Europe's Heritage Goes Online

 Looking for an 18th century Mozart score? An early edition of Dante’s “Devine Comedy”? Or Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring”? Save yourself a trip to the Library of Congress or a costly trip to Europe. All of it will be available online.

A new European digital archive gives users access to about 2 million digital objects including film material, photos, paintings, sounds, maps, manuscripts, books, newspapers and other documents.

The Europeana digital library uses the latest technologies and will "enable a Czech student to browse the British Library without going to London, or an Irish art lover to get close to the Mona Lisa without lining up at the Louvre," said Viviane Reding, the European Union commissioner responsible for new technologies.

Reding told Deutsche Welle the digital library would also give greater visibility to all the treasures hidden deep in Europe's libraries, museums and archives. The online collection includes works from 90 partner institutions and all the countries of Europe, according to the Europeana Web site.

Extra funding required

Europeana organizers hope the project will be fully operational by 2010 and give users around the world direct access to over 6 million digital sounds, pictures, books, archival records and films.

 Currently available in French, English and German, the project will eventually operate in 21 languages.

The project starts off with 14 staff members and at annual costs estimated at around 2.5 million euros ($3.15 million). But the EU commission has already said it will need more since digitalizing 5 million more books will require 225 million euros.

Hopes are the private sector will invest and help speed up the work. So far, only a small percentage of the books in the EU's national libraries have been digitalized -- in itself a massive undertaking. Then, the works must be put online.

EU's answer to Google

Europeana is not the first attempt to digitize libraries and make them accessible online.

US Internet giant Microsoft has not been successful with its online library, which was established in 2006 but abandoned 18 months later when managers decided the project was too expensive.

Google also offers a program that scans entire books and allows people to read and search published works on the Internet. More than 7 million books are currently available through Google Book Search, which started up in 2004.

But Europeana Program Director Jill Cousins said the EU project isn't intended to compete with other online collections.

Courtesy Deutsche Welle

 

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