One million books

One million books

Dante's Divine Comedy and Galileo Galilei's renowned writings, in addition to many other rare, centuries-old texts, will soon be available online through a landmark deal between Google and the Italian ministry of culture.   It is the first accord between Google and a state government. Part of

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Thu 25 Mar 2010 1:00 AM

Dante’s Divine
Comedy and Galileo Galilei’s renowned writings, in addition to many other
rare, centuries-old texts, will soon be available online through a landmark
deal between Google and the Italian ministry of culture.

 

It is the first accord between Google and a state government. Part of Italy’s national heritage, over one million
ancient books from the state libraries in Rome
and Florence,
will be scanned and soon be available online for free, for the entire world to
consult.

 

Head of Italy’s
museums, Mario Resca, said the deal would help save the books’ content forever
and noted that the 1966 Florence
flood ruined thousands of unique and rare books in the city’s national library.
He also believes that digitizing books from before 1868 will help promote and
better preserve Italian culture throughout the world.

 

According to the deal, Google will cover the costs of scanning the
books, all of which are centuries old and thus out of copyright. The national
libraries in Rome and Florence will then put the digitalized
collections online. These libraries already have online public access
catalogues with some 285,000 book titles.

 

For more information, see www.bncf.firenze.sbn.it and www.bncrm.librari.beniculturali.it

 

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