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Special Collections

Special Collections offers a broad range of rare and valuable works and museum objects. From 18th-century botanical drawings by Maria Sibylla Merian to WWII aerial photographs by the RAF and microscopic images of nematodes, the collections encompass a wealth of visual material reflecting the university’s historic and present-day research and educational activities.

Special Collections Catalogue

You can search for books and journals from the Special Collections in WUR Library Search. The materials can only be viewed on location due to their size or fragility. You can search by title, author or subject.

Books and journals

Books and journals

The collection of over 45,000 books, manuscripts, and journals covers subjects such as agriculture, horticulture, ornamental plants, botany, land use, and garden and landscape architecture. Among the most valuable items are herbals, and botanical & horticultural works from the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries.

How to request books and journals

You're welcome to consult the materials from Special Collections in the reading room. As these items are old, rare, fragile, or unique, they require special care in handling and conservation, and therefore cannot be borrowed.

WUR employees and students can request publications from the Special Collections via the Get it! service in WUR Library Search. Look up the relevant document, then click the WUR Library "Get it!" link. On the next screen, choose the option Request this publication from WUR Library. We’ll deliver articles and scanned book chapters electronically. Special Collections books are for use in the reading room only, and we’ll email you as soon as your requested book is ready to consult.

External users can also consult the material from the Special Collections. We only handle requests from users who are registered at the WUR Library. Please follow these instructions to set up a guest account

Treasures from Special Collections

Treasures

Video Maria Sibylla Merian

Maria Sibylla Merian's book on insects in Surinam

Maria Sibylla Merian was entomologist and botanical artist. She was the first to study South-American insects, as well as some amphibians and reptiles. Her book 'Recueil de plantes des Indes, pirate edition', published approx. 1700, became a great success. In the video 'former' curator Liesbeth Missel explains what makes this book so special and intriguing.

Garden and landscape designs

Garden and landscape designs

The garden design and landscape architecture collections from Special Collections cover the history of gardening and landscape developments in the Netherlands. Original garden designs on paper from important architects, such as Leonard Springer, the Zochers, the Copijns, Mien Ruys, John Bergmans and Hein Otto can be studied in the reading room.

Maarten Eykman

How to find garden and landscape information?

Database TUiN (Garden Architecture Archives of the Netherlands) provides access to the works and designs of influential Dutch garden and landscape architects from 1570 until the 20th century. All the materials (designs, letters, postcards and other documentation) in the database are available in print in the reading room of Special Collections. Please use the search box to find designs and other documentation.

Not all collections are included in Database TUiN yet. An overview of all TUiN-collections (in Dutch) is available at Database TUiN.

Groen Erfgoedis a bibliographic database covering publications on the history of gardening and landscape architecture in the Netherlands. the emphasis is on journal articles. All publications are available via Wageningen University & Research Library, some digitally, but the majority in print. In 2025, over 5000 titles were available. Please use the search box to search literature.

Use Special Collections catalogue to find historic books, manuscripts and reports on gardens, landscape architecture and horticulture and dendrology.

Nursery catalogues

Nursery catalogues

The Special Collections has an international collection of approximately 35.000 printed catalogues of nurseries specialised in ornamental plants, bulbs and trees from 1612 and onwards. Also catalogues on fruit, vegetables and agricultural crops and seeds are available. They are used for historical plant research on (agro)cultural biodiversity, the history of plant breeding and for the reconstruction of planting in historical gardens and parks.

The majority of this printed collection of plant catalogues is from the Netherlands and from other European nurseries. There are also catalogues from South Africa, New Zealand, Australia, North and South America and Japan.

The collection nursery catalogues consists of two parts. The largest part from 1835-2000 is described as serial publications by nursery companies, which are stored in boxes.

The second part consists of several very old and rare nursery catalogues from 1612 onwards, for example, the Krelage collection. This collection was donated to the University Library and, over the years, was housed by several institutes in Wageningen. Each institute added catalogues in its own field of interest. This greatly enlarged collection returned to the library in 2000. There was still a small Krelage collection of over 400 catalogues at 90 dahlia nurseries in the Netherlands and abroad (1850-1925).
Both collections were combined into one large collection of nursery catalogues.

Aerial photograhps

Aerial photograhps

Special Collections holds several collections of aerial photographs. you can access two collections online and can also buy prints of the photographs.

Aerial photograph Royal Air Force; Liberation Wageningen 25 April 1945

RAF aerial photographs, 1943 - 1947

The RAF aerial photographs are available via the Wageningen University & Research - Geoportal. Use of the Geoportal is free. You can explore the photographs in a geographical context. You can select an area in the map or search by location, flight data, flight number or pilot name. Please read the Geoportal Help for further explanation. The collection comprises 94,257 photographs made by the Allied Air Force (RAF) flying over the Netherlands. The flight dates range from April 14th 1943 until June 18th 1947, but most are from 1944 and 1945. You can download a medium resolution (150 dpi) for free or purchase a high resolution photo. 

Grebbelinie, 1939

This collection contains 516 photographs taken by the Survey Department of Public Works and Water Management (Meetkundige Dienst van Rijkswaterstaat) in September 1939. They cover the defence line 'Grebbelinie' in the Dutch provinces Gelderland and Utrecht on a scale of 1 : 10,000. The photos of the Grebbelinie are digitally available via Dotka Data. They are not available in the Geoportal yet. You can download a medium resolution (150 dpi) for free or purchase a high resolution photo. 

Other aerial photographs

Special Collections holds several smaller collections of aerial photographs, e.g. from the Nederlandse Luchtmacht from October 1962 - May 1963. Information at the reading room of Special Collections. 

