東洋文庫 | |
The Tōyō Bunko building since 2011 | |
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| Established | 1992 (Setagaya) 2022 (Chiyoda) |
|---|---|
| Location | Honkomagome,Bunkyō,Tokyo,Japan |
| Type | Art museum,Library |
| Collection size | Morrison collection |
| Visitors | 47,514 |
| Director | Yoshinobu Shiba |
| Website | http://www.toyo-bunko.or.jp/museum/museum_eindex.php |
TheTōyō Bunko (東洋文庫), orOriental Library, isJapan's largestAsian studieslibrary and one of the world's five largest, located in Tokyo. It also functions as a research institute dedicated to the study of Asian history and culture. It has greatly contributed to the development of Asian Studies through the acquisition of books and other source materials as well as the publication of research by Japanese scholars. Presently, the library contains approximately 950,000 volumes which are cataloged linguistically according to Asian, Western and Japanese language materials.[1]

The Oriental Library had its beginnings in 1917 whenHisaya Iwasaki, former third President of theMitsubishi Company, purchased the vast private collection of China-related publications of Australian adventurer, journalist, andRepublic of China government adviserGeorge Morrison. After the purchase, he improved the collection by increasing the number ofclassical Chinese, Japanese, and Western language books by receiving advice from a bibliographer,Tunashiro Wada(和田 維四郎).
He established Tōyō Bunko in 1924 to promoteoriental studies. It was the first library institution in Japan that was devoted exclusively to oriental studies.Junnosuke Inoue was invited as the first Director of this Library. Hisaya Iwasaki stopped touching management after establishment, but continued financial support to promote collection and research.
After thePacific War,GHQ dismantledZaibatsu, because Zaibatsu were responsible for the War. Hisaya Iwasaki resigned from all of his posts in theMitsubishi Group, and he moved into his cottage. Therefore, the Oriental Library lost its patron and faced a financial crisis.Kijūrō Shidehara, former prime minister, took up this problem toNational Diet, and the library became a branch of theNational Diet Library in 1948.[2]
From 1961, the library was aUNESCO affiliated organization as the Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies. Also, in 1994 a center was set up within the library to provide research facilities for scholars dispatched from France.[3]
Major decisions concerning the management of the library are made by itsAdvisory Council andBoard of Directors. Daily operations are supervised by the Committee of Department heads. As of 2007, the library was staffed by 20 full-time employees working under the supervision of the Director General Makihara Minoru, and Executive Director Yamakawa Naoyoshi. In addition, there were over 200 research fellows participating in Toyo Bunko-sponsored projects.[4]
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