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the place where books had been originally stored could be the sacristy room
located at the east end of
the south aisle, where the original simple niches preserved in the walls could have been used for scrolls
and codices. Similar niches exist in the walls of the Church’s present oil storeroom in the north aisle.
The original form of these rooms has been identified and reconstructed graphically.
After the Arab conquest of the Sinai Peninsula in the 7
th
c., all the manuscripts belonging to
the numerous permanently abandoned hermitages in the surrounding mountains were gradually
gathered in the fortified enclosure of the monastery and this might had been a turning point to the
increase of the number of volumes in the library and to find additional storage space.
Apart from the monastery’s main Church there is strong possibility that books were stored
also in the
central pre-Justinian tower, which was totally incorporated to the needs and life of
the monastery from the very beginning of its foundation. Following the strong tradition of the
“tower-keep” found in the other monasteries in Egypt, it is most likely that valuable objects of the
community including the manuscripts were kept in the upper floors. This tradition survived until
the 20
th
century and books were safely kept in rooms related to the Abbot’s lodgings.
In the lower levels of the tower of St. George, which is preserved attached to the middle of the
north wall of the
fortress, there are some small medieval rooms that housed for a long period part
of the library. These are raised about one floor over ground level. Their access was through a set
of rooms and the chapel of Sts Apostles that were built between the Church and the fortress wall
demolished during the early 20
th
century. The early dating of the rooms’ structure, which is one
of the main construction phases of the tower, is supported by later graffiti dated in the early 16
th
century. The rooms preserve their original plasters on the walls and
were furnished with poorly
made bookshelves using simple planks, reeds and clay. These rooms could be dated back to the
repair of the tower that followed the 13
th
century (1201) strong earthquake. The earliest known
account for a Library inside the tower of St. George could possibly be that of Michael Eneman from
Uppsala in 1712 who recorded “books stacked one above the other” in a “room along the wall and
near to the main monastery’s Church”.
It seems that this extraordinary place had been a secondary library or a crypt for books, an
extension to the stores of the nearby Church until 1734. It was this year when the knowledgeable
Archbishop Nikephoros Marthalis and his bookkeeper monk Isaias
collected and organized all
the scattered books and housed them in a purposely built Library with the help of monk-masons
Philotheos and Symeon. These new rooms were located at the south side of the Monastery, next to
the chapel of St. Antony. After this it seems that the rooms in the tower of St. George were reserved
to store only worn books that were no longer in use, loose folios from manuscripts, for instance
those of Codex Sinaiticus, and parchment fragments meant for the repair of manuscripts.
Nevertheless, the destruction of the tower of St. George during the great flood of 1798 caused
the fall of debris from the earthen floors and terrace of the chapel of St. George into the interior
of the library rooms and the “burial” of their contents. The tower was
extensively reconstructed
in 1801 by the monastery, assisted by Napoleon’s engineer Kleber and the original use of the place
forgotten. After the disastrous fire during Νοvember 1971 and the excavation that followed in 1975
the valuable remains of the old library were revealed and are known today to the scholarly world as
the “New Finds”.