A. G. Drachmann


Aage Gerhardt Drachmann was a Danish librarian and historian of science and technology, one of the 20th century's foremost experts on Ancient Greek and Roman mechanics.

Life and career

Drachmann was born in Copenhagen in 1891, the son of classicist and teacher Ellen Sophie Drachmann. He studied classical philology and English language and literature at the University of Copenhagen from 1909 to 1915.
Afterward, he took a job as a librarian at the Copenhagen University Library, for which he worked from 1917 until 1956. He spent nine months in 1926–1927 in the United States as a fellow of the American-Scandinavian Foundation, working in the John Crerar Library and the Library of Congress, and subsequently introduced some American library processes to Denmark, including photocopying. In 1943, he became chief librarian at the University Library. In 1948, he received a PhD studying ancient pneumatics. In 1956 he retired to focus full-time on research.
Drachmann was a lifelong bachelor.

Research and published work

Starting in the 1930s, Drachmann wrote scholarly papers, primarily on ancient technology, and papers on library science. From 1928–1949 he edited the Index Medicus Danicus, a card-index bibliography of Danish medical literature. In the 1950s he was an editor of Centaurus, in which many of his papers were also published. He was a member of several learned societies.
Drachmann's research focused on medicine, natural sciences and technology in antiquity. He wrote books on "pneumatic medicine", oil mills, ancient mechanics and Caesar's Rhine bridges, as well as several articles for the Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft and the Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
Drachmann's 1963 book Mechanical Technology of Greek and Roman Antiquity consisted of a critical translation and commentary on Hero of Alexandria's Mechanics, alongside study of other works by Hero, pseudo-Aristotle, Vitruvius, and Oribasius.
In mechanics, Drachmann's method combined careful textual analysis with practical mechanical experiments and constructions. His writing was characterized by an insightful but unpretentious and commonsense style.
In 1971 he received the Leonardo da Vinci Medal for his scholarship in the history of technology.
Drachmann also studied English literature, Danish folk tales and ornithology.

Selected bibliography

Ledetraad i Biblioteksarbejde for Ikke-Fagmænd. Copenhagen, 1931Ancient Oil Mills and Presses. Copenhagen, 1932Hvad var det for en Fugl? Copenhagen, 1938. Ktesibios, Philon and Heron: A Study in Ancient Pneumatics. Copenhagen, 1948 Dorothy L. Sayers som Dramatiker: Essayist og Æstetiker. Copenhagen, 1959Antikkens Teknik: Redskaber og Opfindelser i den græske og romerske Oldtid. Copenhagen, 1963
  • . Copenhagen/Madison, 1963Cæsars Bro over Rhinen. Copenhagen, 1965Grosse griechische Erfinder. Düsseldorf, 1967De Navngivne Sværd i Saga: Sagn og Folkevise. Copenhagen, 1967Hævnmotivet i Kiplings Fortællinger. 1969Lægæst og hans Guldhorn. 1972