German Museum of Books and Writing


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The German Museum of Books and Writing (German: Deutsches Buch- und Schriftmuseum (DBSM)) in Leipzig, Germany, founded in 1884 as Deutsches Buchgewerbe-Museum, is the world's oldest museum of its kind, dedicated to collecting and preserving objects and documents as well as literature connected with the history of books, including paper, printing techniques, the art of illustration, and bookbinding. The museum is housed in a modern €60 million annex to the German National Library in Leipzig built in 2011.[1][2]

German Museum of Books and Writing

Deutsches Buch- und Schriftmuseum

The 2011 annex designed by Stuttgart architect Gabriele Glöckler

Map

Former name

Deutsches Buchgewerbe-Museum
Established29 October 1884
LocationLeipzig, Germany
FounderCarl Berendt Lorck [de]
Websitednb.de/EN/DBSM/dbsm_node.html

In 1886, the museum acquired the entire book collection of Heinrich Klemm [de], which he had sold to the Kingdom of Saxony the year before.[3] A rare copy of a 42-line Gutenberg Bible printed on vellum was among the books in the collection.[4] At the end of World War II, the Bible was taken as war booty and transferred to the Russian State Library in Moscow, where it remains today.[5]

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