AuthorHouse UK today takes you on
a tour of the British Library.
The title above refers to the
most common first words of Buddhist texts and the context here is that amongst
the treasures housed in the British Library is the Diamond Sutra, which is the
earliest example of block printing that bears an actual date. The colophon,
at the inner end, reads: made for universal distribution by Wang Jie on behalf
of his parents on the 15th of the 4th moon of the 9th year of Xiantong, 11th
May 868, approximately 587 years before the Gutenberg Bible was
first printed.
The extant copy is a scroll, approximately 16
feet long. It was discovered in 1907 by the archaeologist Sir Marc Aurel Stein
and then purchased from the walled-up "Caves of the Thousand
Buddhas", which are situated at Dunhuang, northwest China.
Other treasures in the Library
include
· * The Magna Carta
· * The Lindisfarne Gospels
· * Leonardo da Vinci's Notebook
· * The first edition of The Times, 18th
March 1788
· * The Beatles manuscripts
· * Nelson Mandela's Rivonia trial speech
recording
The British library is truly remarkable- the new
building at St Pancras opened in 1998 and is the biggest public
building constructed in the UK during the 20th century. The building has a
total floor area of over 112,000 square metres over 14 floors – 9 that are above
ground and 5 below, which extend 24.5 metres deep.
Over 625 km of shelves, and growing by
12 km every year, are required to house the collection of well over 150 million
items, in most languages, and about 3 million are added annually. Included in
this vast collection are Chinese oracle bones, over 3,000 years old - and
today's daily newspapers,
310,000 manuscript volumes: from Jane
Austen to James Joyce; Handel to the Beatles. There are 60 million patents,
over 4 million maps, over 260,000 journal titles and 8 million stamps.
Over 16,000 people use the collections
each day (on site and online) and the Library operates the world's largest
document delivery service providing millions of items a year to customers all
over the world. Receiving a copy of every publication produced in the UK and
Ireland, it would take you over 400,000 years to see the whole of the
collection if you only looked at one item a day.
AuthorHouse UK reviews urges you to
visit this magnificent warehouse of literature for your writing inspiration.
Another tip from your coach is to get a reasonably priced person who can edit, design and format your chapters, put your word document into PDF (Portable Document Format) so you can sell on the internet and create a printed version from the same file, and submit it for you to a quality POD company like Deharts.
TumugonBurahinBoston Book Printing