That is incredible!
One of the problems with antique books and manuscripts is their longevity.
This one has defied the odds and survived this long. However, it is now guarenteed that it will survive in some capacity even if the orginal(we hope not) disintegrates to dust.
Posted by: Circe on June 21, 2007 1:28 PM