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Cambridge University Library

Cambridge University Library is the main research library of the University of Cambridge. It is the largest of the over 100 libraries within the university.[1] The Library is a major scholarly resource for the members of the University of Cambridge and external researchers. It is often referred to within the university as the UL.[2] Thirty three faculty and departmental libraries are associated with the University Library for the purpose of central governance and administration, forming "Cambridge University Libraries".

Cambridge University Library
Cambridge University Library
CountryEngland
TypeAcademic library
EstablishedBefore 1416
LocationWest Road, Cambridge
Coordinates52°12′18.6″N 0°6′29″E / 52.205167°N 0.10806°E / 52.205167; 0.10806Coordinates: 52°12′18.6″N 0°6′29″E / 52.205167°N 0.10806°E / 52.205167; 0.10806
Collection
Items collected
Size9,000,000 items (approx.)
Legal depositYes
Access and use
Population servedUniversity of Cambridge, and others
MembersUniversity of Cambridge (and some other groups on application)
Other information
DirectorJessica Gardner
Websitewww.lib.cam.ac.uk
Map

Cambridge University Library is one of the six legal deposit libraries under UK law.[3] The Library holds approximately 9 million items (including maps and sheet music) and, through legal deposit, purchase and donation it receives around 100,000 items every year. The University Library is unique among the legal deposit libraries in keeping a large proportion of its material on open access and in allowing some categories of reader to borrow from its collections.

Its original location was the Old Schools near the Senate House until it outgrew the space there and a new library building was constructed in the 1930s. The library took over the site of a former military hospital on the western side of Cambridge city centre, now between Robinson College and the Memorial Court of Clare College. The current building, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott, opened in 1934. The librarian, Jessica Gardner, is the second woman to hold this office.[4]

History

The first library

 
Construction of the main UL building in the 1930s

By the middle of the fourteenth century, the University of Cambridge owned a collection of books. These would have been kept in chests along with other valuables, rather than in a library building as would be recognised today.[5]

A common university library can be traced to the beginning of the 15th century, with the first direct reference to a 'library'. In March 1416 the will of William Loring was proved, which bequeathed three volumes to the library thus: "Item volo quod omnes libri mei juris civilis remaneant in communi libraria scolarium universitatis Cantebrigg' in perpetuum." In the second decade of the fifteenth century, the library found a home on the newly built Old Schools site.

The earliest catalogue is dated ca. 1424, at which time there were 122 volumes in the library.[6] The second earliest surviving catalogue was drawn up in 1473, and denotes 330 volumes. During the English Reformation, while there doesn't seem to be evidence of very widespread book destruction (like at Oxford), some books were certainly destroyed, and there were very few donations university-wide. King's College received only one bequest between 1528 and 1568.[7] From the 16th century, the library received generous donations or bequests of books and growth was considerably increased once the privilege of legal deposit had been granted.

The library's space was greatly extended with the building of the Cockerell Building on Senate House Passage in 1837–42.

The new library

Following an initiative by A. F. Scholfield (librarian from 1923 to 1949), it was decided to build a larger facility. The site selected comprised the 8 acres (3.2 ha) joint cricket field of King's and Clare Colleges. During the First World War, a large part of the site had been requisitioned by the War Office to create the 1st Eastern General Hospital, a facility for the Royal Army Medical Corps to treat military casualties.[8] The hospital had 1,700 beds at its height and treated some 70,000 casualties between 1914 and 1919.[9]

The new University Library building was designed by Giles Gilbert Scott, who also designed the neighbouring Clare Memorial Court (part of Clare College), and was constructed between 1931 and 1934. It is a Grade II listed building.[10] Inside are a number of 17th and 18th century bookcases including the ones designed for the old University Library by James Essex in 1731–34.[11] The funds for the new library were raised by the colleges and private donors. The American philanthropist John D. Rockefeller provided the largest part of the funds for the library's construction. Sensing that it needed a grander entrance, Rockefeller persuaded the architect to add the distinctive front-facing tower.[12] The tower can be seen for several miles around Cambridge.[12]

The building bears a resemblance to Scott's industrial architecture, including Bankside Power Station (now Tate Modern). The library tower stands 157 feet (48 m) tall, 6 feet (1.8 m) shorter than the top of St John's College Chapel and 10 feet (3.0 m) taller than the peak of King's College Chapel. Supposedly, in opening the building, Neville Chamberlain referred to it as "this magnificent erection": contrary to popular belief, pornographic material is not stored in the tower.[13]

The library has been extended several times through ground annexes and underground extensions which allowed for new legal deposit documents to be stored. The main building houses the Japanese and Chinese collections in the Aoi Pavilion, an extension donated by Tadao Aoi and opened in 1998.

