Abstract
Human beings are the only species which, during the course of its evolution, has developed the ability and mediums to store the information outside its brain. The libraries, since ancient times, have been housing and maintaining this extra-somatic information. Throughout the recorded history of mankind they have been instrumental in preserving and transferring the intellectual memory to succeeding generations. Libraries have connected us with our ancestors by collecting, organizing and preserving all types of knowledge resources. This has enabled us to live in a world of cumulative awareness to further build on it, instead to reinvent the wheel again and again. One could well term it as a perpetuation of dialogue between the ages. Shera (1970) described: Society needed libraries in order to make the records of human adventure available over the long period of time….Therefore they must be essential to the development of a sophisticated, and one might say even to a relatively primitive society….we must regard the library as an important element in the total communication process both in the individual and in the society. (p. 44-45) Thus, through the ages, acquiring and maintaining collection has been the core activity of any library and its Traditional functions may be defined as follows:

Dr. Kanwal Ameen. (2005) THE ANTIQUARIAN LIBRARY FUNCTIONS AND THEIR APPLICATION IN CONTEMPORARY LIBRARIES OF PAKISTAN, Journal of Research ( Humanities), Vol XLI, Issue 1 .
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