Anglo-Saxon Language
Learn about Jefferson's lifelong interest in Anglo Saxon language and history, which he thought fundamental to North American culture.
Articles related to Jefferson's lifelong love of books and reading.
Learn about Jefferson's lifelong interest in Anglo Saxon language and history, which he thought fundamental to North American culture.
Discover the design and function of the book boxes Jefferson used to house and transport his library collection.
Learn about the design of a bookcase for petit format books in Jefferson's library at Poplar Forest.
Investigate Jefferson's thoughts on children's literature and the significance of reading for young minds.
Designed to spark thoughtful conversation, this accessible volume brings together short readings, historical context, and discussion prompts that invite readers to explore the meaning of America’s founding document, then and now.
Celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence with this engaging two-book set from Monticello. Featuring the Declaration Book Club and Declare: A Civic Gospel, this bundle offers a rich exploration of America’s founding ideals, past and present.
Thomas Jefferson reported using Cervantes's novel, Don Quixote, to teach himself Spanish and had his children do the same.
Thomas Jefferson owned a number of English language dictionaries.
In an 1815 letter to John Adams, Jefferson declared he could not live without books.
Endrina Tay, Fiske and Marie Kimball Librarian, explores Thomas Jefferson's decision to sell his beloved personal library to the Library of Congress.
Explore Jefferson's lifelong interest in books and reading and the sale of his 6,500 volume collection to the Library of Congress in 1815.
Thomas Jefferson had a peculiar way of marking his ownership of his books that took advantage of common printing practices of his day.
The Library at Monticello held many of Thomas Jefferson's 6,000 book and functioned as a workspace for managing correspondence, architectural drafting, and recordkeeping.
The origins of the Monticello typeface reach back from America's first successful type foundry to a 20th-century version used by the Papers of Thomas Jefferson.
“Notes on the State of Virginia,” the only book Jefferson wrote, was both well-regarded and controversial. Frequently reprinted in his lifetime, “Notes” is a tour d'horizon of Jefferson's interests and ideas on a wide range of subjects.
Find out why Jefferson owned a copy of the Koran in his library at Monticello.
Find out how many books Jefferson sold to the U.S. to form the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.
A list of works that are referred to frequently in the Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia.
Jefferson created a "booklist for a private library" including the fine arts, history, religion, politics, trade, and "natural philosophy" for his brother-in-law in 1771.
A list of suggested books and other reading material related to Thomas Jefferson. his world, and Monticello, organized by topic.
Thomas Jefferson owned several editions of "The System of Nature," a 1770 work of philosophy by Baron d'Holbach,
A look at why Jefferson cut apart a bible to create his own bound version of the Gospels, now often referred to as The Jefferson Bible.
Jefferson's 1st attempt to distill the original tenets of Christianity, "The Philosophy of Jesus of Nazareth," became part of what is now called The Jefferson Bible.
Thomas Jefferson Jefferson made considerable use of Adam Smith's foundational study of capitalism, The Wealth of Nations, a copy of which acquired while in France.