The University Library has also built a large storage facility in Ely which has more than 100 kilometres of shelving for future legal deposit books and periodicals. Work on a £17.1 million off-site facility to house the growing collection finished in 2018 and provides Cambridge University with one of the largest library storage buildings in the world.[14]

Legal deposit library

Cambridge University Library is one of the six legal deposit libraries under UK law, the others being the British Library, the National Library of Scotland, the National Library of Wales, the Bodleian Libraries, Oxford, and the Library of Trinity College, Dublin.[3] Although the Irish Free State left the UK in 1922, Trinity College Dublin remains a UK deposit library and the UK libraries reciprocally retain deposit rights for Irish publications.[15][16] As a legal deposit library, the University Library is entitled to claim without charge a copy of all books, journals, printed maps and music published in the United Kingdom and Ireland. This has contributed to the library's large holdings of over seven million books and 1.5 million periodicals. Between 800 and 1200 books a week are received through legal deposit.

From 6 April 2013, legal deposit also covers material published digitally and online, so that the Legal Deposit libraries can provide a national archive of the UK's non-print published material, such as websites, blogs and ejournals. Significant digitisation efforts continue as more manuscripts and early-modern books are acquired and scanned by the University of Cambridge.

 
The University Library (background) and Trinity College's Wren Library (foreground), as viewed from St John's College chapel tower

Access

The library is open to all members of the University of Cambridge. As is traditional among British university libraries, postgraduates and academics from other UK universities are allowed reference-only access to the library's collection, and members of the public may apply for access to use the Library for reference if their research requires access to materials held there. Students and academics from other libraries and institutions must submit a request to access prior to using the facilities in Cambridge.

The library is unique among the UK's legal deposit libraries in keeping a large proportion of its books on open access and in allowing some categories of reader (for example Cambridge academics, postgraduates and undergraduates) to borrow from its collection. It has a Tea Room in which meals, snacks and beverages are available. The library regularly puts on exhibitions, free to the public, and featuring items from its collections.

Janus

In 2002, the library began a special project termed Janus (after the Roman god) to provide a single point of networked access to catalogues of archives and manuscript collections held throughout Cambridge. This is a major development for the Cambridge Universities Libraries, especially because Cambridge is home to more than 100 libraries and research institutes, each with their own mandate and organisational structure. A widening number of participating repositories, both University and non-University, are working together to provide comprehensive coverage of archives in the city and surrounding area. Janus can be accessed by students and members of university both online and in-person.[17]

Digitisation project

 
Newton's personal copy of the first edition of Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, annotated by him for the second edition. Displayed at the library

In June 2010, Cambridge University announced that a £1.5 million donation would allow them to start digitising some of the collections in the University Library and eventually provide access to them free of charge over the Internet via the Cambridge Digital Library website. Initially the project will focus on two collections called "The Foundations of Faith" and "The Foundations of Science", which includes writings by Isaac Newton and his contemporaries, as well as documents from the Library's archives of Christian, Islamic and Jewish texts.

Friends of the Cambridge University Library

The Friends of the Cambridge University Library was established by a group of individuals, organisations and private donors who are committed to supporting the growth and development of the library. Members of the Friends regularly raise funds for future construction projects and archival restoration efforts, as well as the acquisition and purchase of rare books or manuscripts. Membership in the group is open to all alumni and members of the public interested in the preservation of knowledge and literature. Special events and tours are organised to recognise the contribution of the membership. The Friends of the Cambridge University Library has raised more than £150,000 through regular and special donations over the past five years.[18]

Staff

 
12th-century manuscript of the Dover Bible, in the Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.

The official office of Librarian of the university was not established until 1577, when William James was appointed Librarian. The first set of regulations "for the Office of keeping the Library" were then formed in 1582.[19] Little is known of the administration before the late sixteenth century. Before 1577, the University Chaplain had overall responsibility of the Library among other duties. Sixteen potential Chaplain-Librarians have been identified.[19]

In 1721 the post of Principal Librarian (Protobibliothecarius) was created for Conyers Middleton "as a mark of sympathy with him in his opposition to Richard Bentley".[20] In 1828 this post was merged with that of Librarian (Bibliothecarius).

