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  1. The Library of Congress Control Number ( LCCN) is a serially based system of numbering cataloged records in the Library of Congress, in the United States. It is not related to the contents of any book, and should not be confused with Library of Congress Classification (LCC).

  2. El Library of Congress Control Number (en castellano, ‘número de control de la Biblioteca del Congreso’), abreviado LCCN, es un sistema basado en números de serie para numerar los registros de catálogo de la Biblioteca del Congreso de Estados Unidos.

  3. 16 de jun. de 2006 · This page contains a detailed explanation of the LC Control Number and its prefixes. It also includes discussion and comparison about the LCCN Structure A and the LCCN Structure B.

  4. Library of Congress Control Numbers ( LCCNs) are record identifiers assigned by the Library of Congress to bibliographic and authority records. First established when the Library began printing catalog cards in 1898, these unique identifiers are assigned to records created when materials arrive at the Library.

  5. The Library of Congress Control Number is a number given to an item in the Library of Congress. It is used to identify items in the Library's collection. Each number is issued as part of a series. It is not based on a classification system.

  6. The Library of Congress began to print catalog cards in 1898 and began to distribute them in 1901. The Library of Congress Card Number was the number used to identify and control catalog cards. With the development of the MARC format and the first distribution of machine-readable records for book materials in the late 1960s, the name of the ...

  7. An LCCN is an identifier assigned by the Library of Congress for a metadata record (e.g., bibliographic record, authority record). LCCNs have three components: prefix, year, and serial number. The prefix is optional; if present, it has one to three lowercase alphabetic characters.