e-newspaperarchives.ch
Type of site | Online newspaper archive |
---|---|
Available in | 4 languages |
List of languages English, German, French, Italian | |
Predecessor(s) | Swiss Press Online |
Country of origin | Switzerland |
Owner | Swiss National Library |
URL | www |
Commercial | No |
Registration | Optional (necessary for clippings) |
Launched |
|
Current status | Online |
e-newspaperarchives.ch (or e-npa.ch) is a website run by the Swiss National Library which provides free digitized archives of many Swiss newspapers. It is the successor to the Swiss Press Online site started in 2011, which it succeeded in 2018.
As of 2024, it provides access to 184 Swiss newspapers in several languages.
History
The Swiss National Library created its initial digitization strategy in 2009, in which it prioritized newspapers and the press. Their recommendations include respect for copyright and partnering with related institutions.[1]
Swiss Press Online was launched on 28 September 2011 by the Swiss National Library and Valais Médiathèque, due to a desire by several cantonal institutions to digitize and pool their newspaper resources.[1][2] It was launched on the day that the digitized version of the Confedédéré publication was released,[2][3] which was the service's pilot project.[1] Soon after this several other institutions joined their archives to the project.[1]
In 2017 the service's collaborators wished to make changes to improve the quality of the service: the site's name was changed to e-newspaperarchives.ch and it was moved to a newer technology called Viridian.[1][2] All publications on the former service are still accessible through its successor.[2]
Its scanning processes are carried out by the company 4DigitalBooks,[3][4] and digitization is done in collaboration with other libraries.[1] In November 2019, the library organized a cooperation with the public to fix text scanning errors in the archive introduced by the automated character recognition software. This cooperation was themed around women's suffrage, due to it taking place near the 60th anniversary of the referendum on the issue.[5][6]
Features
Newspapers digitized by the site are accessible through full-text search in addition to a calendar that shows specific dates for the newspaper.[4][7] Users can create individual clippings and archives, and pages can be downloaded as PDFs,[4][7] or printed.[8] It incorporates a statistics tool for tracking frequency of words in the scanned newspapers over time, as well as keyword searching.[4][9]
The site differs from its past iteration in that its text scans are able to be corrected by the public, it is segmented on an article by article basis (for new scans, older scans keep their segmentation level) and incorporates more search and metadata options.[1][2] An upgrade to increase the segmentation of older paper scans is planned for 2025.[1]
As of 2024, it provides access to 184 Swiss newspapers in several languages.[10] Specific newspapers whose archives exist on the site include Der Bund,[4] Neue Zürcher Zeitung,[7] L'Express/L'Impartial,[8] and Le Nouvelliste.[3] Newer editions of digitized newspapers are not immediately accessible through the site, instead being accessible through their respective publishers,[2][4] though they are digitized soon after publication.[8] The oldest digitized newspaper is the 2 January 1692 issue of the Gazette de Berne.
There are few Italian-language newspapers in the archive, and those that are included in the archive are mostly from the Grisons. Most newspapers from the Italian-speaking Canton of Ticino were instead digitized for the Archivio digitale Sbt dei Quotidiani e Periodici.[9]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h Regamey, Liliane (2 December 2021). "La numérisation à la Bibliothèque nationale suisse : la presse à l'honneur" [Digitization at the Swiss National Library: the press in the spotlight]. I2D - Information, donnees documents (in French). 2 (2): 96–102. doi:10.3917/i2d.212.0096. ISSN 2428-2111. Retrieved 10 July 2024 – via Cairn.info.
- ^ a b c d e f "About". e-newspaperarchives.ch. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
- ^ a b c Gabbud, Jean-Yves (14 January 2014). "Plus de 730 000 pages du "Nouvelliste" à portée de dk" [More than 730,000 pages of "Le Nouvelliste" at your fingertips]. Le Nouvelliste (in Swiss French). No. 10. Sion. p. 2. Retrieved 10 July 2024 – via e-newspaperarchives.ch.
- ^ a b c d e f Stähli, Beat; Lüthi, Christian (17 December 2020). "Neues "Bund"-Archiv: Eine Fundgrube für die Geschichte der Stadt Bern" [New "Bund" archive: a treasure trove for the history of the city of Bern]. Der Bund (in Swiss High German). Retrieved 10 July 2024.
- ^ "Projet de production participatif à la Bibliothèque nationale" [Participatory production project at the National Library]. SWI swissinfo (in Swiss French). 28 October 2019. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
- ^ Droux, Antoine (26 October 2019). "Appel à contribution pour corriger les bugs de la presse suisse numérisée" [Call for contributions to fix bugs in the digitized Swiss press]. Radio Télévision Suisse (in Swiss French). Retrieved 10 July 2024.
- ^ a b c Kälin, Adi (1 October 2021). "NZZ digitalisiert: Ausgaben seit 1780 im Internet zugänglich" [NZZ digitized: Issues since 1780 accessible on the Internet]. Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in Swiss High German). Retrieved 10 July 2024.
- ^ a b c "Plus de 1,5 million de pages à portée de clic" [Over 1.5 million pages just a click away]. L'Impartial (in Swiss French). Neuchâtel. 4 June 2013. pp. 8–9. Retrieved 10 July 2024 – via e-newspaperarchives.ch.
- ^ a b "In search of the words "war" and "peace"". Swiss National Library. 15 February 2023. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
- ^ "e-newspaperarchives.ch". e-newspaperarchives.ch. Retrieved 30 July 2024.