A two-part history
The buildings of Chetham’s Library were built in 1421 to house the priests of what is now Manchester Cathedral. Over two hundred years before Humphrey Chetham’s trustees even thought of...
The buildings of Chetham’s Library were built in 1421 to house the priests of what is now Manchester Cathedral. Over two hundred years before Humphrey Chetham’s trustees even thought of...
Big thanks to Ted Young of Seattle for his article about the Library in the latest edition of the Journal of the Book Club of Washington. Ted visited Chetham’s...
As Friday is often Cake Day here at the Library we thought we would share these Eccles Cake photos, which are part of the collection of photographs of old Manchester...
Quite often, the first thing people ask us when they come into the Library isn’t anything to do with the books or the medieval building, but something that has been...
We were delighted to host a pop-up gallery of work by local photographer Gu yesterday, as part of the Angel Meadow Fest event organised by students at Manchester School...
It costs a lot to look after our collection and keep the books in usable condition for our readers and visitors. We are grateful for our NADFAS volunteers who come...
This amazing fifteenth-century manuscript roll measures a full six metres when fully extended, surely a contender for the longest of the Library’s treasures. Not just a beautiful object, this closely...
We have a small but interesting collection of material relating to the great scientist and mathematician John Dalton (1766-1844), who spent much of his adult life in Manchester and...
The Library’s unique 1493 copy of Hartman Schedel’s Liber Chronicarum, otherwise known as the Nuremberg Chronicle, is under the spotlight in today’s 101 Treasures. The extensive annotations made by one...
As many of you will already know, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels studied together at Chetham’s Library in the summer of 1845, working together in the now-famous window alcove...