The precise date when the Library of the Serbian Chemical Society was founded is very difficult to define because there is no written document about it. According to a verbal statement of Prof. A. Leko and other professors, the Library was founded on July 16th, 1934. In "The Rules of the Chemical Society of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia" from 1935, article 11 reads: "that benefactors of the Society become those who subscribe, or in their wills leave money, property, estate, books or collections worth at least five thousand dinars, if the Presidency accepts the present." This can be taken as the beginning of the library fund. The oldest seal on the books, journals and monographs bears the inscription The Library of the Chemical Society of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and the date on the seal is 1937. That is possibly the year when the first books were introduced into the inventory of the Library. That old inventory has unfortunately not been found, so these are only suppositions about when the Library began to exist.
Nowadays this Library is
a real treasure of technical
literature, either from the aspect of the historic development of
chemistry
in Serbia, or because of a great number of valuable and rare foreign
journals.
The Library has been completely organised, it has all technical
catalogues
(topographic, alphabetical and UDC) and one can easily find the
necessary
information. Gradually 740 books
were
registered, the largest number of which are in Serbian, some in
Russian,
and a small number in German, French and English.
The total fund of books was supplied either by way of
exchange or received as presents from the authors or publishers. The
oldest
publication is from 1891, reprinted from Tezak, by Dusan M. Spasic, the
author of Lectures on Hops. The oldest foreign publication is in
French,
a report entitled Rapport sommaire sur les
relations
entre le monopole de l'alcool et l'agriculture en Suisse by E.W.
Miller,
communicated
at the Congress International d'Agriculture 1898, Lausanne. The books
printed
at the beginning of this century deal mostly with hygiene, agriculture,
teaching and education, and have great historical significance for
studying
the health and hygiene situation in Serbia at the time. The most
numerous
books from that period are those written by Aleksa Stanojevic: Drinking-Water
in Soko Banja (1908); Medical Circumstances in Serbia During the Reign
of knjaz Milos Obrenovic 1815-1839; A Contribution to the Health
Culture
of Sremski Karlovci from 1772-1872; The Medical Situation in Zemun
1750-1900;
Hamami (Turkish Public Baths) in Bosnia and Herzegovina 1462-1916; On
Teaching
and Education, (1913); Our Chemical Nomenclature, (1908). Worthy
of attention is also The Directory of Engineers and Architects
Graduating
from the Technical Faculty, University of Belgrade 1919-1938. Books in
the Library published later in the thirties referred mainly to the
study
of certain diseases in Serbia (tuberculosis, the plague), to health
education,
hygienic conditions and health protection of the population.
After the war, at the end of 1945, article 5 of the new
Rules of the Society dealt with organising a technical library.
The
book fund of that time contained a considerable number of books
published
by Nakladnl Zavod Hrvatske (the Publishing House of Croatia), such as
for
example, An Introduction to the Leather Industry (1947); The Technology
of Resins (1947); The Dyeing and Printing of Textile Products (1948);
The
Beer Industry (1948); The Technology of Fuel; The Technology of Sugar;
Copper; Synthetic Materials, etc. From that. time there are a lot
of textbooks for secondary schools, as well as for university
studies.
The increase in the number of books was more than 20 books a year;
later
the number was reduced to 10 books a year, and nowadays decreased to
5-6
books a year.
However, apart from the valuable book fund which is
valuable
mostly as a survey of the historical development of chemistry in
Serbia,
the Library of the Serbian Chemical Society has a very rich fund of
journals
from all over the world, from China, Japan, India, the Soviet Union,
Romania,
Bulgaria, Greece, France, England and North and South America.
All
these journals are in the possession of the Library of the Serbian
Chemical
Society, and it is impossible to rind them in any other library in
Yugoslavia.
This fact makes the importance of these journals greater. The
journal
inventory comprises 1440 bibliographic units, and there are 217 titles
of foreign journals and 72 titles of domestic periodicals, that is,
22000
issues of journals.
The oldest foreign journal the Library has is from 1911,
the Journal of the American Chemical Society, and the oldest
domestic one from 1927, the Archives for
Chemistry
and Pharmacy. A larger number of journals were received
after
1950, but the Library was given the most journals in the
seventies.
At the time, through exchange, more than 70 titles of journals come to
the Library from all parts of the world. After this period the
number
of journals mainly constantly decreased: in the
eighties
60 titles, in 1991- 44 titles, in 1992 - 24 titles, in 1993 - 19
titles,
in 1994 - 25 titles, and in 1995 29 titles. The Library
was
given journals even before the Second World War, but during the war
years
there was a break and the material that had been received was mostly
destroyed
in bombings, and many books were taken out of the country without
permission,
as in the case of the Library of the Faculty of Technology in Belgrade.
Apart from all this, the Library
of the Serbian Chemical Society has managed to preserve the
following important journals, some of which date back to the first year
of publication, which represents a special value:
Abstracts of Bioanalytical
Technology
(from Vol. 1, 1953);
Bulletin of the Chemical
Society
of Japan (11, 1936);
Bulletin de l'Academie
Polonaise
des Sciences (1, 1953);
Chemicke Zvestl (8, 1954);
Collection of Czechoslovak
Chemical
Communications (1, 1929);
Godisnik na
Hemiko-Technologiceskia
Institut (1, 1954);
Hungarian Journal of
Industrial
Chemistry (1, 1973);
Indonesian Abstracts (1, 1958);
Industria i Quimica (Buenos
Aires) (1, 1935);
Journal of Antibiotics (10,
1957);
Journal of the Indian Chemical
Society (8, 193 1);
Journal of the Research
Institute
for Catalysis (4, 1956);
Memoirs of the Faculty of
Science
(1, 1949-1950);
Pakistan Journal of Science
(9, 1957);
Periodica Polytechnica (1,
1957);
Journal of the Hindi Science
Academy (1, 1958);
Revista Technologica-Habana
(1, 1963);
Science Reports of the
Research
Institute of the Tohoku University (1, 1949);
Scientific Papers of the
College
of General Education University of Tokyo (1, 1951);
Vesnik Leningradskogo
Universiteta
(1956); Zurnal Neorganiceskoj Himii (7, 1962) etc.
It can be seen from the list that the Serbian Chemical Society has a modest (due to the circumstances in our country), but a valuable library.
However, a point of worry is the constant decrease in the annual income of books and journals, which has been particularly emphasised in recent years. At the beginning of the second hundred years of its existence, the Society has to face a difficult task - to renew the times when the increase was greater.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||