The idea of forming an international organization of
antiquarian booksellers that would beneficially link national associations of antiquarian booksellers was originally conceived by the former president of the Dutch Association, Menno Hertzberger. As a Jew, he had spent part of the
Second World War hiding from the Nazis. To quote him: "Five long years (of war) had put up … barriers between nations. There was no communication. This enforced extra chauvinism - worse, hatred. Was there a possibility to do something about inter-human relationships, to bring nations more together? This was my dream. But how could it be realized? Only on common ground, on mutual interests. Therefore, for an
antiquarian bookseller, by THE BOOK!" In 1947, representatives from five countries,
Denmark,
France,
Great Britain, the
Netherlands and
Sweden, met in
Amsterdam to discuss the formation of such an organization, with the aim of establishing open markets, to foster friendship and understanding, and to counteract the animosity and suspicion engendered by World War Two. The president of the
British Association,
Percy H. Muir, chaired the first conference and became a major role player in the evolution of the League; Muir also assembled the important scientific library of
Ian Fleming, later author of the
James Bond novels - through Muir, Fleming himself became a director of the London booksellers Elkin Mathews. ILAB was formally incorporated in
Copenhagen in September 1948, with ten participating countries, among them
Belgium,
Finland,
Switzerland,
Norway,
Italy, Great Britain, France, Sweden, the Netherlands and Denmark. William S. Kundig from Switzerland was elected the first ILAB President in the history of the League. In his opening speech the Danish bookseller Einar Grønholt Pedersen defined the universal aims and ethics of all ILAB antiquarian booksellers:
Present status 22 national associations and over 1600 rare booksellers in 39 countries under one roof: Members of the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers are the national associations, their members are affiliated to the League, and known as ILAB booksellers or ILAB affiliates. ILAB Congresses and ILAB Book Fairs are important marketplaces of the rare book world. The ILAB Breslauer Prize for Bibliography is awarded every fourth year to outstanding academic works on
bibliography and the history of the book. The ILAB Missing Books Register aims to prevent book thefts worldwide. The ILAB website is regularly updated with information on booksellers, the rare book market, international rare book fairs and events and holds a comprehensive search function for material for sale by ILAB booksellers: www.ilab.org ==Code of Customs and Usages==