History, culture and art go digital

Published: 21 November 2008 y., Friday

Kompiuteris
The EU’s new digital library brings vast treasure trove of historical documents, rare and valuable manuscripts and exquisite cultural artefacts to your desk.

Europeana is an ambitious project to showcase European history, literature, arts and science. Three million cultural items – images, texts, sounds and videos – went online on 20 November and millions more will soon follow.

They include the score for Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, the 1789 French Declaration of Human Rights, England’s Magna Carta, Dante’s “Divine Comedy” and the Gutenberg Bible.

Europeana allows internet users, with one query, to search thousands of digitised collections from European museums, libraries, national archives and audiovisual collections — including the Louvre in Paris, the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and the British Museum in London. France's National Audiovisual Institute alone supplied 80 000 broadcast recordings from the 20th century, including early footage shot on the battlefields of France in 1914.

“We were offered an embarrassment of riches, well over our target,” said John Purday, who works for the project. “We wanted 2 million. We got 3 million.” A search for Mozart returns 1 000 hits, including musical scores, his letters and performances of his pieces.

Available in 23 languages, the website is free of both charge and copyright, meaning anyone can download the material for personal use.

“Just imagine the possibilities it offers students, art-lovers or scholars to access, combine and search the cultural treasures of all member states online,” said José Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, which is co-financing the project.

So far most of the items are from France, the Netherlands and the UK. Other countries — namely Germany, Spain and Poland — are expected to submit works in the coming months.

The library should grow to 10 million items by 2010. And that is just the start – only 1% of the historic works, documents and cultural artefacts located across Europe have so far been “digitised” - converted into a form that can be displayed on a computer screen.

The EU plans to spend €119m over the next two years to make cultural material more accessible online.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

DEA awards e-commerce contract

The Drug Enforcement Administration announced Nov. 26 that it has awarded a $6 million, two-year contract to PEC Solutions Inc. more »

Small victory

Via takes early round in graphics dispute with Intel more »

A trial date

Russian programmer gets April court date more »

Hardcore About Blocking Porn

The most people agree that work is the worst place for it to arrive. more »

Hardware vendors seek Web services opportunities

A host of IT vendors are jumping on the Web-based services bandwagon as hardware vendors realize the additional margins available from helping companies manage hardware from PCs to printers. more »

FBI software cracks encryption wall

‘Magic Lantern’ part of new ‘Enhanced Carnivore Project’ more »

E-Commerce Getting Ready for a Lean, Mean 2002

E-businesses are putting tech spending and other elements of their organizations on a much shorter leash in an effort to get ready for 2002, analysts say. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

The report

Internet An Ideal Tool For Extremists - FBI more »

IT spend up 1% in 2001 - IDC

The "perfect storm" of the 11 September terrorist attacks, slowing global economy, and the telecommunications supply-demand mismatch, means that worldwide IT spending will only increase one per cent in 2001. more »