the national library of china

31
The National Library of China

Upload: milos

Post on 22-Feb-2016

58 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The National Library of China. The National Library of China in Brief. The library is located in West Beijing. It’s predecessor was the Capital Library established in 1909. Opened to the public 8/27/1912. In 1916 library started accepting legal deposit copies of the national - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The National Library of China

The National Library of China

Page 2: The National Library of China

The National Library of China in Brief

The library is located in West Beijing. It’s predecessor was the Capital Library established in 1909. Opened to the public 8/27/1912. In 1916 library started accepting legal deposit copies of the national publications. 1928 the library got the name the National Beijing Library.

Page 3: The National Library of China

NLC in brief: The name was not officially changed to Zhong

Guo Guo Jia Tu Shu Guan or The National Library of China, until 1998.

The NLC is a comprehensive research library. A national repository of the home publications. A national bibliographic center. A national center of library information networks. And a library research and development center.

Page 4: The National Library of China

NLC in brief . . . This library serves the central legislature, government, and key

research institutions, academy, education, business and the general public.

The library is responsible for the official cultural agreements and conducts communication and cooperation with the libraries both at home and abroad.

By the numbers: Total floor area – 250,000 square meters. This number varies depending on where you look – by on their

website it said they ranked 3rd in size to other world libraries. By the end of 2008 – 26,310,000 volumes/artifacts. I am oh

so sure they have added to it!! 270,000 rare books.

Page 5: The National Library of China

NLC in brief . . . 1,640,000 volumes of general ancient books. 35,000 pieces of the scripted turtle shells and animal

bones. This library would obviously have the largest collection of

Chinese books, but they also have the biggest collection of materials in foreign language in the country.

The library is open 365 days a year. They have 24/7 online access with various multimedia

networks and the Internet.

Exhibition of Bones.

Reading Room

Page 6: The National Library of China

The National Library of China

Old Building and now main branch

Page 7: The National Library of China

100 Years of NLC Celebrated in 2009 The founding of the national library was sanctified

by Puyi, the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), in September 1909.

The library was temporarily located at the site of the Guanghua Temple in Shichahai. Moved to the Imperial College near Beihai Park and finally to its current site near Zizhuyuan Park near Xizhimen.

Page 8: The National Library of China

100 Years…in a time of war. Before the July 7 incident of 1937, in order to protect the

nation’s rare books, the curator transported them to the south of China. Japanese Invasion of China began in earnest.

The same curator employed the same strategy yet again when Shanghai fell and was occupied by the enemy.

He risked his own life to collect the most important rare books and sent them to the U.S. for microfilming.

A total of 102 boxes were shipped, containing 30,000 books from 2,700 genres. Yuan Tongli was the curator.

Page 9: The National Library of China

Dunhuang and Turpan Materials Center

This center was planned in 1983 and established in 1988.

Page 10: The National Library of China

Dunhuang and Turpan Materials Center This center is responsible for the acquisition,

arrangement and collection of materials related to Dunhuang and Turpan studies for scholars around the world.

The Reading Room of Dunhuang and Turpan Materials contains a history of the Sui and Tang dynasties, and history, geography and religious culture of the Western Regions.

Materials include: Microforms, photos, monographs, journals, conference proceedings and A/V materials in Chinese, Western languages, Japanese and other languages.

Dunhuang and Turpan were part of The Silk Road.

Page 11: The National Library of China

Rare pieces include: Dunhuang Manuscripts were discovered in the Mogao Caves in Dunhuang

and includes editions of Chinese classics and Buddhism sutras.

Zhaoheng Tripitaka of the Jin Dynasty was printed in the Jin dynasty (1115-1234). The Buddhist cannon is comprised of 6,980 volumes of text, using 168,000 woodblocks.

Oracle Bones > inscriptions on animal bones and tortoise shells from the Shang Dynasty (16th – 11th Century BC).

Yongle Encyclopedia is a Chinese compilation commissioned by the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) by Emperor Yongle in 1403 and completed in 1408. It was then the world’s largest known general encyclopedia and one of the earliest.

And The Complete Library of the Four Branches of Literature which is bound into 36,381 volumes with more than 79,000 chapters, comprising about 2.3 million pages.

Page 12: The National Library of China

A digitized rare Chinese book:

Page 13: The National Library of China

Rarities:

Buddhist sutra commissioned by Yongle Emperor.

An original manuscript.

Page 14: The National Library of China

Rare Books Collection

Page 15: The National Library of China

Primary functions of the NLC: To pass on the culture of the Chinese nation. To contribute to teaching and scientific research. To serve the ordinary reader:

Reading rates are down within the population served by the NLC and other libraries, but the NLC are finding new ways to engage.

There is nothing ordinary about the NLC from my point of view.

Page 16: The National Library of China

NLC Featured Services: Mobile Digital Library Services: which provides NLC news on events;

Culture Express; recommended books, and info on retrieval, and updates regularly.

China Digital Library for Visual Impairment (CDLVI).

Digital Television Service: this service allows 3 million households to receive a digital feed for NLC lectures, exhibits, and reading through your TV. How Cool.

Touch-screen for Electronic Newspapers: can easily read the news, but can also access to the treasured collections too.

Information Commons (IC): is a one-stop information environment created to meet the users’ comprehensive needs of space, resources and services. It is user-centered, resource-based, technology-relied, service-oriented, innovation-oriented and integrates resource sharing and physical space.

Page 17: The National Library of China

NLC Featured Services: IC consists of an e-learning area, e-research area, special

service area, the National Cultural Information Resources Project experiencing area, e-commerce area, the network communication area and a media center. Whew!

NLC Mobile Newspaper Service: This service pushes newspaper content to cell phones – text, images, and other information. The service is by subscription and downloads more than 40 kinds of newspapers.

Provide Wireless Local Area Network. Virtual Reality Services: including virtual navigation and

virtual reading terminals.

Page 18: The National Library of China

NLC Featured Services: Portable Electronic Readers: Users can download e-

books, and NLC will also provide the readers, or you can bring your own. NLC e-book resources platform has about 190 thousand kinds of electronic books in 380 thousand volumes and more than one thousand yearbooks. The e-books from more than 400 publishers cover the entire second grade classifications of the Chinese Library Classification.

Intelligent Stack Navigation: This service enables users to seek the exact target book precisely by virtually presenting users a vivid, three-dimensional navigational map.

Page 19: The National Library of China

Intelligent Stack Navigation

Page 20: The National Library of China

NLC Featured Services: This is by far one of the best features I have ever

seen! I could certainly use one! http://youtu.be/wfzPhlzPvlE http://youtu.be/KkTN5vdn4pM

Page 21: The National Library of China

NLC

Main Reading Room

Exterior of Main Library

Page 22: The National Library of China

NLC Cross Sections – Jurgen Engel Architect

Page 23: The National Library of China

NLC – Site Plan

Page 24: The National Library of China
Page 25: The National Library of China
Page 26: The National Library of China

The Kerry Center of the NLC.

Page 27: The National Library of China

Interior of the NLC – Main Lobby.

Page 28: The National Library of China

Interior - NLC

Page 29: The National Library of China

Reading Room

Page 30: The National Library of China

Reader’s Entrance