MARTINDALE’S MEDIA CENTER |
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Home Page
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History
World History ~ |
Written and managed by the Royal Household at Buckingham Palace, the site aims to provide an authoritative resource of information about the Monarchy and Royal Family, past and present…” For more information see the
Archive which covers news, sport, social history and entertainment from 1896 to 1970. You can also license higher resolution copies of the same items for Presentations, Web Publishing or Private Use. All content is free of charge for use by UK Maintained Schools in the classroom….”
Victorian art, economics, literature, political and social history, religion, and science…” For more information see Chronololgy of U.S. History
Historical Collections
These materials, from the collections of the Library of Congress and other institutions, chronicle historical events, people, places, and ideas that continue to shape America, serving the public as a resource for education and lifelong learning…” For more information see American Revolution
over two thousand different items, with easily as many or more unnumbered duplicates, many with distinct colorations and annotations…” For more information see Civil War
Division consists of reconnaissance, sketch, coastal, and theater-of-war maps which depict troop activities…” For more information see U.S. History Courses & Lessons
history from the antebellum period through reconstruction…provides access to 267 monograph volumes and over 100,000 journal articles with 19th century imprints…” For more information see the
U.S. History Resources
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Literature
hours to be said throughout the day. The hours are chronologically laid out, each containing a theme corresponding to events…”
Latin, Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Tagalog, etc…”
Bosnian, Chinese, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Latin, Melayu, Persian, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, Tamil, Thai, Turkish, Urdu, etc….” For more information see the
and legendary creatures and monsters from all over the world…” For more information see
University Collections & Bartleby
reference and verse providing students, researchers and the intellectually curious…”
Historic Math Book Collection; New York State Historical Literature; International Women’s Periodicals; Ezra Cornell Papers; Witchcraft Collection; etc…” For more information see
study of southern history, literature, and culture…” American South Collections include
Library of Southern Literature; North American Slave Narratives; The Southern Homefront, 1861-1865; etc…” For more information see
treasures of children’s literature published largely in the United States and Great Britain from before 1850 to beyond 1950…” For more information see
in 1996 to publish virtual facsimiles of rare books and manuscripts in the Penn Library’s collections. Its ongoing https://valtvalacyc.com mission is to make accessible to the global community of scholars and researchers primary source materials that would otherwise be difficult to access…” For more information see the
Duke Databank of Documentary Papyri; Renaissance Materials; The Edwin C. Bolles Collection; etc…”
grouping of works in literature and the humanities. From medieval to modern, scholarly to satirical,…” University of Wisconsin Digital Collections include
The Deipnosophists; Fables, by Robert Louis Stevenson; Mon village, ceux qui n’oublient pas; Nordic Translation Series; The Robert Southey Collection; Selected Works of Edith Nash; etc…” For more information see the
Chaplain Hiro Higuchi Correspondence; Hawaii War Records Depository; Lian Huan Hua Chinese Picture Story Books; etc…”
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Renaissance: 16th Century Renaissance English Literature (1485-1603); 17th Century: English Literature (1603-1660); Restoration: English Literature Restoration oand 18th Century (1660-1785)…”
Islam Literature; Roman Church Literature; Early German Literature; Celtic Literature; Carolingians Literature; Crusades Literature; Empire & Papacy Literature; etc…” For more information see
by medieval scholars…”
a database of Arthurian texts, images, bibliographies, and basic information…” For more information see
Vida de Cervantes; Textos Electronics; Bibliografia; etc…” For more information see
resource combining traditional elements of scholarly research with new communication and presentation possibilities enabled by networked digital technology…” Digital Dante includes
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Comedy from the John A. Zahm, C.S.C., Dante Collection at the University of Notre Dame, together with s elected treasures from The Newberry Library. The Zahm collection ranks among the top Dante collections in North America…” For more information see
for the study of the Inferno. This project is designed to appeal to the different purposes of a wide range of readers, not simply those with scholarly interests…” For more information see the
collaboration with Professor David Hayman, one of the pioneers of Joyce scholarship…” “…The selected works compiled in the James Joyce Scholars’ Collection (JJSC) all share two characteristics: 1) all the books are currently out-of-print and 2) they are valuable, perhaps indispensable,…” For more information see the
reviews and articles, hundreds of images, and many different kinds of interactive exhibits…” For more information see
a database of texts, images, bibliographies, and basic information about the Robin Hood stories and other outlaw tales…” For more information see
facsimiles seeks to share with a wider audience meetings of book art and Shakespearean text, and suggests the variety of responses of visual and book artists to the stimulus of Shakespeare’s words…” For more information see the
of William Shakespeare ranks among the most authoritative published this century…” For more information see
Shakespeare’s Characters; etc…”
media are admired by a global audience. In the broadest terms, the William Blake Archive is a contemporary response to the needs of this dispersed and various audience of readers…”
a comprehensive historical survey of the field’s most important figures, schools, and movements. It includes more than 240 alphabetically arranged entries on critics and theorists, critical schools and movements, and the critical and theoretical innovations of specific countries and historical periods…” For more information see
Newspaper Indexes |
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