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Showing posts with label rare collection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rare collection. Show all posts

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Hard times for 19th century library of over 8,000 rare books


NEW DELHI: In the days of the Raj, when the English aristocracy travelled to India in the 18th and 19th centuries, they would often occupy themselves with books during the long sea journeys that could last over a month. Bulky tomes with heavy subjects were, evidently, a popular option. Close to 8,000 such books, donated by the British travelers, are currently housed in a corner of Chandni Chowk at the Hardayal Municipal Public Library, among the oldest in the city.
Called the "rare books collection" they include a 1677 edition of Sir Walter Raleigh's History of the World and a Herodotus volume in the original Greek from 1826. But these books, like the library, are currently facing a threat. It has been four months since the library received salaries for its staff, let alone development funds. (See: 'We will have to shut down the newspaper section if we don't receive funds')

The rare books are kept under lock and key in iron vaults that are neither weather-proof, nor fire-proof. The pages of particularly brittle books are individually laminated. As for gaining access to a catalogue of these books, it necessarily involves a trek to Chandni Chowk and a classic cobwebs-in-your-hair procedure of going through physical records that will most certainly leave you with dusty fingers. The library is yet to see computerization.
Located close to the Chandni Chowk Police Station, the library has close to 1,200 members and gets about 700 visitors a day, library officials say. The library was instituted by the British in 1862, when it was called the Institute Library. In 1916 it was shifted to the current building and renamed Hardinge Municipal Public Library. It was only in 1970 that the "Hardinge" was replaced with "Hardayal". In December 1912, freedom fighter Lala Hardayalhad flung a bomb at Lord Hardinge's elephant procession. Ironically, the present building was built with contributions with influential Indian individuals and institutions of the time to commemorate Lord Hardinge's escape from that attack.
And then, even in the general stacks, history has a way of sneaking up on you. On a recent visit, TOI discovered a dust-laden, moth-eaten, yellowed copy of Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Ishmael. One of the last few pages bore the inscription "Printed for the Author By WilliamClowes & Sons Limited, London and Beccles". It is an 1884 author's edition.
The building, nearly a century old, preserves the tall arches, wooden spiral staircases and tall doors. A precarious, narrow iron staircase leads to the first floor that houses books in Hindi and English. Flooded with natural light during the day, you'd need to watch your step walking on the frail, creaky, plywood floor. British books on Indian and Roman history, or books in Hindi about homoeopathy, the library has most things covered in the 1,70,000 books it houses.
The reading rooms of the library underwent a renovation two years ago. Open to all from 8 am to 10 pm, it is particularly popular for its newspapers. During the day, it is invariably populated with young students consulting their books, punching away at their calculators and scribbling in their notebooks. "This is where I prepared for my M.A. and B.Ed exams. When I became a teacher, I would send my students here," says Yashpal Arya, the honorary secretary of the library. Currently it is difficult to say whether the library will survive. Even the various memos and letters submitted to government offices by the staff bear an ominous title enquiring for the "fate" of the library. There's hardly any going by the book right now.
'We will have to shut down the newspaper section if we don't receive funds'

It has been four months since the staff of the Hardayal Municipal Public Librarywas paid its salary. With the trifurcation of the MCD earlier this year, there was initially some confusion over the jurisdiction of this library with 31 branches across the city. The Chandni Chowk region, where the central library and the head office are, falls under the North Delhi Municipal Corporation. The official NDMC budget estimate lists "Grant-in-aid toHardayal Mpl. Public Library" as Rs. 3 crore for 2012-13.

Honorary Secretary of the library Yashpal Arya says he will have to shut down the newspapers section of the library by next month if he does not receive funds. The HMPL's newspapers section that subscribes to 31 newspapers from the English, Hindi and Urdu press, is gratis and open to all. "There are so many students who have done their PhDs from here. I only have hope until the end of August. I don't know how things will function beyond that," says Arya.
The library staff submitted a memo to Chief Minister Sheila Dixit on August 3 asking for release of provisional funds for salaries and other expenses. A copy of the memo, bearing the CM's handwritten note to NDMC commissioner PK Gupta is with the TOI.
"There are some audit problems. We are looking into it," said Gupta when last contacted. Meanwhile, the staff continues to scratch their wallets. "My son just joined college. I had to take a loan to submit his fees. It has been four months! How will we run our homes?" says a senior library official from Chandni Chowk.
Read More News at:  Times of India

Friday, April 13, 2012

Vatican and Bodleian libraries to offer rare collections online

Greek manuscripts and earliest surviving Hebrew codex among 1.5m pages to be digitised for both scholars and public to peruse 
Vatican Library 
The Vatican library will provide two-thirds of the material for the joint online venture with Oxford University's Bodleian library. Photograph: Massimo Listri/Corbis


Six centuries after it was founded by Pope Nicholas V for "the common convenience of the learned", the treasures of the Vatican library are to become accessible to scholars and the public alike via the internet.
Greek manuscripts of works by Homer and Plato, perhaps the earliest Hebrew codex in existence and scores of early printed Italian books are among thousands of texts that will be made freely available online by theBiblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (BAV) and Oxford University's Bodleian library.
Over the next four years, the two institutions plan to digitise 1.5m pages from their collections and in doing so reunite texts that have been dispersed for centuries.
The joint project, funded by a £2m grant from the Polonsky charitable foundation, will allow academic researchers and the public to pore over documents from the comfort of their own desks and sofas.
Two-thirds of the material will come from the Vatican library, which was founded in 1451, and which houses more than 1.6m printed books and 180,000 manuscripts.
The remaining pages will come from the Bodleian, which was opened a 151 years later, and which now holds more than 11m printed items.
The digitised collections will fall into three groups: Greek manuscripts; 15th-century printed books (or incunabula), and Hebrew manuscripts and early printed books. The university said the categories had been chosen "for the strength of the collections in both libraries and their importance for scholarship in their respective fields".
Among the other texts to be digitised and put online are works by Sophocles and Hippocrates, a copy of the entire bible written in Italyaround 1100, and volumes of biblical, Kabbalah and Talmudic commentary.
Sarah Thomas, Bodley's Librarian, said the project would help "transcend the limitations of time and space" that had stymied academic research in the past".
She added: "Scholars will be able to interrogate these documents in fresh approaches as a result of their online availability. Today's world – and tomorrow's – is one of global connectedness."
Monsignor Cesare Pasini, the prefect of the BAV, described the collaboration as "a great step forward in the Vatican library's entry into the digital age", adding: "With this joint initiative, the two libraries continue to accomplish their mission for the benefit of science and culture; it represents a great step forward in the Vatican library's entry into the digital age."
Dr Leonard Polonsky, whose eponymous foundation has supported previous efforts to digitise the Bodleian, said the grant would make important collections available to scholars and members of the public all over the world.
He added: "Twenty-first century technology provides the opportunity for collaborations between cultural institutions in the way they manage, disseminate and make available for research the information, knowledge and expertise they hold."