Navigating the Collection and HOLLIS

HOLLIS is Harvard’s library catalog.

To narrow a search to the holdings of the CHS, use the following 2 options:

  1. Enter terms in the search bar, then select “Library Catalog” and in the second drop down menu limit to the “Ctr Hellenic Studies.” Then click on the search icon (a magnifying glass). On the results page, use the menus along the right-hand margin to narrow your search. 
  2. The Advanced Search appears in the top banner next to the Hollis logo. To limit to CHS, select “Library Catalog” from the radio buttons and the search scope for locations will appear. Select “Ctr Hellenic Studies” and add your search term. 

Once you have located a call number, note the location in the CHS library (e.g., GENERAL, REFERENCE, FOLIO, OVERSIZE, PERIODICALS, RARE, OFF-SITE STORAGE) as this designation also determines a book’s location in the library.

Transliteration

Many Greek book titles in HOLLIS are transliterated using Roman characters. Please consult the following chart to understand how to type and read Greek titles in HOLLIS https://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/romanization/greek.pdf

Browsing

The only way to locate an individual title in a collection of ca. 76,000 volumes is to look it up in the library catalog. On the other hand, if you wish to browse the collection by, for example, an author, that too is doable as the library has open stacks and ancient authors are classified in alphabetical order in the PA call number section on the upstairs floor, followed by translations and commentaries and critical works. Do keep in mind that there are authors such as Aristotle who may not only be found in the PA section as a literary author but also as a writer of philosophy, zoology, physics, etc., i.e., to be comprehensive when browsing, you may need to check also other call number sections such as B, esp. B108-708, for (ancient) philosophy, QL for zoology, QC for physics, etc., on the downstairs floor of the library.   

Locating Materials by Call Number and Location

Upstairs, main floor: All regular size books with call numbers in the PA (classical languages and literatures) range. 

There are a few language dictionaries on the large table upstairs as well as the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World (Talbert) on the slanted map stand in the aisle by the windows for reference, not for check out.

Downstairs, one floor down: All other books, i.e., those with call numbers ranging from A through Z (with the exception of the PA’s). For those not familiar with the Library of Congress call no. system, here is a break down with further subdivisions: https://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/lcco/  

Also shelved downstairs are Folios (“smaller” oversize volumes) and Journals (the latter are in alphabetical order).

The Folios and Journals are located on compact (moving) shelves. Press the button to move to the left (to move forward in call number order) and to the right (to move backward in call number order).  

Reference and Language Dictionaries and Oversize Books

  • Also shelved downstairs are some language dictionaries and reference books along the wall by the large table. 
  • Located on large oversize horizontal shelves in a cabinet by the carrels are atlases, art and archaeology materials (with plates, maps, diagrams of excavations at Ephesus, Delos, Athens, Delphi, Lesbos, Bassae, Corinth, Olympia, etc., Attic vase paintings, Beazley, Knossos Fresco Atlas, Evans); 
  • manuscript facsimiles such as the Cairo Codex of Menander (P. Cair. J.43227) which contains large sections of papyri with the Girl from Samos, the Girl with the Shaven Head, and the Arbitration (the original manuscript is housed at the University of Egypt; the facsimile was produced at the Institute of Classical Studies, University of London, 1978);
  • and Aristotle’s Constitution of Athens (British Library Pap. 131), The facsimile was produced at the British Museum, 1891. Through papyrus reuse the manuscript and facsimile also contain parts of scholia for Callimachus’ Aetia and Demosthenes’ In Midiam
  • a facsimile from Leipzig, 1929, of the illuminated Codex Vaticanus Latinus 3868 of works by Terence (the original from the 9th century is held in the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana); 
  • a facsimile of Platonis Codex Parisinus A containing the last two tetralogies of Plato, including Timaeus, Critias, the Laws, and the Republic, and apocrypha; 
  • John Flaxman’s illustrations of scenes from the Iliad and the Odyssey, Hesiod’s Works and Days and the Theogony, and tragedies of Aeschylus. This edition is from Florence, 1826 (engraved drawings of the Iliad and the Odyssey by Tommaso Piroli based on Flaxman’s outline drawings were originally published in Rome, 1793; the Hesiod engravings based on Flaxman’s drawings were done by William Blake).  

