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Al-Assad National Library

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Al-Assad National Library
مَكْتَبَةُ الْأَسَدِ الْوَطَنِيَّةِ
The library building
Map
LocationUmayyad Square, Damascus, Syria
TypePublic, National library.
Established1984 (40 years ago) (1984)
Collection
SizeOver 40,000 titles

Al-Assad National Library (Arabic: مَكْتَبَةُ الْأَسَدِ الْوَطَنِيَّةِ, romanizedMaktabat al-ʾAsad al-Waṭanīyah) is the national library of Syria, located in the capital Damascus overlooking the Umayyad Square. It's named after Hafez al-Assad.

In 1976, Syria's Ministry of Culture issued an official decision to build a national library. Construction began in 1978 and the library was completed in November 1983 and was opened the following year.[1][2] The library's purpose was "to gather all books and daily issues in addition to all kinds of literature connected with our ancestral cultural legacy", then to sort out these materials to serve researchers and scholars and benefit them.[2]

It is the legal deposit and copyright for Syria. The Libraries and Documents Association of Syria has its headquarters at the Assad National Library.[3][4]

Copy of Al-Assad National Library Card for Nigerian Ph.D. researcher Sheikh Dr. Abu-Abdullah Adelabu in the 1990s

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Transcription

Departments

The library has several departments which include a lecture hall and a special department for blind people.[2] The library's departments are as follows:[2]

  • Department of Photographic Documentation: in its three forms (microfilm, microfiche, photocopy). This section was founded in order to satisfy the readers' wishes to obtain photocopies of books and publications.
  • Department of Audio Material: In which the library's books and manuscripts are available in audio form.
  • Department of Documentaries: In which documentaries are stored available to be watched.
  • Department of Fine Arts: Which contains the works of contemporary Syrian artists.
  • Department of Periodicals: In which regular publications and publications are deposited.
  • Department of the Blind: In which books and other material are available in braille for blind people.
  • Department of Information: In which specialists help readers to reach the required topics, and navigate through the various indexes, and through international information systems that enable the reader to identify the latest source of references in each subject.
  • The Lecture Hall: The library has a main lecture hall which can accommodate 308 people. It is suitable for films, lectures and conferences. It is equipped with a radio system for simultaneous interpretation in four languages. There are also two other halls, each of which can accommodate up to 20 people.
  • Reading Room: The library has three reading halls and four other reading rooms. The halls can accommodate up to 1,000 readers at the same time.
  • Individual Reading Rooms: 21 Individual Reading Rooms are available.
  • Showrooms: There are several showrooms in the library specifically for exhibitions such as art and book exhibitions.

References

  1. ^ H. Stam, David (2016). International Dictionary of Library Histories. Routledge. ISBN 9781136777851.
  2. ^ a b c d "About the Library - Al-Assad National Library official wesbsite (in Arabic)". Archived from the original on 2019-11-19. Retrieved 2018-04-07.
  3. ^ Marko Schweizer (January 31, 2005), IFLA 112-114: World Guide to Library, Archive and Information Science Associations, K.G. Saur (An Impint of Walter de Gruyter), ISBN 9783598218408, 3598218400
  4. ^ IFLA. "Data control sheet: Syria" (PDF). IFLA 112-114. De Gruyter. Retrieved 29 May 2012.

Further reading

External links

33°30′53″N 36°16′39″E / 33.51472°N 36.27750°E / 33.51472; 36.27750

This page was last edited on 5 May 2024, at 11:58
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