Waseda University Library
The collections of Waseda University Library form one of the largest libraries in Japan. Established in 1882, they currently hold some 5.6 million volumes and 46,000 serials.
History
The Waseda University Library was originally established at the time of the founding of the university in 1882. Its current Central Library building was opened in 1991, commemorating the university's centennial. All together the university has 29 libraries: the Central Library, four Campus Libraries, and school libraries or reading rooms for students, attached to each school and institute. These libraries are said to hold 5.6 million books.The Waseda University Library also possesses a unique collection which survived the Bombing of Tokyo in World War II unlike many of its counterparts. It possesses some items which even the National Diet Library does not have. Because of this, its collection is an important resource in the study of pre-war Japanese history and literature.
Branches
The library consists of a central library and four main branch libraries, each located on a different campus. These branches include the S. Takata Memorial Research Library, the Library of Science and Engineering, the Toyama Library, and the Tokorozawa Library. Additionally, there are several departmental and special institute libraries that are integrated into the library system.Collections
The Waseda University Library owns a large number of materials of eminent cultural value. Alongside the two items designated as National Treasures and five sets as Important Cultural Assets, are manuscripts, rare books, calligraphy, handwritten strips of poems, archival materials related to Japanese history, and several special collections named after their donors, among others. Because of their rarity, access to such materials is usually limited, except for special exhibitions.Among Waseda University Library's many unique collections are the following:
- Literary works from the Qing dynasty of China, collected by a writer of Chinese verse, Noguchi Ichitaro ;
- History of the Ming dynasty, donated in 1910 by Shimomura Masataro, the owner of Daimaru Draper in Kyoto and alumnus of Waseda;
- Statistical literature in early modern Japan;
- Governmental materials and letters related to the university's founder;
- Chinese military books of the Qing and Ming eras;
- Japanese and Chinese classical mathematics, in particular numerous editions of "Jinkoki";
- Japanese books of the late Edo period;
- Original manuscripts of the renga masters ; and
- History of the modern Japanese legal system.