Various scholars have held the position. Abraham Wheelocke was librarian of the "Public Library" at Cambridge University, and was also Reader in Anglo-Saxon in the 17th century. Augustus Theodore Bartholomew was a librarian at Cambridge University for over twenty-five years. The classicist A. F. Scholfield was Librarian from 1923 to 1949. More recent University Librarians have included E. B. Ceadel, F. W. Ratcliffe (1980–94), Peter Fox (1994–2009) and Anne Jarvis (2009–16). Other notable members of staff include the bibliographer Henry Bradshaw and the Uranian poet Charles Edward Sayle, author of a history of the library.

The current librarian is Jessica Gardner.[21] She joined the library in April 2017, becoming the 36th University Librarian.

Exhibitions

The main University Library hosts exhibitions in its purpose-built Milstein Exhibition Centre. These change approximately every six to eight months and are open to all. Recent exhibitions have highlighted Cambridge's significant collection of documents from the Cairo Genizah, the landscape and geology of the English Fenlands, and the architectural history of the Cambridge University. The exhibitions are sponsored by the Cambridge University Library and are organised by the team of librarians and leading academics in the field. Entry to the exhibitions is always free and open to the general public.

Special collections

 
Interior of the main reading room
 
Bronze book bollard by Harry Gray in front of Library

As part of its collection[22] of more than 8,000,000 volumes, the library contains a wealth of printed and manuscript material from earlier times. This includes:

  • A copy of the Gutenberg Bible from 1455, the earliest European example of a book produced using movable type.
  • Library of Lord Acton, Catholic historian and Regius Professor of Modern History in 1885–1902. The extensive library (around 60 000 volumes) collected by Lord Acton for research was bequeathed to the University Library on his death. The collection contains books from the 15th to 19th centuries, with emphasis on European history and church history. Many of the books contain annotations in Lord Acton's own hand.
  • An archive of Charles Darwin's correspondence and books from his working library (including copies of his own works). In November 2020, the library announced that two of Darwin's notebooks had been lost, probably stolen, around December 2000.[23] They were returned anonymously in 2022.[24]
  • The Hanson collection, containing important books on navigation and shipbuilding, as well as maritime atlases, some dating from the 16th century.
  • The Bradshaw collection, containing more than 14 000 books relating to Ireland, printed in Ireland, or written by Irish authors. This is one of the most important collections of its kind in the world. The collection was formed by Henry Bradshaw, d. 1886. At present, the emphasis is on books printed in Ireland before 1850.[25]
  • The library of the typographer Stanley Morison, who had close links with Cambridge University Press.
  • "The Royal Library", an important collection of more than 30 000 books assembled by John Moore (1646–1714), Bishop of Ely. The collection was bequeathed to the University Library by George I in 1715, hence the name.
  • The library of the Royal Commonwealth Society, containing books, periodicals, pamphlets, photographs and manuscripts relating to the British Empire and the Commonwealth.
  • South Asian, Southeast Asian and Tibetan collections.
  • The Bible Society library and the library of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK).
  • The Taylor-Schechter Genizah Collection, a store of 140 000 manuscripts and manuscript fragments, mainly in Hebrew and Arabic, from the Ben Ezra synagogue in Cairo.
  • Codex Bezae Cantabrigiensis, an important codex of the New Testament dating from the fifth century, written both in Greek and Latin. The Greek text is unique, with many interpolations found nowhere else. It was given to the University of Cambridge by the Protestant scholar Theodore Beza, friend and successor of Calvin; hence the name.
  • Codex Zacynthius, a Greek New Testament codex dated paleographically to the 6th century CE.
  • The Cambridge Songs (Carmina Cantabrigiensia), a collection of Goliardic medieval Latin poems, preserved on ten leaves of the Codex Cantabrigiensis.
  • E.G. Browne's collection of around 480 codices in Arabic, Persian and Turkish.
  • Several composer archives: William Alwyn, Arthur Bliss, Roberto Gerhard, Peter Tranchell.
  • Papers of Isaac Newton, Lord Kelvin, Ernest Rutherford, George Gabriel Stokes, Joseph Needham, G. E. Moore and Siegfried Sassoon, among others.
  • Archives of the Royal Greenwich Observatory.
  • Material and archives of the University of Cambridge, from probates and graces to records of various student societies.
  • Around 1.5 million maps.

