History of Classical Scholarship
The history of how Greek and Latin texts have been studied, edited, and interpreted, from the Alexandrian scholars through Renaissance humanism to the modern discipline of philology.
Definition
The study of the history of classical philology and scholarship, including its scholars, methods, and institutions from antiquity to the present.
Scope
This topic covers the development of classical scholarship: the editorial and grammatical work of the Alexandrian librarians, Byzantine learning, Renaissance humanist recovery and criticism of texts, and the professionalization of philology in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It treats the methods, institutions, and major scholars who shaped how the classics are read.
Core questions
- How did scholarly study of texts begin with the Alexandrian librarians?
- How did Renaissance humanists recover and criticize classical texts?
- How did philology become a professional academic discipline?
- How have scholarly methods and assumptions changed over time?
Key theories
- Origins of philology in Alexandria
- Rudolf Pfeiffer's account of how systematic editing, lexicography, and grammatical scholarship originated with the librarians and scholars of Hellenistic Alexandria.
- Humanist scholarly traditions
- Anthony Grafton's analysis of how Renaissance and early modern humanists developed and contested techniques of textual and historical criticism.
History
Classical scholarship began in Hellenistic Alexandria with the editing and cataloguing of Greek literature, continued through Byzantine and Arabic transmission, and was transformed by Renaissance humanists who recovered manuscripts and refined textual and historical criticism. In the German universities of the nineteenth century, figures such as Wilamowitz established Altertumswissenschaft as a comprehensive science of antiquity.
Debates
- The aims and scope of philology
- Scholars have long debated whether classical philology should be narrowly textual or a comprehensive science of antiquity embracing history, archaeology, and culture, a debate crystallized in nineteenth-century Germany.
Key figures
- Rudolf Pfeiffer
- John Edwin Sandys
- Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff
- Anthony Grafton
Related topics
Seminal works
- pfeiffer1968
- wilamowitz1982
- grafton1991
Frequently asked questions
- Where did classical scholarship begin?
- Systematic scholarship on Greek texts began at the Library of Alexandria in the Hellenistic period, where scholars edited, catalogued, and commented on the literary heritage.
- What is Altertumswissenschaft?
- Altertumswissenschaft is the German conception of classical studies as a unified science of antiquity, integrating philology with history, archaeology, and the study of ancient culture.