CARARE: Difference between revisions

From The Digital Classicist Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 13: Line 13:
<blockquote>CARARE was one of a suite of projects, funded by the European Commission to help develop [https://www.europeana.eu/en Europeana]. It played an important role in involving Europe's network of organisations responsible for investigating, protecting, informing and promoting unique archaeological monuments, architecturally important buildings, historic town centres and industrial monuments of World, European and National heritage importance alongside the existing national, regional and local content providers. Their involvement not only brought together a rich diversity of content about the archaeology and architectural heritage but also added 3D and Virtual Reality content to Europeana.</blockquote>
<blockquote>CARARE was one of a suite of projects, funded by the European Commission to help develop [https://www.europeana.eu/en Europeana]. It played an important role in involving Europe's network of organisations responsible for investigating, protecting, informing and promoting unique archaeological monuments, architecturally important buildings, historic town centres and industrial monuments of World, European and National heritage importance alongside the existing national, regional and local content providers. Their involvement not only brought together a rich diversity of content about the archaeology and architectural heritage but also added 3D and Virtual Reality content to Europeana.</blockquote>


[[category:Digitization‏]] [[category:Images]]‎ [[category:3D]]
[[category:Digitization‏]] [[category:Images]]‎ [[category:3D]] [[category:opensource]]

Latest revision as of 16:43, 19 September 2023

Available

Directors

  • Anthony Corns
  • Alberto Sánchez Vizcaino
  • Karolina Badzmierowska
  • Dimitris Gavrilis
  • Catherine Cassidy

Description

Taken from the project website (Accessed 2023-09-19):

CARARE was one of a suite of projects, funded by the European Commission to help develop Europeana. It played an important role in involving Europe's network of organisations responsible for investigating, protecting, informing and promoting unique archaeological monuments, architecturally important buildings, historic town centres and industrial monuments of World, European and National heritage importance alongside the existing national, regional and local content providers. Their involvement not only brought together a rich diversity of content about the archaeology and architectural heritage but also added 3D and Virtual Reality content to Europeana.