大英图书馆将古希腊手稿搬上网络
爱思英语编者按:据美联社报道,大英图书馆本周一称,该馆正着手将其库藏的多达1000卷的古希腊手稿中的250卷搬上网络,提供免费阅读。管理员们希望此举可以让史学工作者、圣经学者及学习古希腊著作的学生受益。尽管这些手稿长期以来一直对造访大英图书馆阅览室的学者们开放,但是管理员斯科特·麦肯德里克称,把这些手稿放到网上可以让全世界的人们都有机会阅读这些古籍。手稿的精髓部分包括1842年在希腊阿索斯山发现的著名的《伊索寓言》故事集。
One of the world"s most important caches of Greek manuscripts is going online, part of a growing number of ancient documents to hit the Web in recent years.
The British Library said Monday that it was making more than a quarter of its 1,000 volume-strong collection of handwritten Greek texts available online free of charge, something curators there hope will be a boon to historians, biblical scholars and students of classical Greece alike.
Although the manuscripts — highlights of which include a famous collection of Aesopic fables discovered on Mount Athos in 1842 — have long been available to scholars who made the trip to the British Library"s reading rooms, curator Scot McKendrick said their posting to the web was opening antiquity to the entire world.
McKendrick said that London could be an expensive place to spend time poring over the Greek texts" tiny, faded script or picking through hundreds of pages of parchment.
"Not every scholar can afford to come here weeks and months on end," he said. The big attraction of browsing the texts online "is the ability to do it at your own desk whenever you wish to do it — and do it for free as well."
Although millions of books have been made available online in recent years — notably through Google Books" mass scanning program — ancient texts have taken much longer to emerge from the archives.更多信息请访问:http://www.24en.com/
They don"t suffer from the copyright issues complicating efforts to post contemporary works to the Web, but their fragility makes them tough to handle. They have to be carefully cracked open and photographed one page at a time, a process the British Library said typically costs about 1 pound ($1.50) per page.
John Franklin, an associate professor of classics at the University of Vermont, said that the British Library"s efforts were "part of a quite general move to making manuscripts available online." "Hundreds of institutions have done or are doing the same," he said, including his university.
Franklin said it was "wonderful that the general public can have an intimate view of so many manuscripts," but stressed the material"s academic applications, noting that it could serve as a teaching aid for students learning to unravel medieval Greek handwriting, for example.
The British Library has worked aggressively to put much of its collection on the Internet, from 19th-century newspapers to the jewels of its collection — The Lindisfarne Gospels, a selection of Leonardo da Vinci"s sketches and the Codex Sinaiticus, the oldest surviving complete copy of the Christian Bible.
The library"s Greek manuscript project was funded by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation, which supports Greek-related initiatives in arts and culture.
Another batch of about 250 documents is due to be published online in 2012.