Reader services from September 20, 2021

Reader services from September 20, 2021

In accordance with a resolution by the Government of the Republic of Lithuania (2021-08-11 Nr. 651), the Wroblewski Library of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences will be temporarily changing its procedure for provision of services.  From September 20, 2021, the Library will provide contact services and run  events only for persons who meet at least one criterion for the Lithuanian Covid immunity passport (“Passport of Opportunities”).  The document must be presented to the Visitor Access Control Desk employee for validity check.

Visitors not in possession of the Passport of Opportunities or another Covid immunity document of equal validity will only be able loan or return items from the Main Collection at the Library’ Circulation Desk or the Book-O-Mat.  As the number of visitors in the reading rooms, event and exhibition spaces (the entrance hall and the auditoriium) will be regulated  in accordance with the general requirements for distance and/or  space per person,  visitors must register in advance by phone or e-mail.

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  • Until the end of the extreme situation period, the Library will work Monday through Friday, 8 a. m. to 5 p. m.
  • Books and documents in reading rooms and at the Circulation Desk will be issued after you request items through the electronic catalogue, by phone, e-mail or in person.
  • You are welcome to read ordered publications, use work places, and work on personal computers in all reading rooms while keeping a safe distance of 2 meters between persons.
  • In order to work in the reading rooms, it is necessary to register in advance by phone or e-mail. The number of study places will be limited to ensure safe distance between readers. Readers who have not registered in advance and have not reserved a study place will be admitted to the reading rooms only if there are vacant places.
  • You may stay in a reading room up to 4 hours a day.
  • Copiers and scanners may be used only if agreed to by the reading room staff.
  • Requested items from the Main Collection will be issued at the Library or Book-O-Mat.
  • Visitors may enter the Library or reading rooms only if they are wearing protective masks (shields). It is strictly forbidden to remove masks inside.
  • The Library reserves the right not to provide service to visitors with signs of acute upper respiratory infections (fever, cough, difficulty breathing, etc.).
  • To request or return items from the Main Collection please call +370 5 262 3678 or e-mail: abonementas@mab.lt.
  • To place a study place reservation and request items at the General and Periodicals Reading Room and the Humanities and Social Sciences Reading Room please call +370 5 262 2546 or e-mail: aptarnavimas@mab.lt.
  • To request items at the Reference Reading Room please call +370 5 262 7935 or e-mail: donatas.ustinavicius@mab.lt.
  • To place a study place reservation and request items at the Physical Sciences Reading Room please call +370 5 212 0447 or e-mail: egidija.cipariene@mab.lt.
  • To place a study place reservation and request items at the Old Periodicals Reading Room please call +370 5 240 4834 or e-mail: senoji.periodika@mab.lt.
  • To place a study place reservation and request items from the Manuscripts Collection at the Tadeusz Wroblewski Reading Room please call +370 5 262 3667 or e-mail: rankrasciai@mab.lt.
  • To place a study place reservation and request items from the Rare Prints Collection at the Tadeusz Wroblewski Reading Room please call +370 5 262 3669 or e-mail: retispaudiniai@mab.lt.


The 27 Book Lovers (1930–1940): “Working for the Lithuanian Book”

The 27 Book Lovers (1930–1940): “Working for the Lithuanian Book”

The 27 Book Lovers was a bibliophilic society that existed in Kaunas in 1930-1940.  According to its statute, it aimed to “cultivate the artistic book and make it popular in Lithuania”. The 27 Book Lovers fostered elitist bibliophilia.  It had a fixed number of members (never more than 27), popularized artistically designed books, and produced numbered bibliophilic publications, which became standards of exemplary publishing.  The Book Lovers united people from various professions: Lithuanian army officers, diplomats, lawyers, writers, and scholars.  Bibliophilic societies and clubs existed in various countries across the world and became quite numerous in France, Germany, and Poland in the 1920s.  Therefore, an idea to form a similar club emerged among Lithuanian intellectuals. It was in part prompted by their concern about Lithuanian book publishing and culture, which was still undeveloped at that time.
Why twenty-seven?  Three multiplied by nine is three nines.  As it is the name of a popular Lithuanian spirit, Vytautas Steponaitis playfully proposed to make this number part of the name of the new society.  The Book Lovers had much fun with the symbolic numbers 3 and 9. Three nines were the upper limit for the number of members (during the decade of the society’s existence it had from 15 to 21 members), the term of office for the management board was three years, the anniversary was celebrated after nine years, the registration and bank account numbers ended in 27, the statute and regulations had 27 items each, the meetings took place only on the 27th day of a month.  Vilhelmas Burkevičius summed up the activities of the 27 Book Lovers as follows: “A unique property of this society is its intimacy, a restricted number of members, it is the elite of book aficionados, united by their joint activities and determination to work for the Lithuanian book”.
In addition to bibliophilic publishing (eight books and two sheet publications), the 27 Book Lovers run book exhibitions and tours gave talks on book-studies topics at the society’s meetings. These presentations served as a basis for articles in the Chronicle of the 27 Book Lovers (two volumes came out in for 1933 and 1937; the third volume, slated for publication in 1940, was not completed). The society had its own library, which was being enriched by subscriptions to foreign bibliophilic periodicals and purchases of publications in book studies.
After the Soviet occupation in 1940, the society was dissolved and some of its members suffered repressions. Nevertheless, the bibliophilic ideas spread by the 27 Book Lovers stayed alive, and the society’s contribution to organization of bibliophilic movement, research in book history, and publishing of bibliophilic books made a considerable impact on the development of Lithuanian bibliophilia, book studies and book art.
The exhibition will tell you about society members, their everyday activities, publishing pursuits, and the circumstances of the society’s dissolution. The purpose of this exhibition is to shed light on documents that appear insignificant at first glance (protocols, bills, receipts, invitations, postcards, messages, etc.).  These materials testify to the extremely purposeful, intensive, and interesting life of interwar Kaunas bibliophiles, which they lived by clear rules set by themselves. The exhibits (with a few exceptions) are from the archive of the 27 Book Lovers held by the Manuscript Department of the Wroblewski Library (LMAVB RS F59).  Almost all of them are on display for the first time.  These documents expand and, in some places, revise our view on the panorama of Lithuanian cultural life in the fourth decade of the 20th century.

To virtual exhibition