Bodleian Library
The Bodleian is essentially Oxford's working brain, housing 13 million books across multiple historic buildings that you can actually tour.
About Bodleian Library
The Bodleian is essentially Oxford's working brain, housing 13 million books across multiple historic buildings that you can actually tour. You'll walk through Duke Humfrey's medieval library with its original chained books still attached to reading desks, gaze up at painted ceilings from the 1400s, and see the ornate Divinity School where they filmed Harry Potter scenes. The circular Radcliffe Camera next door is the most photographed spot in Oxford, though you can only peek inside on extended tours.
Your visit starts in the Divinity School, a soaring Gothic hall with fan vaulting that makes you crane your neck. The standard tour keeps you moving through exhibition spaces and the medieval library upstairs, where scholars still work at wooden desks surrounded by ancient texts. The atmosphere is properly academic, libraries smell of old paper and learning, with whispered conversations and the soft shuffle of pages. You'll feel the weight of 400 years of scholarship around you.
Most guides don't mention that the basic tour (£6) skips the best bits. Pay £14 for the extended tour to access Duke Humfrey's Library properly, otherwise you're missing the main event. The tours fill up fast in summer, book online a few days ahead. Skip the Radcliffe Camera tour unless you're obsessed with reading rooms, the exterior view from Radcliffe Square is honestly better than the cramped interior.
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