Selected Special Collections
Yudin Collection
Publications relating to Russian history, bibliography, and literature,
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; pictorial material; papers of the Russian
American Company
Gennadii Vasil'evich Yudin (1840-1912), a wealthy Siberian distiller and
amateur bibliographer, developed one of the finest personal libraries in
the Russian Empire. Collecting extensively in the fields of Russian bibliography,
history, and literature, Yudin accumulated significant holdings of provincial
gazettes, early editions of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literary works,
early Russian-language imprints, and Russian literary and historical magazines.
From his home near Drasnoyarsk, Siberia, he was able to procure local publications
that had escaped the attention of the major Russian libraries and so amassed
an unparalleled collection on his native region. Many contemporaries were
impressed by the cope of the Yudin library, among them Lenin, who used the
Collection while exiled in Siberia from 1898. The Yudin collection was purchased
by the Library of Congress in 1906 and forms the cornerstone of the Library's
present Russian-language resources. Although the 80,000 volumes have been
absorbed into the general collections, the original handwritten inventory
can be consulted in the Rare Book and Special Collections Division and is
also available on microfilm. Sergius Yakobson's article, "An Autobiography
of Gennadii Vasil'evich Yudin," in the Library of Congress Quarterly
Journal, v. 3, February 1946, p. 13-15, includes a biographical statement
by Yudin and information on his library.
Scores of rare imprints from the Yudin library are housed in the Rare Book
and Special Collections Division and form the greater part of the division's
eighteenth-century Russian-language holdings. Alexis Babine's account of
the Yudin library highlights such valuable items as the first edition of
A. N. Radischev's critique of serfdom Puteshetvie iz Peterburga v Moskvu (A
Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow) (1790)); Irtysh (1789), the
first magazine published in Siberia; a Slavonic ABC book issued in Rome in
1753; and the first Russian geometry book (1725). These are listed, without
indication of provenance, in Eighteenth Century Russian Publications
in the Library of Congress: A Catalog (Washington: 1961. xvi, 157 p.
Z2502.U5), prepared by Tatiana Fessenko. Rare nineteenth-century books include
the earliest edition of Dostoevskii's first published novel Biednye liudi (Poor
People) (1847) and one of the few copies of the first edition of the medieval
poem Slovo o polku Igoreve (Song of Igor's Campaign) (1800) to escape
the burning of Moscow in 1812.
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