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Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Library & information sciences > General
The Society of Jesus began a tradition of collecting books and
curating those collections at its foundation. These libraries were
important to both their European sites and their missions; they
helped build a global culture as part of early modern European
evangelization. When the Society was suppressed, the Jesuits'
possessions were seized and redistributed, by transfer to other
religious orders, confiscation by governments, or sale to
individuals. These possessions were rarely returned, and when, in
1814, the Society was restored, the Jesuits had to begin to build
new libraries from scratch. Their practices of librarianship,
though not their original libraries, left an intellectual legacy
which still informs library science today. While there are few
European Jesuit universities left, institutions of higher learning
administered by the Society of Jesus remain important to the
intellectual development of students and communities around the
world, supported by large, rich library collections.
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Catalogue of a Collection of Manuscripts, Including Several of Interest and Value, in the Oriental, Greek, Latin, Italian, Spanish, French, German, Flemish, and English Languages
- Autograph Letters of Many Celebrated Persons: and an Assemblage Of...
(Hardcover)
Royal College Of Surgeons Of England
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R762
Discovery Miles 7 620
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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