Konviktsbibliothek Wilhelmsstift
Konviktsbibliothek Wilhelmsstift Tübingen | |
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founding | January 22, 1818 |
place | Tübingen |
ISIL | DE-Tue59 (Library of the Wilhelmsstift) |
management | Georg Ott-Stelzner |
Website | www.wilhelmsstift.de |
Getzeny Institute Tübingen | |
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founding | 1971 |
ISIL | DE-Tue59a (Getzeny Institute at Wilhelmsstift Tübingen, library) |
The Wilhelmsstift has had its own library there since it was founded . Today it has more than 300,000 volumes and is one of the largest and most important seminar libraries in Germany. She is a member of the Working Group of Catholic Theological Libraries (AKThB).
Facilities
The Wilhelmsstift Konviktsbibliothek comprises five separate facilities and four independent libraries under one roof.
- Central reading room in the east wing
- Getzeny Institute in the north wing
- Royal reference library in the east wing
- Library of the History Association of the Diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart
- Diocesan archive of the Rottenburg-Stuttgart diocese
history
The library was founded on January 22nd, 1818, the day on which the " Organic Regulations " were issued. At the beginning the holdings of the Konviktsbibliothek were scarce, but it took a few years before they were fully functional. Over time, the library became to a large extent a receptacle for secularized library material. The inventory of monastery books today comprises around 25,000 volumes. The library owes this to the first directors, who endeavored to obtain mainly theological books for the institution from the rich fund of disbanded monastery libraries. From the previous institutions, the Franciscan monastery and the Collegium illustre , there were no more books in the house. The first deliveries of books arrived from the library of the Augustinian Hermits in Uttenweiler, from the Capuchin and Carmelite library in Rottenburg and from the Wolfegg collegiate monastery .
Individual evidence
- ^ Wilhelmsstift Tübingen - the most important seminar library in Germany , accessed on July 23, 2018.
- ↑ Member libraries of the AKThB , accessed on July 16, 2018.
- ↑ Handbook of the historical book collections in Germany, Austria and Europe. Retrieved February 19, 2015 .