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ÂÒÂ×Ðã Special Collections

Everyone can access ÂÒÂ×Ðã Special Collections digitally or in person. Our collections of rare, unique and historic archives & books cover themes including history of ÂÒÂ×Ðã, education, arts and sciences.

Collection Highlights

Finding Material

  • You can search for rare books and other printed material on Explore.
  • Archives and manuscripts are found on the .
  • Search for digitised and digital content on Digital Collections.Ìý

For more information and video tutorials on how to use these resources to find material held by ÂÒÂ×Ðã Special Collections, learn about Our Collections.


News from our blog

The WEF was founded in 1921 as the New Education Fellowship, later changing its name to the World Education Fellowship. The central focus of the organisation has been child-centred education, social reform through education, democracy, world citizenship, international understanding and the promulgation of world peace.

This year, ÂÒÂ×Ðã Special Collections is hosting the Anthony Davis Book Collecting Prize, to be awarded to a current student studying towards a degree at a London-based university. For many students, the label of ‘book collector’ is a grandiose one, and while the tiny space on their bed-side table may be crammed with text books and novels these don’t seem to match the image conjured up by the words ‘book collection’.

The Outreach team at ÂÒÂ×Ðã Special Collections have spent a great six weeks delivering an after school club to Year 7, 8 and 9 pupils at William Ellis School. Pupils attended in their free time to explore how written texts have been produced through the ages and to learn about some of the ways printing has influenced western society.

One of my first tasks as a project archivist at ÂÒÂ×Ðã has been to catalogue the papers of the philosopher and educator Louis Arnaud Reid. Reid became the first Professor of Philosophy at the Institute of Education, and was a strong advocate of the importance of art in education. He retired in 1962, but continued writing and teaching as an emeritus professor right up until his death in 1986 at the age of 90. These papers were donated by his widow Molly.

How do you make a library? In our current exhibition in ÂÒÂ×Ðã’s Main Library, we suggest that all it takes is three basic ingredients: books; somewhere to keep the books; and people to read and look after the books. Nice and easy… right?

Our first ÂÒÂ×Ðã Special Collections Visiting Fellow, Adrian Chapman (Florida State University London Centre), writes below about the research that arose from his fellowship with us during the summer of 2019, working on our Small Press Collections.

Consider the following elements. R. D. Laing, a radical Scottish psychiatrist who lived from 1927 to 1989. A Neolithic stone circle. A flying saucer. And The Rolling Stones.

My name is Ibolya Jurinka. I am spending 3 months in ÂÒÂ×Ðã Special Collections as an Erasmus+ intern. Erasmus+ is not only a student exchange programme; it also provides overseas opportunities for all employees wishing to gain practical learning experiences from partner organisations in higher education.

I come from Hungary. I have been working as a librarian at the of the Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE).

The holds the archives of the French Protestant School of Westminster.

Often there is more than research inside the books we read. Bookmarks, train tickets, receipts, and menus tucked into pages offer clues about the life of the book itself.

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