Harvard–Yenching Library
Harvard–Yenching Library | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 哈佛燕京圖書館 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 哈佛燕京图书馆 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Hanyu Pinyin | Hāfó-Yānjīng Túshūguǎn | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Japanese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Kanji | ハーバード燕京図書館 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Harvard–Yenching Library is the primary location for East Asia-related collections at the Harvard University Library. In addition to Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Western languages, it houses collections in Vietnamese, Tibetan, Manchu, and Mongolian, totaling more than 1.5 million volumes.[1] The library has been located at 2 Divinity Avenue on the Cambridge campus of Harvard University since around 1957, in a building built in 1929 for Harvard's Institute of Geographical Exploration.[2]
History
In 1879, Ko K'un-hua, a scholar from China, was engaged to give a course in the Chinese language. The small collection of books that was bought for this course became Harvard College's first acquisitions in any East Asian language. In 1914, two Japanese professors came from Tokyo Imperial University to lecture at Harvard; and they donated several important sets of Japanese publications on Sinology and Buddhism to the Harvard College Library, thus launching Harvard's Japanese collection. These two collections became the nucleus of Harvard's East Asian library. In 1927, Archibald Cary Coolidge, head of Harvard's libraries, asked Alfred Kaiming Chiu, then a graduate student at Harvard, to organize and catalog these collections.[3] The library was formally founded in 1928 as the Chinese-Japanese Library of the Harvard-Yenching Institute, the library took its present name in 1965 to reflect the expansion of its collections beyond Chinese and Japanese. In 1976, management of the library shifted from the independent Harvard-Yenching Institute to the Harvard College Library.[4]
A. Kaiming Chiu served as head of the library until his retirement (1964). He was succeeded by Eugene Wu (1965), who was succeeded by James Cheng (1998).[5]
The 75th Anniversary of the Library was celebrated in 2003 with a symposium and the publication of a volume of scholarly articles on the history of the library and its collections. [6] In 2009, the library announced a six-year, multimillion-dollar project to digitize major sections of its rare books collection in cooperation with the National Library of China. [7]
References
- ↑ Harvard-Yenching Library Collections
- ↑ "Institute of Geographical Exploration: 1929-1952", Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments, Harvard University
- ↑ Eugene W. Wu, "The Founding of the Harvard-Yenching Library," Journal of East Asian Libraries 101.1 (1993): 65-69.
- ↑ Harvard-Yenching Library History
- ↑ Ken Gewurtz, "Yenching: The Singular History of A Singular Library," Harvard Gazette "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-12-11. Retrieved 2006-12-08.
- ↑ Patrick Hanan, ed., Treasures of the Yenching: Seventy-Fifth Anniversity of the Harvard-Yenching Library (Cambridge, MA; Hong Kong: Harvard-Yenching Library Distributed by the Chinese University Press, 2003 ISBN 9629961024).
- ↑ Rare Chinese Books" New York Times October 11, 2009
External links
- Harvard-Yenching Library Website
- Harvard-Yenching Library Publications
- Harvard-Yenching Library Facebook Page
Coordinates: 42°22′38.85″N 71°06′51.32″W / 42.3774583°N 71.1142556°W