HistoryBritish Library Newspapers17th and 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers and 19th Century British Library Newspapers
British Library Newspapers consists of two major collections from the British Library which span 300 years of newspaper publishing in the UK. The two collections combined contain nearly 3 million pages and 40 million articles and provide an enormous resource for research on all subjects including history, literature, social sciences, business and economics and the history of journalism and advertising.
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The Economist Historical Archive 1843-2003The Economist and Gale are pleased to announce that the complete facsimile run of The Economist, 1843-2003, will be available online in 2007, with editorial, advertising and tabular matter fully searchable.
Researchers and students will now be able to access high quality primary sources, enabling them to facilitate comparisons of economic trends across continents and centuries.
Features and benefits:
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State Papers Online, 1509-1714Coming in Spring 2008
State Papers Online, 1509-1714 will unite the State Papers Domestic and Foreign and the Registers of the Privy Council, to create a new backbone for research and teaching projects in politics, government, and social economic and religious history.
Part One, to be published in Spring 2008, offers the complete collection of State Papers Domestic for the Tudor era (Henry to
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Post-War Europe: Refugees, Exile and Resettlement, 1945-1950Post-War Europe: Refugees, Exile and Resettlement, 1945-1950 is a new online collection of primary source materials from the holdings of the Wiener Library and The National Archives in the UK and supports research and teaching on post-World War II Europe.
This unique archive covers the international politics leading the administration, care, repatriation and emigration of the Displaced Persons (DPs) as well as the situation and plight of the survivors, both Jews and non-Jews, of the Holocaust and World War Two, and their reintroduction to life and community. A large percentage of the DPs were refugees from Eastern European countries fleeing Soviet rule who were not able to return to their homelands until after the fall of the Berlin wall.
External Editor: Professor Dan Stone, Royal Holloway College, University of London
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Iraq 1914-1974: Middle East Online Series 2An online publication in partnership with the National Archives, Kew
An essential contemporary resource for the understanding of modern
General Editor: Dr Charles Tripp, School of African and Oriental Studies, University of London For more information visit our product website
Also available: Arab-Israeli Relations 1917-1970: Middle East Online Series 1
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