One of the major tasks of the Austrian National Library is the collection and archiving of all publications appearing in Austria (including electronic media). Depending on the law for the medium, four copies, and by other printing elements, two obligation copies each, must be delivered to the National Library by periodic printing elements appearing in Austria. In addition, the library collects all works of Austrian authors appearing abroad, as well as such works which concern Austrians or the Austrian spirit and culture. Further publications from the foreign country are taken up with emphasis on the range of the
Geisteswissenschaften. Tasks and services of the national library cover the development of the existence and their supply in the form of local-loan, remote-loan, and search services as well as Auskunfts, information and reproduction services. The legally given general order for education is obeyed also by co-operation with universities, schools and adult education mechanisms. Altogether, the library has more than seven million objects, of which approximately three million are printed.
Manuscripts and rare books ) from the Vienna
Dioscurides, depicting princess
Juliana Anikia and allegories of Generosity and Intelligence Dating from the 4th century CE to the present, this collection includes antique, medieval and modern manuscripts from almost every literate culture. Notable items in the collection include the 7th century
Notitia ecclesiarum urbis Romae and the
Vienna Dioscurides, the latter of which was inscribed on
UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme Register in 1997 in recognition of its world significance and outstanding universal value.
Map collection and Globe Museum The
map collection includes maps back to the 16th century and it has existed since 1905. After the First World War, the collection of the
Habsburgs was taken over, designated as the Habsburg "Family Estate Library" (Familien-Fideikommiss-Bibliothek). The map collection includes the
Globe Museum, containing over 380 globes, some dating back to the 16th century. It is the world's only public globe museum, and has been in existence since 1956. The principal part of the Globe Museum's inventory consists of globes which existed before 1850. There is also technical literature in the collection, plus similar instruments, such as
armillary spheres. The map collection also includes the 17th-century Atlas Blaeu-Van der Hem, a 50-volume set that consists of more than 2,400 maps, prints, and drawings. Considered the most beautiful and most remarkable atlas ever composed, it includes four volumes of manuscript maps and topographical drawings originally made for the Dutch East India Company (VOC). It was inscribed on
UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme Register in 2003.
Papyrus collection and Papyrus Museum During the 19th century, the
papyrus collection became an important part of the library. The collection goes back to a private collection of Austrian
Archduke Rainer, who gave the collection to Emperor
Franz Joseph I of Austria on 18 August 1899. The papyrus collection contains about 180,000 objects from the period between that of the 15th century BCE to the 16th Century CE. Besides papyri the collection includes papers, records on
clay tablets, inscribed wood and wax trays, stone tablets, leathers, textiles and bones, as well as gold, silver and bronze articles with inscriptions. The papyrus collection is the largest such collection worldwide, and was inscribed on
UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme Register in 2001. The Papyrus Museum, located in the library in the
Neue Burg wing of the
Hofburg Palace, has around 200 objects from the collection on display.
Music Since 1826, the music collection has contained numerous scores and first-printings of works of well-known composers, such as
Anton Bruckner and
Richard Strauss. Numerous recordings such as records or CDs are kept as well. Among the music collection are also many handwritten notes of composers.
Incunabula, old and precious prints Containing old and valuable printings, the collection of
Incunabula is one of the five largest collections of historical block printing of the world. As an independent collection, it has existed since 1995 and ranks thereby among the youngest of the library. The collection covers approximately 8,000 incunabula (the fourth largest in existence worldwide), block printings from 1501 to 1850 (e.g. the Fugger newspapers), and bibliophile as well as rare and valuable printings without temporal restriction. The SIAWD collection has also been supplemented with
Chinese and
Japanese printings.
Planned languages and Esperanto Museum The Department of Planned Languages and Esperanto Museum incorporates a collection of materials related to planned languages.
Women's and gender studies The Department of the Library which collects, digitizes and works to promote publications on women and gender studies is known as
Ariadne. Founded in 1992, the department digitized its materials in 2000 and works to improve the visibility of women's contributions to society and in the history of Austria.
Austrian Web Archive The library has
archived websites since 2009. Its themed collections are women's and gender studies, media, and politics; event collections include sites reflecting on 100 years since the
First Austrian Republic, elections and the
pandemic. Collection lists may be researched on the dedicated website and access to archived copies is possible on the premises of the library in Heldenplatz, and also the
Administrative Library of the Austrian Federal Chancellery,
Vorarlberger Landesbibliothek,
University Library of Graz, Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Tirol, Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Salzburg and
Wienbibliothek im Rathaus. ==Austrian National Library collections==