Across
- 2. A scholar who visited Alexandria long after the fire of 48 BC.
- 3. The act of combining both passages to create a full understanding of the event.
- 8. The island where Caesar was forced to retreat and jump into the sea.
- 10. The new capital that shifted the Empire's focus away from Egypt.
- 12. Organic material that rotted quickly in Egypt’s humid environment.
- 13. The author’s attitude toward the subject, such as the analytical style of Passage B.
- 15. These were carried by the wind from burning ships to the city docks.
- 17. The "glittering jewel of the Mediterranean" where the siege took place.
- 18. A comparison; Passage B compares knowledge loss to a "single explosion."
- 19. Records or people that belong to the same time period as the event.
- 20. The small force of Roman soldiers Caesar led during the siege.
- 23. An economic factor in the Roman Empire that led to library budget cuts.
- 24. Professionals hired to copy books before the original materials rotted.
Down
- 1. The organizational structure used in Passage A to tell Caesar’s story.
- 4. A compelling story; Passage B calls the "single fire" theory this.
- 5. Term used for a text modified from an original source, like Plutarch’s.
- 6. The institution that housed the library and lost its funding over time.
- 7. The sister-regnant involved in a power struggle with Ptolemy XIII.
- 9. Tens of thousands of these ancient "books" were reportedly lost to fire.
- 11. Caesar held these above the water to ensure his writings weren't spoiled.
- 14. The main point of a text; in Passage B, it is that neglect destroyed the library.
- 16. A naval maneuver used by the Egyptians to trap Caesar's fleet.
- 21. Facts or data, like archaeological finds, used to support a claim.
- 22. Passage B describes the library’s end as a "slow, silent" process of this.
