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Lebanese National Library

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Library in Beirut, Lebanon
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Lebanese National Library
المكتبة الوطنية
The Library building
Map
33°53′41″N35°29′25″E / 33.89471514250132°N 35.4903406379325°E /33.89471514250132; 35.4903406379325
LocationBeirut,Lebanon
TypePublic,Nationallibrary.
Established1921 (105 years ago) (1921)
Collection
Size7,000,000books, 10,000 drawings, 20,000 maps, 25,000 16th century editions, 8,000manuscripts, 2,000Incunabula.
Legal deposityes
Access and use
Access requirementsOpen to anyone of 18 years or older
Other information
Websitewww.lnl.gov.lb

TheLebanese National Library (Arabic: المكتبة الوطنية), located inBeirut, is thenational library ofLebanon. It closed to the public in 1979 due to theLebanese Civil War, and its surviving collections were placed in storage. Restoration of its volumes and planning for a new site began in 1999.

History

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The library was established in 1921, with a donation from ViscountPhilippe de Tarrazi of twenty thousand books, many rare manuscripts, and the first issues of national newspapers.[1] De Tarazi's instructions were that his donation should form "the core of what should become the Great Library ofBeyrouth."[1] It was placed under the supervision of the Ministry of National Education in 1922.[2] It moved to theLebanese Parliament building in 1937.[2]

The Lebanese government decreed in 1924 that a copy of every book printed in Lebanon must be submitted, and also provided the library with a staff of eight clerks.[1] A formal copyrightdeposit law was enacted in 1949 and amended in 1959, but it was never enforced.[2] The government also failed to provide the library with a qualified librarian, or to clearly define its objectives.[2]

The library was repeatedly bombed and looted throughout theLebanese Civil War.[1] At one time, it had a collection of 100,000 volumes and 2,000 rare manuscripts; an unknown number of these were burned or stolen.[2] In 1979, the building was closed and the surviving manuscripts and documents were stored in the National Archives, and modern printed books were stored in a separate building between 1982 and 1983.[1] The Lebanese National Library only existed in name during the 1990s.[2]

An impassioned plea for a National Library of Lebanon was published in 1998 by the Lebanese Association of Antique Dealers, under the signature of Jean-Pierre Fattal.[3]

The following year, the European Commission decides to send a study mission to Beirut in order to assist the Lebanese government. This mission is immediately followed by an exhibition titled "collective memory" which was presented at the Sursock Museum in the Lebanese Capital. Its objective was to focus on the importance of the library rehabilitation project. The Lebanese government decides then to install the National Library in the Faculty of Law of theLebanese University, in the district of Sayaneh, according to plans set by the architectJean-Marc Bonfils (1963 -2020).

Planning for a new site for the National Library began in 1999.[4] The goal was for the library to contain everything published in Lebanon (around 2,000 books annually) and all publications about Lebanon and the Arab world.[4] The project, which also involved the restoration of the collection, was estimated at $7 million, of which $1.5 million was donated by theEuropean Union and the rest pledged by other governments and private donors.[4] By 2006, more than 3,000 volumes had been restored.[5] The collection was again threatened during the2006 Lebanon War byIsraeli bombing near its storage facilities at the Port of Beirut.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdeManguel, Alberto (2006),The Library at Night, New Haven & London:Yale University Press, p. 302,ISBN 978-0-300-13914-3.
  2. ^abcdefWedgeworth, Robert (1993),World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services,ALA Editions, p. 452,ISBN 0-8389-0609-5.
  3. ^Fattal, Jean-Pierre (1998).Plaidoyer pour une Bibliothèque nationale du Liban (in French). Association des Antiquaires du Liban.
  4. ^abcCochrane, Paul (22 May 2004),"Plan for national library gives reading a boost",The Daily Star, archived fromthe original on 21 September 2013, retrieved6 June 2011.
  5. ^abNortham, Jackie (August 1, 2006),A Fight to Save Lebanon's Rare Manuscripts,National Public Radio, retrieved6 June 2011.

External links

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Further reading

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