===== Europeana Libraries ===== {{:europeana-logo.png?nolink&100|Europeana Libraries project}} [[http://www.europeana-libraries.eu/get-involved/projects/project-list/europeana-libraries]] This project was co-funded by the European Union’s CIP-ICT-PSP programme. It was coordinated by The European Library and hosted by the National Library of the Netherlands. Europeana Libraries was a 2-year project that brought the digital collections of 19 of Europe’s leading research libraries to Europeana and The European Library. The content included: • 1,200 film and video clips • 850,000 images • 4.3 million texts (books, journal articles, theses, letters) The project aimed to create a valuable resource for scholars and build a robust network of national, university and research libraries, supported by Europe’s major research library organisations. ==== Highlights (from the DoW) ==== 5 Million Objects: Digitised books, films and images will be made freely available online. Subjects range from Oriental manuscripts to Spanish civil war photographs and represent a wide geographical spread that covers the length and breadth of Europe. Full-text Indexing: The project will make it possible for users to search within digitised text. This creates the potential for in-depth academic study of all texts brought together by Europeana Libraries. Representation: The Europeana Libraries project provides research libraries with a platform to promote their collections to the widest possible audience. It lays the foundation on which a critical mass of research resources can be based. Aggregation: This project will unite content from several libraries and create a single channel for contributing library content to Europeana and The European Library. The model will be efficient, cost effective and capable of being extended to research libraries across Europe. High Quality Metadata: The quality and structure of library metadata will be improved. This will make online searching more accurate and user friendly. New features such as timelines and maps will also be supported. ==== Content Providers and examples of their contributions ==== Bayerische Staatsbibliothek: 8-19th century manuscripts and rare books Biblioteca Academiei Române: Italian drawings, Romanian history Complutense University of Madrid: engravings, theses, photographs Hungarian Parliament Library: parliamentary records, gazettes, literature Katholieke Universiteit Leuven: portraits of important figures from history Lunds Universitet: scholarly articles and journals National Library of Wales: 18th-20th century prints and photographs Trinity College Dublin: photographs, songs, booklets UCL (University College London): 50,000 catalogue records for theses Universitatea Lucian Blaga Din Sibiu: books and images from Romania Universität Wien: scientific papers, films of talks by Nobel Prize winners Universiteit Gent: posters of the late 19th century, ephemera University of Belgrade: books on Alexander the Great, Oriental manuscripts University of Bern: 16-18th century map collection University of Oxford: public domain books and journals (digitised by Google) University of Tartu: books, periodicals, maps, letters and photographs Uppsala Universitet: e-theses, images Wellcome Library: photographs and films covering the history of medicine Zentralbibliothek Zürich: 10-16th century maps, colourised photographs ==== CERL Involvement ==== CERL was involved in business planning, coordination of the technical work packages, and communication and dissemination.