How to buy aerial photographs?

The analogue aerial photographs of the RAF Aerial Photographs and The Grebbelinie were scanned by the company Dotka Data who acts as the reseller for these collections of WUR. High quality copies of the scans (300 and 1200 dpi) can be purchased at their web shop or viewed and downloaded in medium resolution (150 dpi). None commercial, scholarly users in the field of history and WUR students and employees can apply for special tariffs to this tariff and discount agreement (both in Dutch).

More about Aerial photograhps

Academic heritage

Academic heritage

Special Collections holds several collections that were made or used either in education or during research practices at Wageningen University & Research and its forebears in the past. The major part consists of image collections covering plant, animal and environmental sciences. The collections are available for research in their original shape and can be studied in the reading room. A part of these collections is digitally available.

How to find academic heritage collections?

  1. Look up digitised heritage collections in WUR Image Collections.
  2. Academic heritage collections, both digital as well as in original print, can be found in WUR Library Search, the catalogue.
  3. Search for specific materials in the Special Collections catalogue. Please enter your subject in the search box. You could narrow your search by choosing a 'collection' or ‘document type’ on the left side: ‘Historical photographs’ or 'Illustrated publications'.

Printed collection

5000 historical photographs from 1850-1970. The photographs portray livestock, civil engineering, garden architecture and the Dutch East Indies, especially on tropical agriculture and ethnography.

Video showing Hofstee's puzzle

Hofstee's puzzle: an innovation for socio-geographic research

In the 1950s Professor E.W. Hofstee from the former department Sociology and Sociography developed a tool to create maps with statistical data of the Netherlands. You could consider this technique as a predecessor to today's GIS. The original puzzle frame and drawers with the puzzle pieces are still on display in the Leeuwenborch.

Agricultural engineering and machinery

Agricultural engineering and machinery

Special Collections holds a unique and large collection of digitised photos from the former IMAG. And a large set of printed brochures and manuals of all agricultural machinery traded in the Netherlands in the 20th century.

2 scharige Cappon wentel aanbouwploeg

The collection 'Agricultural engineering, 1950-1990' of about 35,000 photos was taken by photographers employed at the Institute for Mechanisation, Labour and Buildings [Instituut voor Mechanisatie, Arbeid en Gebouwen (IMAG)]. IMAG is a former scientific institute in Wageningen. The IMAG researched mechanisation processes in agriculture and horticulture. Main topics are research setups for the testing of agricultural machines, installations and buildings.

Copyrights

Wageningen Research holds the copyrights to this collection. The photos can be downloaded for free and used for non-commercial use. The Creative Commons license CC BY-NC 4.0 is applicable.

The former Museum of Historical Agricultural Machinery (Museum Historische Landbouwtechniek, Wageningen) collected in 1980-2008 a large amount of brochures and manuals of all kinds of agricultural machines in the Netherlands. The brochures are stored in boxes in the stacks of Special Collections. 

How to find a brochure?

Search in the 'Folderoverzicht' (the Catalogue of the agricultural machinery) to find information on the machines you need. For example:

  • search by brand ('John Deere')
  • search by type of machine ('melkmachines')

Please use CTRL F to search for specific terms in the document. The information is in Dutch.

Maps and atlases

Maps and atlases

The Maps and Atlas Collection holds many maps, modern and old, topographic and thematic, printed and in manuscript, and a small collection of atlases of the Netherlands and the former colonies, Dutch Indonesia and Suriname.

Old maps (1600-1850)

The oldest printed maps are from the 16th and 17th century, including an interesting collection of maps of the Dutch polders. Most of these maps are digitised.

Dutch Map Series (1850-now)

A large collection of modern maps of the Dutch Topographical Survey (1850-now, scales 1:25,000 and 1:50,000) and thematic map series on hydrology, geology, and geomorphology can be found in the Catalogue.

Alterra map collection (1945-2000)

This collection contains approximately 7300 thematic maps related to the rural areas of the Netherlands. The maps were made over a period of 55 years, starting in 1945. The collection has been put together by the research institute Alterra, now called Wageningen Environmental Research. The maps were made by predecessors of Alterra, mainly by the Staring Centrum (-DLO), de Foundation for Soil Mapping (StiBoKA) and the state institutes for forestry and nature research (IBN and RIVON). The maps present data on soil science, geomorphology, groundwater, landscape, land consolidation, vegetation, flora and fauna, archaeology and cultural history. These maps can be found in the Image Collections. Not all maps are digitised.

Your visit

Visiting

Special Collections is open Monday to Friday from 9.00 am to 1.00 pm. On Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays, we are closed. In the afternoon, you can visit the reading room and exhibitions by appointment only. Access is free for everyone.

WUR Library - Special Collections
Forum (Building 102)
Droevendaalsesteeg 2 
6708 PB Wageningen
Courier number: 39

Plan your trip to the Forum Library using Google Maps

The entrance to Special Collections is through the Library’s main entrance on the 2nd floor of Forum. Please ask at the lending desk for directions.

Please contact us if you have any questions. We will gladly help to find what you are looking for. 

Email: speccoll.library@wur.nl

Call: 0317-482701

In the afternoon, you can work in the reading room or visit the exhibition by appointment only. Don't hesitate to get in touch with us by email (speccoll.library@wur.nl) or call 0317-482701. We look forward to welcoming you! If you have an appointment, please notify the lending desk staff at the Forum Library of your visit.

“Science meets heritage”
Special Collections | WUR Library

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