Cultural references

 
Cambridge University Library

See also

References

  1. ^ "Facilities and resources | Undergraduate Study". www.undergraduate.study.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  2. ^ For example, the Twitter account is the UL
  3. ^ Harper, Francesca (9 December 2016). "Cambridge welcomes Dr Jessica Gardner as new University Librarian". www.lib.cam.ac.uk.
  4. ^ "History of Cambridge University Library | Cambridge University Library". www.lib.cam.ac.uk. 5 March 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  5. ^ Higgins, Hannah. The Grid Book. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2009. p.180. ISBN 978-0-262-51240-4
  6. ^ Oates, J. C. T. (1962). "The Cambridge University Library: 1400-1600". The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy. 32 (4): 270–286. doi:10.1086/619053. ISSN 0024-2519. JSTOR 4305285. S2CID 144221637.
  7. ^ "From the Front to the Backs: Story of the First Eastern Hospital". University of Cambridge. 1 July 2014. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 July 2019. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  9. ^ Historic England. "University Library (Grade II) (1126281)". National Heritage List for England.
  10. ^ Historic England, "University Library (1126281)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 29 March 2017
  11. ^ a b c Gardner, Jessica (1 May 2018). "The mysterious Cambridge library tower, supposedly full of banned books, is opening to the public". The Independent. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
  12. ^ a b Apperly, Eliza. "Nothing racy in 'tower of porn'". Varsity. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  13. ^ Savva, Anna (3 April 2017). "Cambridge University Library has run out of space for all its books and manuscripts". Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  14. ^ "Committee on Finance. – Copyright Bill, 1962—Committee Stage". Dáil Éireann Debate. 14 February 1963. pp. Vol.199 No.11 p.9 cc.1475–6. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
  15. ^ "Legal Deposit". The Library of Trinity College Dublin. Trinity College Dublin. 10 June 2016. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
  16. ^ About Janus, Cambridge University Library
  17. ^ Waldoch, Laura (16 December 2014). "Friends of the Library". www.lib.cam.ac.uk.
  18. ^ a b Oates, J. C. T. (1986). Cambridge University Library: a history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 491. ISBN 0-521-30656-6.
  19. ^ "Protobibliothecarius". Janus. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  20. ^ "Cambridge welcomes Dr Jessica Gardner as new University Librarian". 9 December 2016.
  21. ^ . www.lib.cam.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 15 September 2008. Retrieved 27 November 2005.
  22. ^ "Charles Darwin: Notebooks worth millions lost for 20 years". BBC News. 24 November 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  23. ^ Jones, Rebecca (5 April 2022). "'Stolen' Charles Darwin notebooks left on library floor in pink gift bag". BBC News. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
  24. ^ Sayle, Charles (1916) A Catalogue of the Bradshaw Collection of Irish Books in the University Library, Cambridge. 3 vols. Cambridge: Printed for the University Library

Bibliography

  • Alston, R. C. (winter 1989) "Cambridge University Library", in: Research Libraries in OCLC; no. 89, pp. 2-8
  • Bradshaw, Henry (1889) Collected Papers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Textus
  • Fox, Peter (ed.) (1998) Cambridge University Library: the Great Collections. Cambridge University Press ISBN 0-521-62636-6 (Paperback ISBN 0-521-62647-1).
  • Oates, J. C. T., & McKitterick, D. (1986) Cambridge University Library: a History 2 vols.
    • Oates, J. C. T. Cambridge University Library: a History; [Vol. 1]: From the beginnings to the Copyright Act of Queen Anne. Cambridge: University Press ISBN 0-521-30656-6
    • McKitterick, David Cambridge University Library: a History; [Vol. 2]: the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Cambridge: University Press ISBN 0-521-30655-8
  • Ratcliffe, F. W. (2007) Books, Books, Just Miles and Miles of Books: across the library counter, 1950–2000. Cambridge: F. W. Ratcliffe (autobiography)
  • Sayle, Charles (1916) Annals of Cambridge University Library 1278–1900. Cambridge: University Library

Descriptions of collections

  • Oates, J. C. T. (1954) A Catalogue of the Fifteenth-Century Printed Books in the University Library, Cambridge. Reissued: Cambridge: Cambridge University Press ISBN 978-1-108-00848-8 Extracts
  • Reif, Stefan C. (1997) Hebrew Manuscripts at Cambridge University Library: a description and introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press ISBN 978-0-521-58339-8 Extracts
  • Wade, Thomas Francis; Cambridge University Library (1898). A catalog of the Wade collection of Chinese and Manchu books in the library of the University of Cambridge. Compiled by Herbert Allen Giles. University Press.
  • Cambridge University Library (1898). A Catalogue of the Collection of Chinese and Manchu Books Given to the University of Cambridge. The University Press.

