Bodleian and Vatican digitise 1.5 million ancient texts
 Most of Bodleian's manuscripts of Greek classical authors date from the 15th and 16th Centuries
    Most of Bodleian's manuscripts of Greek classical authors date from the 15th and 16th Centuries
  
Oxford's
 Bodleian Libraries and the Vatican's Biblioteca Apostolica plan to 
digitise 1.5 million ancient texts to make them available online.
The two libraries announced the four-year project after receiving a £2m award from the Polonsky Foundation.
Dr Leonard Polonsky said his aim was to ensure researchers and the public have free access to historic and rare texts.
Greek manuscripts, 15th Century printed books and Hebrew early printed books and manuscripts will be digitised.
The three subjects were chosen "for the strength of the 
collections in both libraries and their importance for scholarship in 
their respective fields", a Bodleian spokeswoman said.
The libraries say the digitisation will "virtually unite" 
materials that have been dispersed between the two collections over the 
past few centuries.
Sarah Thomas, Bodley's librarian, said: "Transforming these 
ancient texts and images into digital form helps transcend the 
limitations of time and space, which have in the past restricted access 
to knowledge. 
"Scholars will be able to interrogate these documents in fresh approaches as a result of their online availability."
'World's heritage'
       
Two thirds of the material will come from the Vatican Library and the rest from the Bodleian.
The University of Oxford's Bodleian Libraries form the 
largest university library system in the UK and includes the famous 
principal library, the Bodleian.
 The Vatican Library's Greek manuscripts include works by Homer, Sophocles, Plato and Hippocrates
    The Vatican Library's Greek manuscripts include works by Homer, Sophocles, Plato and Hippocrates
  
Founded by Thomas Bodley, it first opened to scholars in 1602 
and its combined collections include more than 11 million printed items.
A large number of its early printed books (incunabula) and 
Greek manuscripts originate from Italy and the project will focus on 
digitising these.  
The Vatican Library was founded in 1451 by Pope Nicholas V "for the common convenience of the learned". 
It is a private institution not attached to a university or academic institution. 
The Vatican Library preserves more than 180,000 manuscripts, 
1,600,000 printed books, 300,000 coins and medals, and 150,000 prints, 
drawings and engravings. 
Many of the first books printed in Rome between 1467 and 1473
 are still preserved in the Vatican Library, which also houses a copy of
 the entire Bible written about 1100 in Italy.
The Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Lord Patten of 
Barnes, said: 'We are very grateful to Dr Polonsky for his insight into 
the importance of widening access to the fundamental texts which have 
had a major impact on the development of civilisation.  
"By making these collections available online we give the 
wider public access to a small, but significant part of the world's 
heritage.'"
Monsignor Cesare Pasini, the prefect of the Vatican Library, 
said: "Thanks to the far-sighted and generous support of the Polonsky 
Foundation, two of the oldest libraries in Europe will join forces in an
 innovative approach to digitisation driven by the actual needs of 
scholars and scholarship."
 
 
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