The Hebrew University of Jerusalem has digitized everything from the Nobel Prize-winning physicist's scientific notebooks to his love letters to half a dozen women.

The leading pioneer of the Atomic Age is finally touching down in the Information Age nearly 60 years after his death. Over the next several years, Albert Einstein's complete archives will be made available online by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, curator of the Noble Prize-winning physicist's volumes of private and professional correspondence, research notes, travel diaries, scientific writings, and more.

Einstein's archives include some 80,000 items that have only recently been "cataloged and enhanced with cross referencing technology," according to the Associated Press.

"Knowledge is not about hiding. It's about openness," Hebrew University president Menachem Ben Sasson told the news agency. Former university president Hanoch Gutfreund added: "More than anyone else, [Einstein] expressed his views on every agenda of mankind. Now we have a complete and full picture of that person."

With the help of a grant from the Polonsky Foundation UK, the organization that also assisted in the digitization of Isaac Newton's papers, curators have been "pulling never-before seen items" from a climate-controlled safe and readying them for distribution online as high-resolution images.

The university's new Einstein Archives Online portal, which debuted earlier this week, currently offers visitors about 2,000 documents representing Einstein's life through the year 1921. Subsequent additions to the site will fill out the papers bequeathed by the German Jewish physicist, born in 1879, to Hebrew University upon his death in 1955.

Einstein's archives include 14 notebooks "scribbled with his groundbreaking scientific research," according to the AP, as well as the original 1916 manuscript of his general theory of relativity, which Einstein actually gave to the university upon its founding in 1925.

But there are also a number of more personal items in the collection, the AP reported.

Included among Einstein's papers is "personal correspondence with half a dozen lovers," the good grades he achieved as a youngster (which run counter to the pervasive idea that he was a terrible student), and even a proposal for peace in the Middle East that suggested forming "[a]n eight-member 'secret council' of Arab and Jewish physicians, judges, clergy, and labor representatives which would negotiate a settlement to the conflict that divided them."