A digital library of pre-18th to 20th century documents relevant to the fields of law, history, economics, politics, diplomacy and government, with annotations, indexes, and links to supporting materials.
International in focus, the archive intends to present in one location primary documents concerning the Great War. It includes treaties, diaries, memorials, personal reminiscences, and a biographical dictionary.
A comprehensive, image-based collection of legal periodicals, treaties, U.S. Supreme Court cases, U.S. Attorney General opinions, and the Federal Register. Many historical collections of worldwide resources.
British Periodicals traces the development and growth of the periodical press in Britain from its origins in the seventeenth century through to the Victorian 'age of periodicals' and beyond.
The Times of London, 1785-2010 Researchers can search through the complete digital edition of The Times (London), to retrieve full facsimile images of either a specific article or a complete page.
The most detailed account of U.S. culture and history you’ll find anywhere—based on the renowned research power of Readers’ Guide! Will still cover events elsewhere in the world. For over 100 years, library users have relied on Readers’ Guide to Periodical Literature as the ultimate index of subjects in the popular press, such as magazines written at the time, including Time and Newsweek. Mostly U.S. magazines.
Readers' Guide Full Text is a database containing comprehensive indexing and abstracting of the most popular general-interest periodicals published in the United States and Canada, plus the full text of selected periodicals.
Print index in the Tisch reference collection. Call number AI3 .R47. This resource can help you to locate journals and scholarly articles published between 1920 and 1965.
Includes the papers of Sir Ronald Storrs (1881-1956) from Pembroke College, Cambridge. The guide to the collection is in the Tisch reference collection while the manuscripts are on microform.
The documents in this collection were sourced from international journals, newspapers, scientific reports, and radio and television broadcasts from 19 countries in North Africa and the Middle East, as well as from other nations with security interests in the region. A division of the Central Intelligence Agency identified, curated and translated the documents into English every day for four decades.
Experience the phenomenal independence movements of southern African nations through this digitized collection of thousands of documents and other primary sources.
Offers multidisciplinary information and provides the opportunity to search across 40 integrated databases sourced worldwide. Combining South African Studies and African Studies, NiPAD provides access to two million records with full-text links.