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European Commissioner for Information Society and Media Viviane Reding delivers a speech during the opening ceremony of the launch of the European digital library Europeana, in Brussels November 20, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BRUSSELS, Nov. 20 (Xinhua) -- With the European digital library Europeana officially online Thursday, Internet users worldwide can now have access to over 2 million books, maps, recordings, photographs, archives, paintings and films from national libraries and cultural institutions of the 27 member states of the European Union (EU).
More contents will be added to this already enormous
digital library in the coming years.
"With Europeana, we combine Europe's competitive
advantage in communication and networking technologies with our rich cultural
heritage. Europeans will now be able to access the incredible resources of our
great collections quickly and easily in a single space," said European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.
EU commissioner for information society and media,
Viviane Reding, called for cultural institutions, publishing houses and
technology companies in the EU to continue to supply Europeana with resources in
digital form. "My objective is that in 2010, Europeana will include at least 10
million objects," she said.
"Europeana offers a journey through time, across
borders, and into new ideas of what our culture is. More than that, it will
connect people to their history and, through interactive pages and tools, to
each other," she added.
Europeana, initiated by the European Commission in
2005, is run by the European Digital Library Foundation, which brings together
EU's major associations of libraries, archives, museums, audiovisual archives
and cultural institutions. Europeana is hosted by the Dutch national
library.