The Library and Archive, owned and operated by the city of Florence, was founded in August 1945 as a restoration and replacement of the Museo del Risorgimento di Firenze founded in 1901. As of 2020, the Library and Archive's holdings include about 30,000 volumes of heritage documents, 550 volumes of periodicals, two 16th century books, ten current periodicals, one hundred discontinued periodicals, bibliographical funds, manuscripts, and a large iconographic collection from the Risorgimento period.
Collections were seriously damaged by the 1966 flood of the Arno.[4][5] Nonetheless, the facility and collections were restored and the Library and Archive reopened in 1969.
The Library and Archive is in the same building as:
In 2007, Italian Senator Paolo Amato(it) (born 1954) during Italy's 15th Legislature (2006–2008), introduced a Bill to restore of the Museum of the Risorgimento in Florence, partly in commemoration the 150thanniversary of the unification of Italy (2011). The Bill states that the museum had been open to the public only nineteen years, from 1909 though 1938, and was dismantled in 1945, after World War II.[6]
Complesso delle Oblate(it) (Oblate Complex) – former monastery dating back to 1288, now, as of 2007, the municipally owned and operated Oblate library, a state-of-the-art multifunctional center.
Amato, Paolo[in Italian] (2007). "Istituzione del Museo del Risorgimento di Firenze" [Establishment of the Museum of the Risorgimento in Florence] (PDF). Senato della Repubblica – XV Legislatura [15th Legislature, Italy] (in Italian). Vol. Atto Senato n. 1780. Rome: Tipografia del Senato. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
Annuario Delle Biblioteche Italiane [Yearbook Bibliography of Italian Libraries] (in Italian). Vol. 1. Rome: Fratelli Palombi. 1969. pp. 448–449. OCLC490082618.
Fioravanti, Luciano (1993). Guida alle Biblioteche della Provincia di Firenze [Guide to the Libraries of the Province of Florence] (in Italian). Florence: All'Insegna del Giglio. p. 333. ISBN978-8-8781-4031-8. OCLC882067954.
Rotondi, Clementine, ed. (1956). "Notizie degli Archivi Toscani". Archivio Storico Italiano (in Italian). 114 (2/3): 320–682. ISSN2036-4660. JSTOR26248511. Papers of Emanuele Orazio Fenzi donated around 1955–1956 to the Biblioteca e Archivio del Risorgimento. Documents span 1851 to 1923: travel diaries, translations, copies of agricultural writings, critical bibliography of Libya (1867–1922); letters from family and others to Emanuele Orazio Fenzi; correspondence between Emanuele Orazio Fenzi and Gino Bartolommei Gioli (1912–1923), 6 pieces. Rotondi, the bibliographer, was, at the time, working at the National Union Catalog Center (Petrucciani, Alberto. "Rotondi, Clementina". Dizionario Bio-Bibliografico Dei Bibliotecari Italiani Del XX Secolo. Retrieved 4 March 2021).
Mario M. Witt (6 March 2020). "The Florence Flood of 4 November 1966" (Podcast). The Book Collector. Retrieved 3 March 2021 – via SoundCloud. "Some 7000 volumes were inundated by the waters.," on page 20, was omitted at 22:27 in the podcast. Nonetheless, the narrative chronicles the overall extent of damage to archives and artifacts.
General references (not linked to notes)
Rotondi, Clementine; Camerani Marri, Giulia (eds.). "Le Stampe della Biblioteca e Archivio del Risorgimento di Firenze" [The prints of the Library and Archive of the Risorgimento in Florence]. Rassegna Storica Toscana [Tuscan Historical Review] (4 monographs) (in Italian). ISSN0033-9881. OCLC558537849.
"InventarioI". Vol. 11, no. 2 (July–December 1965). pp. 301–333.