External links

  • Cambridge University Library website
  • Cambridge Digital Library
  • Photographs taken during building

cambridge, university, library, main, research, library, university, cambridge, largest, over, libraries, within, university, library, major, scholarly, resource, members, university, cambridge, external, researchers, often, referred, within, university, thirt. Cambridge University Library is the main research library of the University of Cambridge It is the largest of the over 100 libraries within the university 1 The Library is a major scholarly resource for the members of the University of Cambridge and external researchers It is often referred to within the university as the UL 2 Thirty three faculty and departmental libraries are associated with the University Library for the purpose of central governance and administration forming Cambridge University Libraries Cambridge University LibraryCambridge University LibraryCountryEnglandTypeAcademic libraryEstablishedBefore 1416LocationWest Road CambridgeCoordinates52 12 18 6 N 0 6 29 E 52 205167 N 0 10806 E 52 205167 0 10806 Coordinates 52 12 18 6 N 0 6 29 E 52 205167 N 0 10806 E 52 205167 0 10806CollectionItems collectedbooks journals newspapers magazines sound and music recordings maps prints drawings manuscriptsSize9 000 000 items approx Legal depositYesAccess and usePopulation servedUniversity of Cambridge and othersMembersUniversity of Cambridge and some other groups on application Other informationDirectorJessica GardnerWebsitewww wbr lib wbr cam wbr ac wbr ukMapCambridge University Library is one of the six legal deposit libraries under UK law 3 The Library holds approximately 9 million items including maps and sheet music and through legal deposit purchase and donation it receives around 100 000 items every year The University Library is unique among the legal deposit libraries in keeping a large proportion of its material on open access and in allowing some categories of reader to borrow from its collections Its original location was the Old Schools near the Senate House until it outgrew the space there and a new library building was constructed in the 1930s The library took over the site of a former military hospital on the western side of Cambridge city centre now between Robinson College and the Memorial Court of Clare College The current building designed by Giles Gilbert Scott opened in 1934 The librarian Jessica Gardner is the second woman to hold this office 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 The first library 1 2 The new library 2 Legal deposit library 3 Access 4 Janus 5 Digitisation project 6 Friends of the Cambridge University Library 7 Staff 8 Exhibitions 9 Special collections 10 Cultural references 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 13 1 Descriptions of collections 14 External linksHistory EditThe first library Edit Construction of the main UL building in the 1930s By the middle of the fourteenth century the University of Cambridge owned a collection of books These would have been kept in chests along with other valuables rather than in a library building as would be recognised today 5 A common university library can be traced to the beginning of the 15th century with the first direct reference to a library In March 1416 the will of William Loring was proved which bequeathed three volumes to the library thus Item volo quod omnes libri mei juris civilis remaneant in communi libraria scolarium universitatis Cantebrigg in perpetuum In the second decade of the fifteenth century the library found a home on the newly built Old Schools site The earliest catalogue is dated ca 1424 at which time there were 122 volumes in the library 6 The second earliest surviving catalogue was drawn up in 1473 and denotes 330 volumes During the English Reformation while there doesn t seem to be evidence of very widespread book destruction like at Oxford some books were certainly destroyed and there were very few donations university wide King s College received only one bequest between 1528 and 1568 7 From the 16th century the library received generous donations or bequests of books and growth was considerably increased once the privilege of legal deposit had been granted The library s space was greatly extended with the building of the Cockerell Building on Senate House Passage in 1837 42 The new library Edit Following an initiative by A F Scholfield librarian from 1923 to 1949 it was decided to build a larger facility The site selected comprised the 8 acres 3 2 ha joint cricket field of King s and Clare Colleges During the First World War a large part of the site had been requisitioned by the War Office to create the 1st Eastern General Hospital a facility for the Royal Army Medical Corps to treat military casualties 8 The hospital had 1 700 beds at its height and treated some 70 000 casualties between 1914 and 1919 9 The new University Library building was designed by Giles Gilbert Scott who also designed the neighbouring Clare Memorial Court part of Clare College and was constructed between 1931 and 1934 It is a Grade II listed building 10 Inside are a number of 17th and 18th century bookcases including the ones designed for the old University Library by James Essex in 1731 34 11 The funds for the new library were raised by the colleges and private donors The American philanthropist John D Rockefeller provided the largest part of the funds for the library s construction Sensing that it needed a grander entrance Rockefeller persuaded the architect to add the distinctive front facing tower 12 The tower can be seen