Europa (web portal)

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Favicon of Europa Europa
Europa logo

The English main page
URL http://www.europa.eu/
Commercial? No
Type of site Public service portal and
institutional information
Owner European Union
Created by European Commission
DG Communication
EU Publications Office

Europa (sometimes written EUROPA), the official web portal of the European Union, is designed to improve the public’s interaction with the EU institutions by quickly directing website visitors to the services or information they are seeking. Europa links to all EU agencies and institutions in addition to press releases and audiovisual content from press conferences. Europa is also an umbrella over the EU sites in the sense that all agencies and institutions have got their respective name, (or initials) plus the subdomain.europa.eu as standard URL. For example, the Institute for Security Studies' address is iss.europa.eu.

Contents

'Europa' is commonly recognised as the most neutral way of writing 'Europe' when it comes to compromising all EU languages into a single web-portal name, because 'Europe' translates into 'Europa' in most EU languages, as well as the fact that the name of the continent originates from a character in Greek mythology called Europa.

Further information: Europa (mythology)

See also: Languages of the European Union
The language-selection start page where all 23 languages are listed
The language-selection start page where all 23 languages are listed

All legislation and documents of political importance are published in all 23 official EU languages. Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Irish, Italian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovak, Slovene, Spanish and Swedish. Documents which are not legally binding are usually published in English, French and German.

In January 2007, EU commissioner Franco Frattini criticised the web service for not translating an article about the 50th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome in Italian, his own language.[1] This type of uproars by speakers of other major EU languages than English, happens occasionally.

Europa also offers services such as EUR-Lex, a Publications Office and libraries of photographs, videos and audio for the Commission and the Parliament.

  1. ^ Frattini upset over Italian language slip-up, www.euobserver.com Accessed 18 January 2007

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