According to
Johannes Tzetzes, the Mouseion was an institution founded by Ptolemy I Soter (c. 367 BC – c. 283 BC) in
Alexandria,
Egypt, though it is more likely that it took shape under
Ptolemy II Philadelphus (309–246 BC). As a community gathered together under the protection of the Muses, the Mouseion remained supported over the centuries by the
patronage of the royal family of the Ptolemies, and later by that of the
Roman emperors. Unlike the modern
museum in the sense that has developed since the
Renaissance, the Mouseion of Alexandria did not have a collection of sculpture and painting presented as works of art, as was assembled by the Ptolemies' rival
Attalus at the
Library of Pergamum. Instead, it was an institution of learning that attracted some of the best scholars of the
Hellenistic world, as
Germain Bazin puts it, "analogous to the modern
Institute for Advanced Study in
Princeton or to the
Collège de France in Paris." It is uncertain how many scholars lived in the Mouseion at any given time, as surviving reports are few and rather brief. Nonetheless, it appears that scholars and staff members were salaried by the State and paid no taxes. According to
Strabo, they also received free room and board, and free servants. In addition to Greek works, some foreign texts were translated from Egyptian, Assyrian, Persian,
Jewish, and other languages. According to this description, the Mouseion featured a roofed walkway, an arcade of seats, and a communal dining room where scholars routinely ate and shared ideas. However, it is unclear if the premises provided accommodations for anatomical research or astronomical observations. At a later date another smaller library was housed in the nearby
Serapeum (Temple of
Serapis), which may have been open to people other than Mouseion scholars.
Johannes Tzetzes and other Byzantine sources do not mention any further directors after him, albeit four obscure 'caretakers' are mentioned in an
Oxyrhynchus fragment, and an inscription from the 80s BC speaks of a certain Onesander of
Paphos being appointed to the Library. There are reports that, during the
Siege of Alexandria in 47 BC, parts of the library collection caught fire and were destroyed. Despite the fact that the Mouseion continued as an institution under Roman rule, it never regained its former glory. Emperor
Claudius added an additional building in the first century AD, and much later the emperor
Caracalla temporarily suspended Mouseion membership in 216 AD. The Brucheion, the complex of palaces and gardens that included the Mouseion, was probably destroyed by fire on the orders of Emperor
Aurelian in 272 AD, although it is not known with certainty how much of the original buildings existed at the time. Scattered references in later sources suggest that another comparable institution was established in the 4th century at a different location, but little is known about its organisation and it is unlikely to have had the resources of its predecessor. The mathematician
Theon of Alexandria (ca. 335 – ca. 405), father of the philosopher
Hypatia, is described in the 10th century
Suda as "the man from the Mouseion," but it is not clear what connection he actually had with it.
Zacharias Rhetor and
Aeneas of Gaza both speak of a physical space known as the "Mouseion" in the late 5th century. ==Legacy==