for several miles around Cambridge 12 The building bears a resemblance to Scott s industrial architecture including Bankside Power Station now Tate Modern The library tower stands 157 feet 48 m tall 6 feet 1 8 m shorter than the top of St John s College Chapel and 10 feet 3 0 m taller than the peak of King s College Chapel Supposedly in opening the building Neville Chamberlain referred to it as this magnificent erection contrary to popular belief pornographic material is not stored in the tower 13 The library has been extended several times through ground annexes and underground extensions which allowed for new legal deposit documents to be stored The main building houses the Japanese and Chinese collections in the Aoi Pavilion an extension donated by Tadao Aoi and opened in 1998 The University Library has also built a large storage facility in Ely which has more than 100 kilometres of shelving for future legal deposit books and periodicals Work on a 17 1 million off site facility to house the growing collection finished in 2018 and provides Cambridge University with one of the largest library storage buildings in the world 14 Legal deposit library EditCambridge University Library is one of the six legal deposit libraries under UK law the others being the British Library the National Library of Scotland the National Library of Wales the Bodleian Libraries Oxford and the Library of Trinity College Dublin 3 Although the Irish Free State left the UK in 1922 Trinity College Dublin remains a UK deposit library and the UK libraries reciprocally retain deposit rights for Irish publications 15 16 As a legal deposit library the University Library is entitled to claim without charge a copy of all books journals printed maps and music published in the United Kingdom and Ireland This has contributed to the library s large holdings of over seven million books and 1 5 million periodicals Between 800 and 1200 books a week are received through legal deposit From 6 April 2013 legal deposit also covers material published digitally and online so that the Legal Deposit libraries can provide a national archive of the UK s non print published material such as websites blogs and ejournals Significant digitisation efforts continue as more manuscripts and early modern books are acquired and scanned by the University of Cambridge The University Library background and Trinity College s Wren Library foreground as viewed from St John s College chapel towerAccess EditThe library is open to all members of the University of Cambridge As is traditional among British university libraries postgraduates and academics from other UK universities are allowed reference only access to the library s collection and members of the public may apply for access to use the Library for reference if their research requires access to materials held there Students and academics from other libraries and institutions must submit a request to access prior to using the facilities in Cambridge The library is unique among the UK s legal deposit libraries in keeping a large proportion of its books on open access and in allowing some categories of reader for example Cambridge academics postgraduates and undergraduates to borrow from its collection It has a Tea Room in which meals snacks and beverages are available The library regularly puts on exhibitions free to the public and featuring items from its collections Janus EditIn 2002 the library began a special project termed Janus after the Roman god to provide a single point of networked access to catalogues of archives and manuscript collections held throughout Cambridge This is a major development for the Cambridge Universities Libraries especially because Cambridge is home to more than 100 libraries and research institutes each with their own mandate and organisational structure A widening number of participating repositories both University and non University are working together to provide comprehensive coverage of archives in the city and surrounding area Janus can be accessed by students and members of university both online and in person 17 Digitisation project Edit Newton s personal copy of the first edition of Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica annotated by him for the second edition Displayed at the library In June 2010 Cambridge University announced that a 1 5 million donation would allow them to start digitising some of the collections in the University Library and eventually provide access to them free of charge over the Internet via the Cambridge Digital Library website Initially the project will focus on two collections called The Foundations of Faith and The Foundations of Science which includes writings by Isaac Newton and his contemporaries as well as documents from the Library s archives of Christian Islamic and Jewish texts Friends of the Cambridge University Library EditThe Friends of the Cambridge University Library was established by a group of individuals organisations and private donors who are committed to supporting the growth and development of the library Members of the Friends regularly raise funds for future construction projects and archival restoration efforts as well as the acquisition and purchase of rare books or manuscripts Membership in the group is open to all alumni and members of the public interested in the preservation of knowledge and literature Special events and tours are organised to recognise the contribution of the membership The Friends of the Cambridge University Library has raised more than 150 000 through regular and special donations over the past five years 