Ancient Literacies

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

market transactions. We rely on more or less plausible inferences from


context, and not every context can be brought into sharp focus.


But although the particular activities of booksellers often elude us, we


can say something about them in the aggregate. At Rome it was possible


to purchase Greek books and Latin books, newly authored works


and established titles, recently copied manuscripts and antiquarian


ones, books written to order as well as books ready made, and by the


time of Martial, codices as well as bookrolls.^7 This range of offerings


implies that collectively, booksellers were able to organize a variety


of resources in terms of materials, bibliographic information, and produc-


tion techniques.


BOOKSHOPS IN THE ROMAN CITYSCAPE


As described by our informants, bookselling at Rome was a retail trade


carried on almost exclusively in indoor shops. In that respect, their experi-


ence may seem not so far removed from our own, at least until recently,
but some details bear thinking about. All evidence suggests that, unlike


baths or bars or food markets, Roman bookshops were not dispersed


throughout the city, but concentrated in and around the center. The places


in which books were sold are mentioned in about ten cases, and those


that can be mapped (see figure 11.1) lie immediately south of the central


forum on the Vicus Tuscus, or north and east of it, near Nerva’s Forum and


along the Argiletum and its cross street, the Vicus Sandaliarius, where


Galen says that ‘‘most’’ or ‘‘very many’’ bookshops were located in his day.^8


Like Galen in this instance, other sources indicate that a number of


bookshops operated in proximity to one another.^9



  1. (Some examples only) Greek authors: Strabo 13.1.54 [609], GalenLib. Propr.
    19.8 10, Ku ̈hn; Latin authors: Cat. 14.17 19, StatiusSilvae4.9.20; new titles: Hor.Epist.
    1.20, Quint.Epist. ad Tryph.; old titles: Sen.Ben. 7.6.1, Mart.Epigr. 14.194; new copies:
    Mart.Epigr. 1.66, 2.8.3 4; antiquarian (or perhaps pseudo antiquarian) editions: Gell.NA
    2.3.6, 18.5.11; books written to order: Cic.QFr. 3.4.5, Aug.Conf. 6.10.16; codices: Mart.
    Epigr. 1.2, 14.190. I cannot point to evidence that illustrated texts were also on sale in Roman
    shops. But because it required at least as much skill to illustrate a text as to write book hand,
    there can be little doubt that anyone who wanted a copy, say, of Varro’sHebdomadeswith its
    700 portraits of famous men (PlinyHNat. 35.11) would have had to acquire it from a shop.

  2. Bookshops on the Vicus Tuscus: Hor.Epist. 1.20.1 2 with Porphyrio’s note; on
    the opposite side of the Forum, near Nerva’s Forum and the Temple of Peace: Mart.Epigr.
    1.2.7 8; along the Argiletum: Mart.Epigr. 1.3.1, 1.117.9 12; the Vicus Sandaliarius: Gell.
    NA18.4.1, GalenLib. Propr. 19.8.4 Ku ̈hn. If a medieval subscription has been correctly
    emended by De Bruyne 1913, it attests a late antique book dealer not far from the Argiletum,
    near the church of St. Peter in Chains. The location of the Sigillaria, associated with book
    sales in three passages (Gell.NA2.3.5 and 5.4.1, Auson.Cento Nupt. pr.), remains unknown.
    For the sites, see SteinbyLTUR1: 125 6 (Argiletum), 4: 310 (Sigillaria), 5: 189 (Vicus
    Sandaliarius), and 5: 195 7 (Vicus Tuscus).

  3. Other texts implying the presence of several bookshops in proximity to one another
    are Cat. 55.4, Mart.Epigr. 1.3.1, and GelliusNA18.4.1. For the clustering of shops of a given


Bookshops in the Literary Culture of Rome 271

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