
The Bodleian Libraries at Oxford are safeguarding and showcasing outstanding texts and ephemera so we can all enjoy the benefits of 21st century enlightenment

In 2012 The Bodley Medal has been awarded to Australian Peter Carey, who is the author of twelve novels, the most recent of which is the highly acclaimed ‘The Chemistry of Tears”

The Romance of the Middle Ages’ an exhibition commencing January 28, 2012 at Oxford in England showcases manuscripts and early printed books containing romantic literature.

The Bodleian Libraries at Oxford are putting on show for the first time the original manuscript of the ‘boys own’ essential reading material Lord of the Flies. It is a human behaviour story par excellence about order and chaos, capture and torture, morality and immorality, being civilised and the dreadful consequences of completely uncivilised behaviour.

The Bodleian Libraries at Oxford in England have announced the newly acquired letters of renowned Czech author Franz Kafka (1883 – 1924) to his favourite sister Ottla, who died in the death camp at Auschwitz during World War II, are on public display for the first time.

The Bodleian Libraries at the University of Oxford have recently digitized Maimonides’ Mishneh Torah, a comprehensive code of Jewish Law. This means the manuscript can now be consulted, browsed and read by those inhabiting cyberspace

It is really only since the Victorian Age that early maps of the world went from being considered amusing relics of dark-age ignorance held up to public scorn and ridicule to being seen as an essential element in understanding the medieval world-view. They are important to anyone with an interest in the art, literature, philosophy and social structure of that time.

The Bodleian Libraries at the University of Oxford has acquired at a Sotheby’s auction the last Jane Austen original manuscript, which has been in private hands

Each summer at Oxford University in Oxfordshire England they hold an exhibition at the Bodleian Libraries. Manifold Greatness celebrates the 400th anniversary of the publication in 1611 of The King James Authorized Version of The Holy Bible. This is a book that still attracts superlatives and is beloved by scholars, churchmen, churchwomen and laity the world over.