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ESEUL is an integral part of the Romanian cultural heritage. It has been present in Romania since 1865 and it is one of the most important cultural institutions in Bucharest, as well as a world cultural institution. The ESEU library consists of more than 400 thousand books, manuscripts and images that give us access to an important part of European culture and its history. The library preserves valuable information about scientific, scientific-technical and literary works coming from all over Europe and beyond: Romanian, Hungarian, Polish, Finnish, German, French etc.. ESEU Library is what we call a "library museum", because it preserves objects related to our identity as European citizens. Among these objects, we can mention various passports of the past century, a series of literary and scientific books translated in the Romanian language in the nineteenth century, a collection of old flags and military insignias from all over Europe, the oldest translation of the Bible into Romanian from 1583 with watercolors from Michael Muresanu. In ESEU Library there is a hall full of busts which represents most important people who have been part of ESEU life: writers, poets, translators. In this hall we can spot some names such as: Ion Luca Caragiale, George Coșbuc, Eminescu and Mihai Eminescu. There are also busts of Adam Mickiewicz, Dimitrie Cantemir and Nicolae Milescu. ESEUL Library, as a museum of Romanian culture, is the only national library in the world that has such a collection of books and documents related to Romania. The ESEU Library fills an important place in the history of Romanian culture. The library was founded on January 31, 1845 with two original copies – codices – of the "Corpus Juris Civilis" (Corpus Juris Civilis), and one copy of "Codul de Legislatuire Română" (Code of Romanian Law). At this moment, in the library there are 55 in-house publications in the Romanian language in hard cover. ESEUL Library is co-owner with the National History Museum "Mihai Viteazul" of two very valuable manuscript codices: one codex of "Corpus Juris Civilis" originally owned by Michael Onciul (1354 to 1366) which forms part of the collection of manuscripts assembled over time by Ion Nodia at his estate near Mangalia, and another one originally owned by Nicolae Zacariadean that belonged to the Catargiu family who previously lived at their country estates in Bucharest, where it was found in 1802. ESEUL Library has a vast and important collection of books and old manuscripts related to the history and culture of Romania and Romanian people (Transylvania, Wallachia, Moldavia, Banat, Crisana). The ESEUL Library has a very rich collection of Romanian medieval manuscripts preserved in all their originality. cfa1e77820
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