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Sabir Central City Library

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Central City Library named after M.A. Sabir
Eastern façade of the building
Map
Former namesAmbartsum Melikov's House
General information
TypeMansion
Architectural styleBaroque Revival architecture
Address13 Islam Safarli St., Baku
CountryAzerbaijan Azerbaijan
Construction started1919

The Mirza Alakbar Sabir Central City Library (Azerbaijani: Mirzə Ələkbər Sabir adına Mərkəzi Şəhər Kitabxanası) is a public library in downtown Baku, Azerbaijan, established in 1919.

History

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In late 1918, the Cultural-Educational Department of the Association of Consumer Societies of Azerbaijan decided to open a public library. Providing the collection for the new library proved to be a difficult task, since there was no large-scale publication in the country at the time. The library's initial collection included a few hundred items, mostly acquired from personal book collections and its readership was very limited. In 1921, it was named after Mirza Alekper Sabir in commemoration of the tenth anniversary of his death. At this time, with the exception of limited resources in Azeri, most published materials were in Persian, Arabic and Turkish.

The library was founded at 13 Verkhnyaya Priyutskaya Street (present-day Shamil Azizbeyov Street). Later it was moved to its present location in the 1904 baroque mansion which once belonged to oil industrialist Ambartsum Melikov and was designed by architect Vartan Sarkisov.

By 1929, the library contained 12,300 items and had 4,000 readers, included an association of women readers establish to promote library services among newly emancipated Azerbaijani women. In 1938, the library became the first establishment in Azerbaijan to train professional librarians. In 1941, it became the first library in the country to have a bibliographic reference department.

In 2014, the Sabir Central City Library was named "Best Library of the Year".

It was re-opened in 2017 by the government of Baku.[1]

References

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  1. ^ "Central City Library re-opened in Baku [PHOTO]". Azernews.Az. 2017-03-29. Retrieved 2024-02-20.