The University of Tokyo Library is a term used to refer to the University of Tokyo (UTokyo) Library System, which consists of three comprehensive libraries located in each of the university's main campuses, and 27 field-specific libraries affiliated with faculties and institutes within UTokyo.[1] As of December 2023, the UTokyo Library System owns a collection of over 9.98 million books and numerous materials of historical or scientific values, making it the second largest library in Japan.[2] It is only surpassed by the National Diet Library, which stores approximately 12.11 million books.[3]
The General Library officially opened when UTokyo's predecessor institutions were reorganised to form UTokyo, the nation's first university, on 12 April 1877. However, its roots can be traced back to Edo-era libraries, such as the Bansho Shirabesho. It was relocated to its current location at Hongo in August 1884. Soseki Natsume's novel Sanshiro provides a detailed description of the library around this time.
On 1 September 1923, the original building was destroyed in the Great Kanto Earthquake, along with 750 thousand books from its collections. This loss included over 20 thousand books from Friedrich Max Müller's collections and Takizawa Bakin's handwritten scripts.[4] The library's reconstruction was greatly supported by donations from abroad, the most notable of which was $2 million (about $36 million in 2023) from John D. Rockefeller.This building completed in 1928 is still in use, and it also serves as the headquarters for the whole of the UTokyo Library System.
A major renovation was completed in the late 2010s, and it now features a 46-metre-deep automatic underground storage capable of housing 3 million books.[5]
The General Library is open to faculty members, students, auditors, members of staff, and others who have been approved by the director. Former faculty members, members of staff, and alumni are also allowed access.
ILL service provides access to the holding of the General Library through interlibrary loan of original material. Loan service is available to university libraries in Japan.
The current Komaba Library, opened in 2002, serves as the successor to the former building, which had become too small for its growing collections. It functions as the main library for the College of Arts and Sciences at Komaba, catering to the general education of all first-year undergraduate students, as well as second to fourth-year students who decided to study there instead of moving to Hongo for specialised education.[6]
The library features a diverse range of learning materials, particularly for subjects such as Linear Algebra and Calculus, which are mandatory for all natural science undergraduates in their first year.
Opened in 2004, Kashiwa Library is a library devoted to the natural sciences. All the books in Kashiwa Library can be searched on OPAC.[7]
Faculty members, graduate students, undergraduate students, auditors, others who have requested use from outside the university, and others who have been approved by the director can use the Kashiwa Library.
Apart from the three comprehensive libraries, the UTokyo Library System includes 27 field-specific libraries.
Asian Research Library | Link | ||
Law Library | Link | ||
Centre for Modern Legal and Political Documents (Meiji Shinbun Zasshi Bunko) | A comprehensive collection of newspapers, magazines, and other materials that help understand Japan in Meiji and Taisho era | Link | |
Medical Library | Link | ||
Libraries for Engineering and Information Science & Technology | consists of 10 smaller collections affiliated with each department in the faculty of engineering | Link | |
Humanities and Sociology Library | Link | ||
Science Library | Link | ||
Economics Library | Link | ||
Education Library | Link | ||
Pharmaceutical Library | Link | ||
Information Studies Library | Link | ||
Multi-media and Socio-information Archive | Link | ||
Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia Library | Link | ||
Institute of Social Science Library | Link | ||
Historiographical Library | Link | ||
University Museum Library | Link |
Agriculture and Life Sciences Library | Link | ||
Earthquake Research Institute Library | Collects not only materials related to modern earthquake and seismic studies but also old Ukiyoe and documents that give detailed information about earthquakes that occurred long before scientific analysis of earthquake started | Link |
Science Library, the Graduate School of Arts and Science | Link | ||
Centre for Pacific and American Studies Library | Link | ||
Mathematics Library | Link | ||
Institute of Industrial Science Library | Link | ||
Research Centre for Advanced Science and Technology Library | Link |
Institute for Cosmic Ray Research Library | Link | ||
Institute for Solid State Physics Library | Link | ||
Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute Library | Link |
The UTokyo Library houses many collections. Some collections are searchable through OPAC, though most are available only through card catalogue.
Inter-library loan & delivery service between libraries in the campuses is available for researchers as teachers and graduates (some libraries are excluded).
The Book Contents Database allows you to search for books held in the libraries of the University of Tokyo by looking at their tables of contents or information taken from their summaries and dust jackets. This gives you access to the actual content of the books, which was previously unavailable through the conventional OPAC system. Approximately 229,820 volumes (Japanese:164,319 English:65,501, as of 2004.11) of books/materials held by the University of Tokyo can be searched.
The database of bibliographies and abstracts of dissertations/theses, which were granted by the University of Tokyo. The database includes bibliographies from 1957, and abstracts after 1994. Guide to the locations of dissertations is also displayed.
Search for newspapers held in the University of Tokyo libraries.