Khalid dies in 642; his replacement, 'Amr…
642 CE
Khalid dies in 642; his replacement, 'Amr ibn el-'As, compels the retreating Eastern Romans to surrender Alexandria.
Caliph Umar I is said to have ordered the destruction of the Library of Alexandria (or what remains of the original institution, which may be very little).
The entire collection of books (except for the works of Aristotle) stored at the library are removed and used as fuel to heat water for the city's public baths.
The conquerors supposedly follow the same rationale put forth during the 638 torching of the Sassanid royal library at Ctesiphon, roughly: “if the books herein are in accord with the Koran, they are unnecessary; if they are not in accord with the Koran, they are works of the infidel and are therefore lies.”
The victorious Muslims grant religious freedom to the city’s Christian community, and the Alexandrians quickly recall their exiled Monophysite patriarch to rule over them, subject only to the ultimate political authority of the conquerors.
The city will persist in such fashion as a religious community under an Arab Muslim domination more welcome and more tolerant than that of Constantinople.