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"Set within Puebla’s UNESCO-listed historic center, this library is considered the first public library in the Americas. Founded in 1646 when Bishop Juan de Palafox y Mendoza donated more than 5,000 books as an open resource for students and clergy, it now holds over 45,000 volumes, from early printed works on astronomy and navigation to 16th-century theological texts and Indigenous-language imprints from Mexico’s earliest presses. A long, vaulted reading room lined with dark ayacahuite and cedar woodwork frames artifacts like a large 18th-century globe and a few surviving chained books that reveal how knowledge was once accessed and controlled. Entry is through a small museum that contextualizes Puebla’s intellectual history, and visitor numbers are capped to protect the fragile wooden structure." - Navya Verma
Rare books, 17th-century library, first in Americas, UNESCO site
Av 5 Ote 5, Centro histórico de Puebla, 72000 Heroica Puebla de Zaragoza, Pue., Mexico Get directions