Islamabad’s main library has all that a reader needs
Around the corner from the Prime Minister’s Secretariat, the National Library is home to a collection of around 400,000 texts, including manuscripts and rare historical books.
The National Library was established in 1986, although a skeleton of the library – later named the Liaquat National Library – was first set up in Karachi in 1951. When the National Library moved to Islamabad, the collection from Karachi came too.
Among those books was the Ain-i-Akbari (Administration of Akbar), a 16th century text written by Mughal emperor Akbar’s court historian Abu’l Fazl, and a rare copy of Kooliyat Meer Taqee, which was published under the patronage of the College of Fort William and edited by munshis attached to the college in Calcutta in 1981.
National Library Director Syed Ghyour Hussain said: “This library is the topmost knowledge resource centre on the nation, which receives, maintains and preserves all the published literature of the country under the provision of the Copyright Ordinance 1961.