Abstract
<jats:p>Background: Libraries and the intellectual community they serve have constituted the backbone of cultural life in Namangan region from the early twentieth century to the present. The region&#8217;s rich history of Islamic scholarship, combined with Soviet-era mass literacy programmes and post-independence cultural policy, has produced a uniquely layered library landscape. Objective: This study examines the dual role of libraries and the intelligentsia in shaping the cultural life of Namangan region across three political epochs (1903–1991–2021), with particular attention to quantitative growth trends, the sociological composition of local intellectual communities, and the adaptive strategies employed by cultural institutions during periods of systemic transition. Methods: Historical-descriptive, comparative-chronological, and quantitative-statistical methods are employed. Primary sources include regional state archive documents, official statistical publications of the State Statistics Committee of the Republic of Uzbekistan, contemporary local periodicals (Namangan Haqiqati, Pop Tongi), and data from regional information-library centre administrations. Statistical data are presented in tabular and diagrammatic form and subjected to analytical commentary. Results: From a single library established in 1903, Namangan region expanded to 571 public libraries with 6.55 million volumes by 1990, and subsequently restructured into 18 state ARM/AKMs and 409 community libraries by 2021. Quantitative data reveal three distinct phases: exponential Soviet-era growth (1918–1990), post-independence institutional consolidation (1991–2013), and qualitative modernisation (2013–2021). The intelligentsia — principally teachers, university lecturers, and cultural workers — functioned as the primary mediators between library collections and the reading public throughout all three phases. Statistical modelling reveals a positive correlation between library density and literacy indicators at the district level. Conclusion: Libraries in Namangan region have demonstrated institutional resilience and adaptive capacity across distinct political regimes. The intelligentsia&#8217;s sustained engagement with library institutions — both as professional library workers and as promoters of reading culture through private home libraries and community initiatives — constitutes a defining feature of the region&#8217;s cultural identity. These findings contribute to regional studies of library history in Central Asia and offer evidence-based insights for cultural policy in transitional societies.</jats:p>