(fragment of the Gospel of John) at the John Rylands Library On opening in 1900, the library had 70,000 books and fewer than 100 manuscripts and by 2012, more than 250,000 printed volumes and over one million manuscripts and archival items. The main foundation of the library's collections acquired in 1892 was the
Althorp Library of
Lord Spencer regarded as one of the finest library collections in private ownership with 43,000 items - 3,000 of which originate from before 1501. Mrs Rylands paid £210,000 for Spencer's collection which included the
Aldine Collection and an
incunabula collection of 3,000 items. The incunabula included a few block books and the St Christopher block print (southern Germany, 1423) the latter being the earliest dated block print whose date in undisputed. During subsequent years, more than 1,000 more incunabula were added to the collection (from various sources). Owens College Library received
Richard Copley Christie's library of over 8,000 volumes including many rare books from the
Renaissance period in 1901. It was part of the Victoria University of Manchester library from 1904 and was transferred to the John Rylands Library building after the merger in 1972. In 1901, Mrs Rylands paid £155,000 for more than 6,000 manuscripts owned by
James Lindsay, 26th Earl of Crawford of
Haigh Hall. The
Bibliotheca Lindesiana was one of the most impressive private collections in Britain at the time, both for its size and rarity of some of its contents.
Walter Llewellyn Bullock bequeathed 5,000 items (notably early Italian imprints) during the 1930s. Mrs Rylands died in 1908 having bequeathed her private collections and an endowment of £200,000 to enable the library to expand. The funds were used to acquire 180,000 books, 3,000 manuscripts and extend the building. The Librarian,
Henry Guppy, invited individuals to deposit their archives for safe keeping in 1921 when there were no
county record offices in Lancashire or Cheshire and the library became one of the first to collect historical family records. The library's collections include exquisite medieval illuminated manuscripts, examples of early European printing including a fine paper copy of the
Gutenberg Bible and books printed by
William Caxton, and personal papers of distinguished historical figures including Elizabeth Gaskell, John Dalton and
John Wesley. The library houses
papyrus fragments known as the
Rylands Papyri and documents from
North Africa. The most notable are the
St John Fragment, believed to be the oldest extant
New Testament text,
Rylands Library Papyrus P52, the earliest fragment of the text of the canonical Gospel of John; the earliest fragment of the
Septuagint,
Papyrus Rylands 458; and
Papyrus Rylands 463, a manuscript fragment of the apocryphal Gospel of Mary.
Minuscule 702, ε2010 (
von Soden), is a
Greek minuscule manuscript of the
New Testament, on parchment. Among the
papyri from Oxyrhynchus are a homily about women (Inv R. 55247), part of the
Book of Tobit (Apocrypha) (448), and
Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 73, relating to the transfer of a slave. The Arabic papyri were catalogued by
David Samuel Margoliouth; his catalogue was published in 1933. In addition to the collections of Spencer, Crawford, Christie and
Bullock, holdings have been enriched by gifts, permanent loans or purchases of several libraries belonging to institutions and individuals. These include the French Revolution Broadsides donated by the 27th Earl of Crawford in 1924 and the archives of the
Methodist Church of Great Britain in 1977. In 1924 the library purchased the greater part of the French revolutionary collection of the Bibliotheca Lindesiana; and then on the occasion of the library's semi-jubilee the
27th Earl of Crawford donated the French Revolutionary Broadsides from the Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Between 1946 and 1988 a number of sections of the Earl of Crawford's library were deposited here, however all but one of these were withdrawn in 1988. The British Pop Archive, a national collection dedicated to the preservation and research of popular culture, opened with an exhibition at the library in May 2022. ==Staff==