
Collège de France Korean Studies Library
Founded in 1959 at the Sorbonne by Professor Charles Haguenauer (1896-1976), a Japanese and Korean scholar, and attached to the Collège de France in 1973, over 70% of the Korean Studies Library is in Korean and classical Chinese. It includes some 30,000 works on ancient and modern Korea, covering a wide range of fields: literature and linguistics, history and geography, social sciences, philosophical and religious studies, fine arts and law. It also boasts a rich and varied range of documentary resources on North and South Korea, as well as early works from the Maurice Courant collection (1865-1935), some of which can be accessed online via Salamandre.
The library has a large number of periodical titles, including some thirty living ones. In addition to its annual acquisitions, the library also receives donations, in particular from the Korea Foundation, the National Institute of Korea History and the National Library of Korea.
The library offers 58 seats, including 3 carrels and 2 rooms for group work in a reading room shared by the 5 Asian Worlds libraries. Reservations are made via the Affluences platform.
Access terms
Library membership is reserved for faculty and researchers, PhD candidates, graduate and undergraduate students. Temporary access is also possible for other lectors for professional reasons such as documentalists, journalists, experts, etc.
Lending terms
All books, periodicals and documents must be consulted on site.
Collège de France Institute of Korean Studies Library