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Andreas Galanos, a Europeana User Teacher for Greece, explains how to browse content in Europeana.eu and use it in the classroom to teach about migration.
As part of the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018, Europeana in partnership with museums, galleries, libraries and archives across Europe, held 18 collection days in 12 countries on the theme of migration.
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British School in The Netherlands migration stories
During the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018, Europeana worked with cultural heritage institutions and citizens across Europe to share migration stories and objects on Europeana Migration. These stories are part of Europe’s rich and shared history of migration, and help to tell the story of Europe and the people who live here.
Together with the National Library of The Netherlands, we’re celebrating International Migrants Day and the end of the European Year of Cultural Heritage with a special day inviting people to share their migration stories and objects in the Hague.
Europeana, Photoconsortium, KU Leuven and Museo della Grafica invite communities from Pisa and beyond to this event to share their personal migration stories to our migration collection.
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Miestas kalnuose, 1616–1619, M. K. Čiurlionis National Museum of Art, Lithuania, CC BY
More than halfway through Europeana Migration, we stop to highlight some key takeaways already gained and get a word from our Chief Culture Officer Zubia Naqvi on the importance of multiculturalism and a globalised Europe.