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Tenri Central Library

Coordinates:34°35′41″N135°50′47″E / 34.59472°N 135.84639°E /34.59472; 135.84639
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Library of Tenri University in Japan
Tenri Central Library in early summer
Tenri Central Library in late winter

Tenri Central Library (天理大学附属天理図書館Tenri Daigaku Fuzoku Tenri Toshokan) is the library ofTenri University. It has notably extensive collections of antiquarian material, including original manuscripts from 13th-century Japan, and artifacts of European exploration and early visits to Japan. Dating to 1926, the library predates the university itself. It has its origins in the private collection of the family of the foundress ofTenrikyo,Oyasama.[1]

They sponsor the Tenri Antiquarian Materials Workshop, which gathers rare materials from the modernization period in East Asia in the 19th and 20th centuries, and organizes them for local and overseas research.[2] They are noted for their collection of works bySheng Xuanhuai.[3] They also have a copy of the originalRomance of the Three Kingdoms.

History

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Before its official establishment, Tenri Central Library began in March 1919 as a library withinTenrikyo Doyusha, the publishing company ofTenrikyo Church Headquarters. Several years later, in April 1925, a plan was made to combine the libraries of several Tenrikyo schools in order to establish a general library open to students, researchers, and the public.[4]

In September 1926, Tenri Central Library was founded, initially featuring a collection of twenty-six thousand volumes, of which five thousand were Western. At the time, the library was on the third floor of the recently established Tenri Foreign Language College, the predecessor ofTenri University. A new building was completed for the library on 18 October 1930.[4]

In the autumn of 1951,Emperor Hirohito visited the library. July 1962 saw the completion of an extension of the library building, which added 10,722 square meters of floor space.[4]

The library specializes in religion, Oriental studies, Near Eastern studies, anthropology, ethnology, topography, language, and Japanese literature. Among the valuable Japanese materials of its collection are six volumes designated as national treasures (such as theŌyo Bunchukō Shū), over seventy volumes designated as important cultural properties, 15,000 printing blocks ofJōruri inbon, 170 printing blocks ofMotoori Norinaga,Teikokun Kojiki, and 1,200 printing blocks ofKogido Isho.[4] On the first floor of the library, there is also an extensive collection of Tenrikyo books in over a dozen languages.

References

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  1. ^"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved2010-03-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^Sachie Noguchi, "Tenri Workshop: A Report to NCC Board in August 2007",Journal of East Asian Libraries 145 (June 2008), 69-71; also "Tenri Workshop Year 2: A Report",Journal of East Asian Libraries 146 (October 2008), 66-8, and "Tenri Workshop Year 3: A Report",Journal of East Asian Libraries 149 (October 2009), 61-5.
  3. ^Kaneko Kazumasa, "Shen Hsuan-Huai collection in the Tenri Central Library",Committee on East Asian Libraries Bulletin 101 (December 1993), 149-50
  4. ^abcdTenrikyo Overseas Mission Department (1986).The Teachings and History of Tenrikyo. Tenri, Japan: Tenrikyo Overseas Mission Department.

External links

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