Ishikawa Takeyoshi Memorial Library

Coordinates: 35°42′03″N 139°45′33″E / 35.7009391°N 139.759139°E / 35.7009391; 139.759139
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Ishikawa Takeyoshi Memorial Library
石川武美記念図書館
Map
35°42′03″N 139°45′33″E / 35.7009391°N 139.759139°E / 35.7009391; 139.759139
Location2-9 Kanda-Surugadai, Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan
TypePrivate library
ScopeWomen's periodicals
Classical Japanese literature
Established1947 (77 years ago) (1947)
(Ochanomizu Library opening)
Access and use
Population servedResearchers[1]
Other information
Websitewww.ochato.or.jp Edit this at Wikidata

The Ishikawa Takeyoshi Memorial Library (石川武美記念図書館, Ishikawa Takeyoshi Kinen Toshokan) is a private library in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. The library first opened in December 1947 as the Ochanomizu Library (お茶の水図書館), for the exclusive use of women;[1] men have been admitted since its reorganization in October 2003.[1] The library is named after Ishikawa Takeyoshi [ja] (1887–1961), founder of Japanese publishing house Shufunotomo [ja], who, in 1941, established the predecessor of today's Ishikawa Takeyoshi Memorial Library General Foundation (一般財団法人石川武美記念図書館),[1] the change in name and legal form occurring in 2013.[1]

Since the 2003 reorganization, the library has had two sections, the Library of Modern Women's Periodicals (近代女性雑誌ライブラリー)[2] and the Seikidō Bunko (成簣堂文庫),[3] which specializes in classical Japanese literature and includes the Chikuhakuen (竹柏園本) and Mutō (武藤本) Collections.[1]

Seikidō Bunko[edit]

The Seikidō Bunko comprises the collection Ishikawa Takeyoshi purchased from his friend Tokutomi Sohō and totals some one hundred thousand volumes—classical texts and historic documents dating from the Nara period to the end of the Edo period and the Meiji Restoration, as well as Chinese and Korean works, and some Western materials.[4]

The Chikuhakuen Collection represents part of the book collection of Sasaki Nobutsuna, as acquired by Ishikawa Takeyoshi in 1944, and comprises some two thousand volumes related to the Man'yōshū, including the twenty volumes of the late-Kamakura period Nishi Honganji-bon, the earliest complete manuscript of the anthology.[4]

The Mutō Collection represents part of the book collection of scholar of Japanese literature Mutō Motonobu (武藤元信) (1854–1918), a specialist in The Pillow Book, and comprises some two thousand volumes donated to the Foundation in 1944.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f 組織概要 [Overview of the Organization] (in Japanese). Ishikawa Takeyoshi Memorial Library. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
  2. ^ "Library Catalogs". National Diet Library. 21 July 2023. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
  3. ^ 成簣堂文庫 [Seikidō Bunko] (in Japanese). National Diet Library. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
  4. ^ a b c 成簣堂文庫のご案内 [Guide to the Seikidō Bunko] (in Japanese). Ishikawa Takeyoshi Memorial Library. Retrieved 27 October 2023.