The University of Virginia was conceived with a library at its heart, placed in the Rotunda at the head of the Academical Village. The Library’s first collection was selected by Thomas Jefferson and arranged according to a classification scheme he adapted from Francis Bacon’s The Advancement of Learning. Today, the Library’s original purpose remains unchanged: to provide access to accumulated knowledge, and in so doing, increase it — in short, to advance learning. In pursuit of that goal, we collect, preserve, organize, and share materials of all kinds.
The Library's staff, services, and resources are here to ensure that the University community has the information it needs for teaching, research, and personal enjoyment and enrichment. We invite you to learn more about the organization that makes up the UVA Library today, and the services we provide.


Current exhibition
Join us for the Fall Exhibitions Celebration on Wednesday, September 17 from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library! Toast the centennial anniversary of the Virginia Quarterly Review with a retrospective of artifacts from their vault showcasing a century of literary excellence. Take an alphabetical approach to the Library's collections and meet our staff curators eager to share The ABCs of the UVA Library in celebration of our new University Librarian, Leo Lo.
Quick Facts

Recognition Statement
At the University of Virginia Library in Charlottesville, we acknowledge that the land where we learn and work is the ancestral homeland and traditional territory of the Monacan Indian Nation. We pay respect to their elders and knowledge keepers — past and present.
We acknowledge and pay respect to the enslaved Africans, enslaved laborers, and free Black laborers who built UVA, as well as their descendants.
Today we acknowledge the land, we acknowledge labor, traditions, and knowledge, and we acknowledge lives.