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The Esperanto Museum ((ドイツ語:Esperantomuseum); (エスペラント:Esperantomuzeo)) in Vienna, Austria was founded in 1927 by Hofrat Hugo Steiner and was incorporated into the Austrian National Library as an independent collection in 1928. Today it is at the same time museum, library, documentation centre and archive. It accommodates the biggest collection of artificial languages in the world and a linguistic research library for language planning. Since 2005, the Department of Planned Languages and Esperanto Museum ((ドイツ語:Sammlung für Plansprachen und Esperantomuseum); (エスペラント:Kolekto por Planlingvoj kaj Esperantomuzeo)) has been located in the baroque Palais Mollard-Clary. The holdings of the collection consist of more than 35,000 library volumes, 2,500 periodical titles, 3,000 cultural artifacts, 5,000 autographs and manuscripts, 22.000 photographs and photographic negatives, 1,200 posters and 40,000 pamphlets. In all, approximately 500 various planned languages are documented, of which the most important are Esperanto and Interlingua. ==External links== *(Department of Planned Languages ) *(Esperanto Museum ) *(Scanned Esperanto-books ) *(Scanned Esperanto-journals ) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Department of Planned Languages and Esperanto Museum」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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