Access to Rare Books

  • Rare books can be consulted only on the downstairs level of the library and by appointment only.
  • To search for rare books in the library catalog HOLLIS, limit your search to “Library Catalog” and to the “Ctr for Hellenic Studies,” then to publication years “1500-1800” in the Advanced Search module. 
  • The CHS library owns almost 300 rare book titles. Some highlights include a limited-edition facsimile of Homer’s Iliad referred to as Venetus A. The facsimile was printed in Leiden, A. W. Sijthoff, 1901, with a preface by Dominico Comparetti. The original manuscript (Codex Venetus A, Marcianus Graecus 454, now 822) from the 10th century is in the Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana in Venice, and is considered the most authoritative manuscript for the texts of the IliadLife of Homer, and the Epic Cycle (minus the Cypria) with scholia, most likely at least in part going back to the Alexandrian librarian and scholar Aristarchus (2nd c. BCE). The CHS digitized the manuscript at Marciana as part of the Homer Multitext Project;
  • Other rare book highlights include editions of a 1549 Galen (Janus Cornarius, translated it into Latin); 
  • a 1520 Lucan, note the effort to resemble a manuscript with vignette illuminations and texts with commentary around the text itself; 
  • a 1585 Tacitus, the printer Christophe Plantin (Plantinus) fled to Antwerp from Paris fearing being accused of heresy as printing texts not authorized by the Catholic Church could lend you in prison or worse; note also the printer’s device in the form of a compass and angels, and the motto “labore et constantia,” by work and steadiness, the life of a printer; 
  • a 1668 Arrian (translated from Greek into Latin by Nicholas Blancard); 
  • a 1618 Herodotus Book IX, Greek Latin parallel text, (Henri and Robert) Estienne-Stephanus (Robert fled Paris for Geneva); notice the passage highlighter throughout the text in the form of a hand with a pointing finger; also the printer’s device in the form of an olive tree (tree of knowledge), male figure possibly Paul the Apostle; other devices include an olive tree with a serpent coiling around, and the motto “noli altum sapere,” do not be high-minded – Robert Estienne left the Catholic Church for Protestantism; he also founded modern Latin lexicography, the TLL); 
  • a 1593 Isocrates (Greek and Latin parallel text, Estienne); 
  • a 1585 Epictetus (Plantin);
  • a 1549 Quintilian, printer Sebastian Gryphius (Sébastien Gryphe), Lyon, with a griffin on top of a winged globe as a printer’s mark; one of his collaborators in the print shop was burned at the stake for heresy.  

Self-Checkout

  • Scan the barcode on your Harvard or CHS ID, lining it up with the infrared light. Then scan the barcode on the back cover of the book you wish to check out. Fellows have a checkout period of one semester (their entire stay) and can keep books in their offices. They can check out books 24 hours a day, including on holidays. 
  • Special loans allowing fellows to check out books to their residences on campus may occasionally be granted by the chief librarian to prepare for an imminent talk, a publication deadline, or the like. 
  • Readers can keep checked out books on designated shelves in the library. The checkout period is the duration of their stay as indicated on the application form, but no longer than until the end of the academic year in May when all books must be checked in and reshelved. Library reader access is 9am-5pm M-F except for on holidays when the library is closed.
  • Both fellows and readers should try to limit their check-outs to one shelf at a time.

Check-in & Reshelving

  • On the touch screen self-checkout kiosk, you choose “return” and scan the barcode on the back of the book to check it in.
  • The library staff reshelves all items. Please place all checked-in books on the reshelving carts downstairs and upstairs in the library.

Missing Books & Book Purchase Recommendations

  • Please alert the library staff if you cannot locate a book. 
  • If you have recommendations for books to purchase that fit the profile of the CHS collection, please contact the chief librarian.  
The Mosaic Room in the library is named thus for obvious reasons. A huge mosaic, a triptych mural with the center panel depicting Herakles’ passage through the Strait of Gibraltar, and the two side panels featuring the Pillars of Herakles by American art deco artist Hildreth Meière, originally created for the Prudential Insurance Company, adorn one of the walls, also on the outside facing the inner courtyard. The side panels were renovated and installed at the CHS by a team led by Sicilian American artist Anthony Schiavo. The center panel is at the Newark Museum. There is a poster representing the center panel by the check-out kiosk on the upstairs floor of the library. 
https://chs.harvard.edu/artist-anthony-schiavo-and-the-center-for-hellenic-studies-meiere-mosaics/