National Library of Bulgaria (NBKM)

Identity area

Identifier

BG-NBKM

Authorized form of name

National Library of Bulgaria (NBKM)

Parallel form(s) of name

Other form(s) of name

Type

  • National

Contact area

 

Director of the Oriental Department: Stoyanka Kenderova ; Assistant of the Director of Oriental Department: Milena Zvancharova

Type

Address

Street address

88 Vasil Levski Blvd

Locality

Sofia

Region

Country name

Bulgaria

Postal code

1037

Telephone

(+359 2) 9183 /101

Fax

(+359 2) 843 54 95

Email

Note

Description area

History

St. Cyril and Methodius National Library of Bulgaria (Natsionalna Biblioteka Sv Sv Kiril i Metodiy, hereafter, NBKM), located in Sofia, has one of the richest Ottoman archives with respect to the quantity and variety of materials. Founded in 1878, the NBKM’s holdings were significantly expanded in 1931 with the acquisition of millions of Ottoman documents from Turkey. Today, the NBKM’s Oriental Department Collection (Kolektsiya na Orientalski Otdel) contains more than 160 sijills, 1000 defters and registers, 1,000,000 individual documents, and countless registers of religious endowments (waqf/awqāf) from all provinces of the Ottoman Empire between the fifteenth and the twentieth centuries. In addition, it has a valuable Persian, Arabic, and Turkish manuscript collection. Apart from its Oriental Department, the Bulgarian Historical Archive (Bŭlgarski istoricheski arkhiv) houses materials dating mostly from the nineteenth century and written in both Ottoman Turkish and Bulgarian. In this sense, NBKM is a hidden gem for scholars of the Middle East and the Balkans.

The NBKM was first established in 1878 as the Sofia Public Library but quickly became the National Library in 1879. During 1870s and 1880s, NBKM officials collected various Ottoman materials from local waqfs and libraries throughout Bulgaria, and brought them to the Oriental Department of the NBKM. In 1944, the entire building was destroyed in the course of the war. While some materials were irreparably damaged during the attacks, much was saved. These surviving materials were transferred to local libraries in order to be protected from further destruction. All the transferred materials were eventually brought back to the NBKM’s main building in late 1940s. The NBKM’s current building was officially opened in 1953. The NBKM gets its name from St. Cyril and St. Methodius, the eponymous brothers who invented the Cyrillic alphabet in late ninth century. A monument of the two brothers holding the Cyrillic alphabet in their hands stands tall in front of the NBKM, and it is also one of the landmarks of the city.

Geographical and cultural context

Mandates/Sources of authority

Administrative structure

Records management and collecting policies

Buildings

Holdings

Finding aids, guides and publications

Access area

Opening times

Access conditions and requirements

Accessibility

Services area

Research services

Reproduction services

Public areas

Control area

Description identifier

Institution identifier

Rules and/or conventions used

Status

Level of detail

Dates of creation, revision and deletion

Entry prepared on January 2017.

Language(s)

Script(s)

Sources

Seçil Uluışık, “National Library of Bulgaria,” HAZINE, 9 May 2015, http://hazine.info/national-library-bulgaria/

Maintenance notes

Author : Open Jerusalem http://www.openjerusalem.org/

Access points

Access Points

  • Clipboard

Primary contact

88 Vasil Levski Blvd
Sofia
BG 1037