18 Staff Edit 12th century manuscript of the Dover Bible in the Parker Library Corpus Christi College Cambridge The official office of Librarian of the university was not established until 1577 when William James was appointed Librarian The first set of regulations for the Office of keeping the Library were then formed in 1582 19 Little is known of the administration before the late sixteenth century Before 1577 the University Chaplain had overall responsibility of the Library among other duties Sixteen potential Chaplain Librarians have been identified 19 In 1721 the post of Principal Librarian Protobibliothecarius was created for Conyers Middleton as a mark of sympathy with him in his opposition to Richard Bentley 20 In 1828 this post was merged with that of Librarian Bibliothecarius Various scholars have held the position Abraham Wheelocke was librarian of the Public Library at Cambridge University and was also Reader in Anglo Saxon in the 17th century Augustus Theodore Bartholomew was a librarian at Cambridge University for over twenty five years The classicist A F Scholfield was Librarian from 1923 to 1949 More recent University Librarians have included E B Ceadel F W Ratcliffe 1980 94 Peter Fox 1994 2009 and Anne Jarvis 2009 16 Other notable members of staff include the bibliographer Henry Bradshaw and the Uranian poet Charles Edward Sayle author of a history of the library The current librarian is Jessica Gardner 21 She joined the library in April 2017 becoming the 36th University Librarian Exhibitions EditThe main University Library hosts exhibitions in its purpose built Milstein Exhibition Centre These change approximately every six to eight months and are open to all Recent exhibitions have highlighted Cambridge s significant collection of documents from the Cairo Genizah the landscape and geology of the English Fenlands and the architectural history of the Cambridge University The exhibitions are sponsored by the Cambridge University Library and are organised by the team of librarians and leading academics in the field Entry to the exhibitions is always free and open to the general public Special collections Edit Interior of the main reading room Bronze book bollard by Harry Gray in front of Library As part of its collection 22 of more than 8 000 000 volumes the library contains a wealth of printed and manuscript material from earlier times This includes A copy of the Gutenberg Bible from 1455 the earliest European example of a book produced using movable type Library of Lord Acton Catholic historian and Regius Professor of Modern History in 1885 1902 The extensive library around 60 000 volumes collected by Lord Acton for research was bequeathed to the University Library on his death The collection contains books from the 15th to 19th centuries with emphasis on European history and church history Many of the books contain annotations in Lord Acton s own hand An archive of Charles Darwin s correspondence and books from his working library including copies of his own works In November 2020 the library announced that two of Darwin s notebooks had been lost probably stolen around December 2000 23 They were returned anonymously in 2022 24 The Hanson collection containing important books on navigation and shipbuilding as well as maritime atlases some dating from the 16th century The Bradshaw collection containing more than 14 000 books relating to Ireland printed in Ireland or written by Irish authors This is one of the most important collections of its kind in the world The collection was formed by Henry Bradshaw d 1886 At present the emphasis is on books printed in Ireland before 1850 25 The library of the typographer Stanley Morison who had close links with Cambridge University Press The Royal Library an important collection of more than 30 000 books assembled by John Moore 1646 1714 Bishop of Ely The collection was bequeathed to the University Library by George I in 1715 hence the name The library of the Royal Commonwealth Society containing books periodicals pamphlets photographs and manuscripts relating to the British Empire and the Commonwealth South Asian Southeast Asian and Tibetan collections The Bible Society library and the library of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge SPCK The Taylor Schechter Genizah Collection a store of 140 000 manuscripts and manuscript fragments mainly in Hebrew and Arabic from the Ben Ezra synagogue in Cairo Codex Bezae Cantabrigiensis an important codex of the New Testament dating from the fifth century written both in Greek and Latin The Greek text is unique with many interpolations found nowhere else It was given to the University of Cambridge by the Protestant scholar Theodore Beza friend and successor of Calvin hence the name Codex Zacynthius a Greek New Testament codex dated paleographically to the 6th century CE The Cambridge Songs Carmina Cantabrigiensia a collection of Goliardic medieval Latin poems preserved on ten leaves of the Codex Cantabrigiensis E G Browne s collection of around 480 codices in Arabic Persian and Turkish Several composer archives William Alwyn Arthur Bliss Roberto Gerhard Peter Tranchell Papers of Isaac Newton Lord Kelvin Ernest Rutherford George Gabriel Stokes Joseph Needham G E Moore and Siegfried Sassoon among others Archives of the Royal Greenwich Observatory Material and archives of the University of Cambridge from probates and graces to records of various student societies Around 1 5 million maps Cultural references Edit Cambridge University Library The Cambridge University Library has featured in several films and television