• As of 2003, manuscripts, rare books, and lithographs amounted to 60,000 in number, including 31,000 volumes on manuscript basics, words, and ideas; logic and philosophy; theosophy and mysticism; and the
Hadith; with 65% in Arabic, and the rest in Persian, Turkish, Urdu, and other languages. Among these volumes are unique texts of many famous Islamic authors. The most ancient of these treasures show the history of the
Qur'an from the late 2nd and 3rd centuries A.H.; including the oldest two-component version of the Qur'an in
Kufic script, of
Ali bin Hilal, also known as Ibn Abolhasan Ali Ibn Hilal, as well as two volumes of interpretation; the
Nahj al-Balagha of
Sharif Razi; the Gospel in Latin; and copies of the
Avesta. • There are more than 4,000 volumes of photographs of manuscripts, as well as 12,200 microfilms and lists of books of the 10th and 11th centuries—printed in
Arabic, English,
Turkish,
Latin, and
Armenian—as well as more than 30,000 rare lithographs. • There are over 1,500,000 printed books in Persian, Arabic, Turkish, Urdu, and other non-Latin languages. This collection is housed on three floors of the new buildings. There is also an archival library of books of Communist and anti-Islamic groups. • The periodical section has more than 2,500 journals and newspapers in Persian, Arabic, Turkish, and Urdu, as well as a number of old magazines and newspapers, in lithograph, from the time of the
Qajar dynasty. • Handwritten documents over the previous five centuries number 500,000 so far. These include edicts—of kings, princes, rulers—regarding marriage, etc. • Non-literary objects in the library include coins,
stamps, old photo albums, other old color and black-and-white photos,
astrolabes, audio and video tapes, and computer disks. • There are old and new geographic maps and atlases of the world, and geographic references in different languages. • The works of the library founder, Marashi Najafi, to be put on display. ==Departments==