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Assalaamu 'alaykum!
In the middle of the first century of the Hijrah, we find a man called 'Abdul-Hakam Bin 'Amr Al-Jumahee, who established a public library which contained Kurraasaat (books) on various subjects... People were free to use the library for reading or for amusement. [Aghaanee, 4/253]
At the same time there was the library of Ibn Abee Lailaa, which contained only the Holy Quraan and people gathered there for recitation. [Sa'd, 6/75]
There is another library mntioned in the ossession of Khaalid Bin Yazeed Bin Mu'aawiyah, but it is not the earliest record of anything like a public libraryy as was supposed by Krenkow, because the libraries of 'Abdul-Hakam and Ibn Abee Lailaa most probably existed at an earlier date than this library.
There may have been some other libraries which are unknown to us because this information is scattered for and wide, and there is no special chapter on early libraries in the sources available.
[Studies In Early Hadeeth Literature, By M. M. Al-Azami, p. 16-17]
At the same time there was the library of Ibn Abee Lailaa, which contained only the Holy Quraan and people gathered there for recitation. [Sa'd, 6/75]
There is another library mntioned in the ossession of Khaalid Bin Yazeed Bin Mu'aawiyah, but it is not the earliest record of anything like a public libraryy as was supposed by Krenkow, because the libraries of 'Abdul-Hakam and Ibn Abee Lailaa most probably existed at an earlier date than this library.
There may have been some other libraries which are unknown to us because this information is scattered for and wide, and there is no special chapter on early libraries in the sources available.
[Studies In Early Hadeeth Literature, By M. M. Al-Azami, p. 16-17]