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Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati, Siena

Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati
Catherine of Siena biblioteca comunale.jpg
Saint Catherine praying, from Orazioni in volgare italiano, 15th century, Biblioteca Comunale Ms. T. II. 7, f. 161r
Country Italy
Established 1758, 1959
Location Via della Sapienza 3, 53100 Siena
Coordinates 43°19′14″N 11°19′46″E / 43.3206°N 11.3295°E / 43.3206; 11.3295Coordinates: 43°19′14″N 11°19′46″E / 43.3206°N 11.3295°E / 43.3206; 11.3295
Collection
Size over 500,000
Website www.bibliotecasiena.it

The Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati is the public library located at Via della Sapienza () #3 of the comune of Siena, in Tuscany, Italy.

The library's origins date to 1758, when the archdeacon and local economist Sallustio Bandini donated his library to the University of Siena, on the condition that it grant public access. The university at this time lacked a formal library. In 1774, the library already included 13,000 objects. In 1798 an earthquake closed the library; it soon reopened but was closed by the French in 1808, along with the University of Siena. The library was restarted by the commune in 1810, and amassed further manuscripts from the suppressed convent of Sant'Agostino.

The collection over the centuries has been greatly enhanced by additional donors, including the manuscripts and designs owned by Giuseppe Ciaccheri (1724-1804), pupil of Bandini, and the first librarian of the collection. In 1786 the library received works housed in the Santa Maria della Scala (Siena), among them the precious Byzantine lectionary Gospels (designated by 283 on the list Gregory-Aland) already part of the treasure of the same institution (X. IV. 1). In 1866, the editor Giuseppe Porri left to the library his collection of stamps, signatures, coins, medals and signature seals. In 1932 the podestà of Siena, Fabio Bargagli Petrucci, became the administrator and added his collection of public documents, christening it with the name "Intronati", in memory of the Accademia degli Intronati of the 18th-century.

Atop the entrance to the Historical Reading room of the library is a plaque with the six statutes of the old Accademia in Latin:

In the 1990s reconstruction led to designation of a specific hall. Some material of the Museo archeologico nazionale was transferred to the former monastery adjacent to Santa Maria della Scala.

In 1935 the collection of the library was estimated at 120,000 volumes, 86,000 brochures, 820 incunabula, 5,226 manuscripts, 20,000 autographs, and stamps. Currently, the library's collection of printed books and manuscripts is estimated at over half a million units. The archive of the library is divided in twenty-nine series. Special value have documents from the time of Renaissance and Reformation.


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