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British Museum

British Museum treasures go online in Google partnership

Colossal bust of Ramesses, 'the Younger Memnon,' 1250 BC, displayed in the Egypt Gallery of The British Museum. Photo by Jononmac46, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
Colossal bust of Ramesses, ‘the Younger Memnon,’ 1250 BC, displayed in the Egypt Gallery of The British Museum. Photo by Jononmac46, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.

 

LONDON (AFP) – Thousands of artifacts from the British Museum’s priceless collections went online Thursday in a partnership with Google that will allow web-users to take a virtual stroll through its galleries.

The deal with the Google Cultural Institute, which has 800 partners from over 60 countries, also allows objects to be scrutinized by researchers around
the world thanks to high-definition Gigapixel technology.

Among artifacts viewable online is the famous Rosetta Stone, which helped unlock the secret of Egyptian hieroglyphs, and sculpture from the Parthenon in Athens.

“The world today has changed, the way we access information has been revolutionized by digital technology,” British Museum director Neil MacGregor said in a statement.

“It is now possible to make our collection accessible, explorable and enjoyable not just for those who physically visit, but to everybody with a computer or a mobile device,” he said.

There will also be a “Museum of the World” accessible through the site — a way of viewing the artifacts mapped to a timeline to allow users to make connections between cultures around the world.

Google and British Museum said in a statement that the collections would be “the largest space to be captured on indoor Street View.”

Highlights from the museum’s temporary exhibitions will also be available online, including two currently running on the Celts and ancient Egyptian religions.

Google announced a similar initiative last month that will allow users to view 500,000 artworks in French museum collections.