Qatar National Library’s Board of Trustees chair HE Sheikha Hind bint Hamad al-Thani and the British Library Board chair Dame Carol Black attended a reception last night at the British Library in London in celebration of the fourth anniversary of Qatar Digital Library’s launch.

The website, with content in both Arabic and English, provides free public access to an important range of historical collections held by the British Library. So far the website has been visited by more than 1.2mn users, generating more than 10mn page views.

The website is the result of a partnership between Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development, Qatar National Library, and the British Library to digitise historical collections relating to Gulf history and Arabic scientific manuscripts.

Metadata and descriptions of the digitised items are in both Arabic and English, and the Qatar Digital Library transforms access to these collections – previously only accessible via the British Library’s reading rooms – for academics, researchers, students and the wider global community.

Initially agreed in 2012, the partnership was extended earlier this year so that a further 900,000 images will be added to the 1.5mn already available online.

Ahead of Wednesday’s reception, HE Sheikha Hind toured the digitisation studio on the sixth floor of the British Library, where Gulf-related material – including music, maps, ships’ logs, reports, letters, private papers and historic publications – is digitised, fully catalogued and uploaded onto the Qatar Digital Library (www.qdl.qa).

Speaking at the reception, HE Sheikha Hind said: “It is said that libraries give us power – the power to cast our eyes across the sweep of history and discover what the past can tell us about our present and future. But harnessing this power depends on accessibility. Across the world, physical access to such a vault of knowledge is not universal.

“Thankfully, the digital age means access to libraries is no longer purely defined by buildings. We are here to celebrate a project that epitomises how libraries, and all that they hold, can truly be available to everyone. Libraries open up our world. That is why they must be opened up to the world.”

Dame Carol Black said: “The collections held at the British Library are the raw material of historical research. Over the past four years the Qatar Digital Library project has helped to make our rich and fascinating collections relating to Gulf history and Arabic science available to researchers around the globe. Working in close and fruitful partnership with Qatar Foundation and the Qatar National Library, we are delighted to have made this valuable resource freely available as never before, and expect to unlock access to many more collections as the third phase of the programme begins in the New Year.”

Dr Sohair Wastawy, executive director at Qatar National Library, who was also in attendance at the reception, said: “The Qatar Digital Library embodies of the core missions of the Qatar National Library, which is to provide free access to a wealth of information to everyone. The Qatar Digital Library has already supported numerous researchers and scholars across several disciplines, ranging from history to science, from archaeology to sociology, among others.”

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