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Nation's Library
The Nation's Library of the Presidency From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Nation's Library of the Presidency[2] (Turkish: Cumhurbaşkanlığı Millet Kütüphanesi),[3]
![]() | This article's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. (February 2020) |
The Nation's Library is a library located in Ankara, Turkey. The library, which was established in 2016, was opened by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 20 February 2020 with the participation of approximately 2,000 guests. The Nation's Library has 5,048,493 printed resources, including 2,168,302 books and 2,948,290 periodicals belonging to 25,017 printed journals in 134 different languages. It is also the largest library in the country with more than 300 million articles, reports, etc. belonging to 1,218,475 e-books, 7,901,681 electronic theses and 112,153 e-journals in 233 databases belonging to 73 main databases.
Since 2020, by providing digital access to 103,350 books, 136 million documents, and 567,000 notebooks from the collection of the Directorate of State Archives[1] , it has become one of the world’s leading libraries.
The Nation's Library has 141.718.843 books, documents, notebooks, books, dia, maps, etc., which are available to researchers together with the inventory of the Directorate of State Archives.
Located inside the Presidential Complex at Ankara, the Library is 125,000 square meters and can accommodate up to 5,000 readers at a time.[2] The library building is decorated with white and pink marble, designed with traditional Seljuk, Ottoman and contemporary motifs.[4]
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History
The Library project was led by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in 2016 through the efforts of Turkish intellectuals, librarians, and NGOs, and inaugurated in February 2020.[5]
The Nation's Library is the largest single library investment in the history of Turkish Republic.[6] It also is the first library in Turkey to use integrated book conveyor system.[6]
Famous patrons


People who donated to the Library from their personal collection include:[5]
- President Erdoğan,[7]
- Ambassadors of Uzbekistan, India, Chile, China, France, and Belarus,
- Historian İlber Ortaylı,[8]
- Literary critic and historian Abdülbaki Gölpınarlı,
- Oud master and composer Cinuçen Tanrıkorur,
- Author Şefik Can,
- Restaurateur Mehmet S. Tezcakin,[9]
- Former Minister Hasan Celal Güzel,
- Author and journalist Mehmed Şevket Eygi,
- Art historian Mustafa Kamil Dürüst,
- Poet Mustafa Şerif Onaran,
- Director Muhsin Mete,
- Publisher Saman-Hatice Helvacıoğlu, and
- Sociologist Cemil Meriç.
In addition, French President Emmanuel Macron sent a special envoy to propose collaboration between the Nation's Library and his country's national library in the field of literature.[5]
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Accessibility
The Nation's Library is designed to be accessible with wheelchair, and the country's leading telecommunications companies, Turkcell and Türk Telekom, prepared technology rooms for visually- and hearing-impaired users.[2]
Cihannuma Hall

The Cihannuma (World Atlas) Hall, decorated with 16 columns representing the 16 Great Turkic Empires, houses a collection of 200,000 books and has a seating capacity for 224 readers at a time in an area of 3,500 square meters.[2] The dome of the Cihannuma Hall is 32 meters high and 27 meters wide.[6]
Verses four and five of sura al-Alaq from the Quran, the first to be revealed to Muhammad, on the significance of reading and writing are inscribed on the dome of the hall: "O, kalemle yazmayı öğretendir, insana bilmediğini öğretendir" (He is the one who taught how to write with a pen, taught the human being what he did not know).[5]
Books brought in collaboration with the Foreign Ministry on the culture and history of the countries where Turkey has a diplomatic mission are displayed in the World Library inside Cihannuma Hall.[2]
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Collections and exhibits
Summarize
Perspective

The Rare Books Library
The Rare Books Library contains 50 thousand books, including Abdülbaki Gölpınarlı manuscripts and Mehmet Şevket Eygi Collections.[6]
Research Library
The Research Library has a collection of nearly 20 thousand books and 20 group study rooms.[6]
Nasreddin Hodja Children's Library
The Nasreddin Hodja Children's Library, named after the Seljuk satirist Nasreddin Hodja, is available for readers between the ages five and ten, with its collection of 25 thousand books and a multimedia section.[6] The Children's Library provides activities related to traditional Turkish arts.[2]
Youth Library
The Youth Library, which is available for readers between the ages ten and fifteen, has a collection of 12 thousand books, and contains individual and group study rooms.[6]
Multimedia Library

The Multimedia Library contains 12 individual study rooms for four digital rooms that are equipped with touchscreen monitors and offer access to TRT archives and nearly 10 thousand audio-vision materials.[6]
Periodicals Hall
The Periodicals Hall has a collection of 1,550 magazines and newspapers and offers access to a 90-day archive of 7,000 dailies and magazines from 120 countries in 60 languages in full page on touchscreen monitors that also features catalog search.[6]
Reading Rooms
The Reading Rooms have a collection of 300,000 books and 32 group study rooms and 8 lounges.[6]
Conference Hall
The Conference Hall, with its four simultaneous interpretation cabins, is designed to host international conferences and meetings.[6]
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Online, electronic and digital resources
The Nation's Library offers access to:[6]
- 45 million documents from the State Archives,
- 300 thousand manuscripts within the Manuscripts Institution of Turkey,[10] and
- 550 thousand e-books, 6.5 million e-dissertations, 120 million articles, 60 thousand e-magazines from 46 databases, to which the Turkish Academic Network and Information Center and the Presidency are subscribed.
See also
References
External links
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