programmes including the Theory of Everything The Chronicles of Narnia The Voyage of the Dawn Treader Sherlock Holmes A Game of Shadows Cloud Atlas A Discovery of Witches and The Man Who Knew Infinity The tower of the Library has featured in a number of news programmes and documentaries for reportedly contained Victorian pornography though this has been disproved 12 13 In the unfinished novel The Dark Tower attributed to C S Lewis the eponymous tower is a replica of this building See also EditLibraries of the University of Cambridge List of University Librarians at the University of Cambridge Some manuscripts Cambridge University Library Ff i 27 Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 76References Edit Facilities and resources Undergraduate Study www undergraduate study cam ac uk Retrieved 9 July 2015 For example the Twitter account is the UL a b Introduction to legal deposit British Library Retrieved 17 March 2014 Harper Francesca 9 December 2016 Cambridge welcomes Dr Jessica Gardner as new University Librarian www lib cam ac uk History of Cambridge University Library Cambridge University Library www lib cam ac uk 5 March 2015 Retrieved 10 September 2015 Higgins Hannah The Grid Book Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press 2009 p 180 ISBN 978 0 262 51240 4 Oates J C T 1962 The Cambridge University Library 1400 1600 The Library Quarterly Information Community Policy 32 4 270 286 doi 10 1086 619053 ISSN 0024 2519 JSTOR 4305285 S2CID 144221637 From the Front to the Backs Story of the First Eastern Hospital University of Cambridge 1 July 2014 Retrieved 5 November 2015 First Eastern General Hospital Archived from the original on 21 July 2019 Retrieved 25 March 2017 Historic England University Library Grade II 1126281 National Heritage List for England Historic England University Library 1126281 National Heritage List for England retrieved 29 March 2017 a b c Gardner Jessica 1 May 2018 The mysterious Cambridge library tower supposedly full of banned books is opening to the public The Independent Retrieved 7 May 2018 a b Apperly Eliza Nothing racy in tower of porn Varsity Retrieved 25 March 2017 Savva Anna 3 April 2017 Cambridge University Library has run out of space for all its books and manuscripts Retrieved 4 April 2017 Committee on Finance Copyright Bill 1962 Committee Stage Dail Eireann Debate 14 February 1963 pp Vol 199 No 11 p 9 cc 1475 6 Retrieved 19 May 2017 Legal Deposit The Library of Trinity College Dublin Trinity College Dublin 10 June 2016 Retrieved 19 May 2017 About Janus Cambridge University Library Waldoch Laura 16 December 2014 Friends of the Library www lib cam ac uk a b Oates J C T 1986 Cambridge University Library a history Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 491 ISBN 0 521 30656 6 Protobibliothecarius Janus Retrieved 9 September 2015 Cambridge welcomes Dr Jessica Gardner as new University Librarian 9 December 2016 Library collections Cambridge University Library www lib cam ac uk Archived from the original on 15 September 2008 Retrieved 27 November 2005 Charles Darwin Notebooks worth millions lost for 20 years BBC News 24 November 2020 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Jones Rebecca 5 April 2022 Stolen Charles Darwin notebooks left on library floor in pink gift bag BBC News Retrieved 5 April 2022 Sayle Charles 1916 A Catalogue of the Bradshaw Collection of Irish Books in the University Library Cambridge 3 vols Cambridge Printed for the University LibraryBibliography EditAlston R C winter 1989 Cambridge University Library in Research Libraries in OCLC no 89 pp 2 8 Bradshaw Henry 1889 Collected Papers Cambridge Cambridge University Press Textus Fox Peter ed 1998 Cambridge University Library the Great Collections Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 62636 6 Paperback ISBN 0 521 62647 1 Oates J C T amp McKitterick D 1986 Cambridge University Library a History 2 vols Oates J C T Cambridge University Library a History Vol 1 From the beginnings to the Copyright Act of Queen Anne Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 30656 6 McKitterick David Cambridge University Library a History Vol 2 the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 30655 8 Ratcliffe F W 2007 Books Books Just Miles and Miles of Books across the library counter 1950 2000 Cambridge F W Ratcliffe autobiography Sayle Charles 1916 Annals of Cambridge University Library 1278 1900 Cambridge University LibraryDescriptions of collections Edit Oates J C T 1954 A Catalogue of the Fifteenth Century Printed Books in the University Library Cambridge Reissued Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 00848 8 Extracts Reif Stefan C 1997 Hebrew Manuscripts at Cambridge University Library a description and introduction Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 58339 8 Extracts Wade Thomas Francis Cambridge University Library 1898 A catalog of the Wade collection of Chinese and Manchu books in the library of the University of Cambridge Compiled by Herbert Allen Giles University Press Cambridge University Library 1898 A Catalogue of the Collection of Chinese and Manchu Books Given to the University of Cambridge The University Press External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cambridge University Library Cambridge University Library website Library catalogue search Cambridge Digital Library Photographs taken during building Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cambridge University Library amp oldid 1114798312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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