The Bodleian is the largest university library system in the United Kingdom. It includes the principal University library - the Bodleian Library - which has been a library of legal deposit for 400 years - as well as 27 libraries across Oxford, including major research libraries and faculty, departmental and institutional libraries.
The Bodleian Libraries are among the most celebrated in the world, not only for their incomparable collections of books and manuscripts, but also for their buildings, some of which have remained in continuous use since the Middle Ages. One of the oldest libraries in Europe, the Bodleian is second in size only to the British Library in Britain, with over 13 million printed items. First opened to scholars in 1602, it incorporates an earlier library built by the University in the 15th century to house books donated by Humfrey, Duke of Gloucester. Since 1602 it has expanded, slowly at first but with increasing momentum over the last 150 years, to keep pace with the ever-growing accumulation of books, papers and other materials, but the core of the old buildings has remained intact.
Known to many Oxford scholars simply as ‘the Bod’, these buildings are still used by students and scholars from all over the world, and they attract an ever-increasing number of visitors.
Members of the public can explore the collections via the Bodleian's digital collections online or by visiting the exhibition galleries in the Weston Library or by viewing displays in the Old Library. Visitors can also view the reading rooms and library spaces of the Old Library through daily tours.
If you are a student or researcher you can find out about gaining access to the library for research purposes.
Director: Richard Ovenden, Bodley's Librarian