Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The National Library of India is a library located in the Belvedere Estate, Alipore, Kolkata, India. [3] It is India's largest library by volume and public record. [4] [5] [6] The National Library is under Ministry of Culture, Government of India. The library is designated to collect, disseminate and preserve printed material produced within India.
State Central Library: Thiruvananthapuram: Kerala: 1829 Ernakulam Public Library: Kochi: Kerala: 1870 Maulana Azad Central Library Bhopal: Madhya Pradesh: 1908 Swami Vivekanand Library (BRITISH LIBRARY) Bhopal: Madhya Pradesh: 1965 Asiatic Society of Mumbai: Mumbai: Maharashtra: 1804 Central Library, IIT Bombay: Mumbai: Maharashtra: 1958 David ...
A "♦" indicates a national library of a province or state, or constituent country or dependent state [neutrality is disputed]. It is listed under the sovereign state which governs that entity. Sovereign states are listed even when they have no national library or when the existence and name of a national library could not yet be ascertained.
National Information System for Science and Technology (NISSAT), New Delhi National Institute of Science Communication and Information Resources, New Delhi (Formerly INSDOC) National Library of India
The National Digital Library of India is a virtual repository of learning resources, providing services including textbooks, articles, videos, audiobooks, lectures, simulations, fiction, and other kinds of learning media for the learners/user community.
After independence, in 1948, the National Library of India was transferred from The Esplanade to Belvedere House. [10] [11] The complex now includes within it, two housing colonies built by the government, one being for National Library of India employees, and the other for central government employees.
Library associations connect libraries and library workers at the local and national level. They often provide resources to their individual and institutional members that enable cooperation, exchange of information, education, research, and development.
Harinath De (12 August 1877— 30 August 1911) was an Indian linguist, polyglot, Indologist and an academician, who later became the first Indian librarian of the National Library of India (then Imperial Library) from 1907 to 1911. [2] In a life span of thirty four years, he learned 34 languages. [3]