British Library

British Library
the national library of Great Britain: part of the British Museum until 1973.

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National library of Great Britain, formed by the British Library Act (1972) and organized July 1, 1973.

It consists of the former British Museum library, the National Central Library, the National Lending Library for Science and Technology, and the British National Bibliography. The British Museum library, founded in 1753 based on earlier collections and later increased by the addition of royal libraries, had the right to a free copy of all books published in the United Kingdom. Its collection included a rich series of charters (including those of the Anglo-Saxon kings), codices, psalters, and other papers ranging from the 3rd century BC to modern times. The present-day British Library receives a copy of every publication produced in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

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      national library of Great Britain (United Kingdom), formed by the British Library Act (1972) and organized by July 1, 1973. For much of the 20th century its holdings were divided among the British Museum library (with some 12 million volumes) and several other buildings, but in 1997–98 a new complex was opened in London, England, near St. Pancras Station in order to unify its vast collections. The British Library holds more than 25 million printed books as well as hundreds of thousands of periodicals, microfilms, rare manuscripts, and titles in electronic form. Its special offerings include the Oriental and India Office Collections (transferred from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in 1982), the National Sound Archive (formerly the British Institute of Recorded Sound, incorporated into the library in 1983), printed music, a map library, and philatelic materials.

 The British Museum library was long housed in the main building of the British Museum, in Bloomsbury, London. The museum (with its library) was founded in 1753 on the basis of the collections of Sir Hans Sloane (Sloane, Sir Hans, Baronet); Edward and Robert Harley, earls of Oxford; and Sir Robert Cotton (Cotton, Sir Robert Bruce, 1st Baronet). In 1757 George II presented to the library what is now known as the Old Royal Library (books collected by the kings of England from Edward IV to George II), which brought with it the right to a free copy of all books published in the United Kingdom. The museum library grew to become one of the world's largest and finest with the addition of the second royal library, that of George III, which was presented by George IV in 1823. The centrepiece of the British Museum library was the huge, round, dome-ceilinged Reading Room (see photograph—>), which was designed by Sydney Smirke in association with the librarian Anthony Panizzi (Panizzi, Sir Anthony) and completed by 1857. Karl Marx (Marx, Karl), Virginia Woolf (Woolf, Virginia), and many other illustrious writers and thinkers, both British and foreign, did their work in that room.

      As the library holdings grew in the 20th century, additional space was acquired in Bloomsbury, and annexes were opened at Bayswater and other London locations. Many of the newspaper collections were moved to Colindale (now in the borough of Barnet in northern London), where a newspaper repository (1905) was replaced by the full-service British Museum Newspaper Library (1932). During the air raids of World War II, some 225,000 volumes were destroyed at the British Museum, and tens of thousands of newspapers were burned at Colindale. Repairs to damaged buildings were carried out in the 1950s and '60s. In 1962 the National Lending Library for Science and Technology was established at Boston Spa, Yorkshire. The Newspaper Library became part of the British Library in 1973, but in the late 1990s its collections were relocated to the main St. Pancras library.

      Plans for a central library complex were first requested in the 1960s from the architects Sir Leslie Martin and Colin St. John Wilson, but these designs, and others in 1973, met with resistance from local residents and various politicians concerned over the preservation of existing buildings and the expenditure of public funds for the project. Land was purchased beside St. Pancras Station in 1976, and new plans by Wilson were officially approved two years later. Money for construction was held up until 1982, however, and the project was plagued by further shortages of funding and political support. During construction its architecture was decried by some—most notably by Charles, prince of Wales—but other critics applauded its modern style and its conveniences. At the time of its royal opening in 1998 the library complex had nearly 1,200 seats for readers (about one-third the number originally planned).

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Universalium. 2010.

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