Bodleian Library - Sites and Regulations

Sites and Regulations

The Bodleian Library occupies a group of five buildings near Broad Street: these range in date from the late medieval Duke Humfrey's Library to the New Bodleian of the 1930s. Since the 19th century a number of underground stores have been built below parts of these.

Today, the Bodleian also includes several off-site storage areas as well as many other libraries in central Oxford:

  • Alexander Library of Ornithology
  • Bodleian Chinese Studies Library
  • Bodleian Education Library
  • Bodleian Health Care Libraries
  • Bodleian Japanese Library
  • Bodleian Latin American Centre Library
  • Bodleian Law Library
  • Bodleian Library of Commonwealth and African Studies at Rhodes House
  • Bodleian Music Faculty Library
  • Bodleian Oriental Institute Library
  • Philosophy and Theology Faculties Library
  • Bodleian Social Science Library
  • Bodleian Theology Faculty Library
  • English Faculty Library
  • History Faculty Library
  • Radcliffe Science Library
  • Rewley House Continuing Education Library
  • Sackler Library
  • Sainsbury Library at the Saïd Business School
  • Sherardian Library of Plant Taxonomy
  • Social and Cultural Anthropology Library
  • Taylor Institution Main Library
  • Taylor Institution Modern Languages Faculty Library
  • Taylor Bodleian Slavonic and Modern Greek Library
  • Vere Harmsworth Library (Rothermere American Institute)
  • Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine Library

Read more about this topic:  Bodleian Library

Famous quotes containing the word regulations:

    If the veil were withdrawn from the sanctuary of domestic life, and man could look upon the fear, the loathing, the detestations which his tyranny and reckless gratification of self has caused to take the place of confiding love, which placed a woman in his power, he would shudder at the hideous wrong of the present regulations of the domestic abode.
    Lydia Jane Pierson, U.S. women’s rights activist and corresponding editor of The Woman’s Advocate. The Woman’s Advocate, represented in The Lily, pp. 117-8 (1855-1858 or 1860)