• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Google to put ancient Iraq museum collection online

Tue Nov 24, 2009 10:43am EST

Stocks

   

* Iraqi museum images to go on internet

* Google CEO in Baghdad for launch

* Move meant to encourage foreign firms to invest in Iraq



By Aseel Kami

BAGHDAD, Nov 24 (Reuters) - Google (GOOG.O) is putting thousands of images of ancient artefacts at Iraq's National Museum online, the Web search leader said on Tuesday, part of a U.S. bid to entice foreign firms to invest in Iraq.

What is now modern-day Iraq was once known as Mesopotamia a region considered by many as the "cradle of civilisation". The museum houses one of the finest Mesopotamian collections in the world.

But its millennia-old artefacts from Babylonian, Assyrian and Sumerian cultures, as well as Iraq's more recent history, have been largely closed to public view since the invasion due to security concerns and for renovation.

"The Iraqi museum is closed and people from all around the world are asking questions about it. Now they can know more as they sit in their homes," museum director Amira Eidan told Reuters.

Google employees have taken more than 14,000 pictures of the antiquities and aim to put them online in early 2010.

"I can think of no better use of our time and our resources to make the images and ideas from your civilization, from the very beginning of time, available to a billion people worldwide," Google CEO Eric Schmidt said at a news conference at the Baghdad museum.

"Most American companies are not yet operating in Iraq, and we would like to show that it's possible to do business in Iraq, that Iraq is an important market that will grow quickly, that it's sufficiently stable," he added.

U.S. Ambassador to Iraq, Chris Hill, said: "I believe that having someone of the stature of Eric Schmidt here to discuss technological cooperation ... with this museum is a positive sign for the people of Iraq that this process (of investment) is beginning."

The museum's Nimrud treasures, a collection of gold jewellery excavated in northern Iraq, are considered one of the most important archaeological finds of the 20th century and there had been fears they might have disappeared in the post-invasion chaos.

The National Museum fell prey to widespread looting after invading U.S. troops failed to protect it when they took Baghdad more than six years ago. Around 6,000 of the 15,000 items stolen have since been returned, Iraqi officials said. (Editing by Mohammed Abbas and Robin Pomeroy) ((mohammed.abbas@reuters.com, +964 790191 7035; Reuters Messaging: mohammed.abbas.reuters.com@reuters.net))



More from Reuters

HIV infected boy Gao Jun, 8, holds in his hands antiretroviral drugs used in the treatment of HIV, in an orphanage run by the Fuyang AIDS Orphan Salvation Association in Fuyang, Anhui province November 27, 2009.   REUTERS/Aly Song

Special Report: Insurer drops coverage for HIV patients

When Jerome Mitchell successfully sued his insurance company after it revoked his policy, he exposed a wrongdoing that could have repercussions for the entire health insurance industry.  Full Article | Slideshow 

  North Korean leader Kim Jong-il claps during a mass rally in Hamhung Square to celebrate the completion of the February 8 Vinalon Complex in Hamhung in South Hamgyong Province March 6, 2010 in this picture released by the North's KCNA news agency on March 7, 2010.  Credit: Reuters/KCNA

Is Kim having scary thoughts?

North Korea's Kim Jong-il is in one of the riskiest periods of his iron rule. Should the West be afraid?  Full Article 

Models of new iPhones with Chinese interface are shown during a promotional event in Hong Kong

Your iPhone may be sickening

A mysterious illness that left workers weak, shaky and in pain is traced back to a high-tech source: gadgets like the iPhone.  Full Article