New York Times Historical Archive online – now with index

Our subscription to the electronic version of the New York Times Historical Archive now includes the New York Times Index. This is the digitised version of the print index volumes (which are in the VHL’s reference section on the ground floor), fully integrated into the online archive of the newspaper. Please note, however, that while the NYT itself is available up to 2007, the Index stops in 1993.

When searching the archive, you will now find that in the advanced search screen you can search fields specific to the Index  both on their own and together with the full text/citation/abstract fields that were already available. They are Company/Organization, Creative Work, Location, Person and Subject. Search results will now be enhanced with information from the index (click on ‘abstract’).

The New York Times Historical Archive is available via OxLIP+. Use single sign-on for remote access.

ARTstor and Bridgeman: Using images in teaching and learning

ARTstor and Bridgeman: Using images in teaching and learning

Wednesday 18 May 9.15-11.15

The course examines two major digital image collections subscribed to by the University, ARTstor and Bridgeman Education, geared to research and teaching in the humanities, history of science and medicine, and social sciences. Viewing, presenting and managing images are also covered.

OUCS – Book Here

Trials: Russian-Ottoman Relations & Izvestiia Digital Archive

Trials of the following electronic resources will be of interest to those researching Slavonic, Central European, East European and Turkish history:

Russian-Ottoman Relations

During the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, the balance of power between Russia and the Ottoman Empire was constantly monitored in Western Europe, where several powers had designs of their own on some of the Ottoman territories. This 4-part archive includes publications of relevant government documents, diplomatic reports, travel accounts, and fiercely political (and polemical) tracts and pamphlets designed to rally public support. The sources are largely Western documents.

Part 1: The Origins, 1600-1800
Part 2: Shifts in the Balance of Power, 1800-1853
Part 3: The Crimean War 1854-1856
Part 4: The End of the Empires, 1857-1914

Izvestiia Digital Archive

Among the longest-running Russian newspapers, Izvestiia was founded in March 1917 and during the Soviet period was the official organ of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. Remarkable for its serious and balanced treatment of subject matter, Izvestiia has traditionally been a popular news source within intellectual and academic circles.

Access is via OxLIP+. The trials run until the end of June. Please send feedback to Angelina Gibson.

Trinity Term Information Skills Programme

The programme of Information Skills courses for this term is now available to view on our website.

The programme includes courses on:

  • RefWorks
  • WISER sessions on
    • Manuscripts
    • Sources for African studies
    • Online resources for historians 
    • US history sources
    • Sources for Medievalists 
  • Sessions from ProQuest on
    • Early English Books Online (EEBO)
    • Historical Newspapers
    • House of Commons Parliamentary Papers

For full details and to book places please go to http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/history/services/training/PGtraining

Trial until 31 May: Times of India Historical Archive (1838-2001)

The Indian Institute Library is currently running a trial of Times of India Historical Archive (1838-2001).

The Times of India, founded in 1838 as the Bombay Times and Journal of Commerce, is one of the major English-language newspapers of South Asia. This resource provides searchable full-text access to the title from 1838 to 2001, including digital reproductions of pages. It is not just relevant for those studying Indian / South Asian history or colonial British history but also British and local British history. For instance, there are over 200 articles on the Bodleian alone.

Oxford users: access is via OxLIP+.

The trial runs until the end of May. Please send feedback to Gillian Evison and Emma Mathieson (e: indian.institute@bodleian.ox.ac.uk).

Connected Histories: Sources for British History, 1500-1900

Launched on 1 April Connected Histories: Sources for Building British History, 1500-1900 is a federated search engine to search in a single search a wide range of distributed digital resources relating to early modern and nineteenth-century British history.

The following 11 resources are included:

  • British History Online: The digital library of primary and secondary sources for the history of Britain, from the Middle Ages to c.1900.
  • British Museum Images: The collection provides searchable access to almost 100,000 images, relating to early modern and 19th-century Britain.
  • British Newspapers, 1600-1900: The most comprehensive digital historic British newspaper archive in existence, with 3 million pages of historic newspapers, newsbooks and ephemera from national and regional papers.  Oxford user? Check below for tip how to connect to British Newspapers from Connected Histories.
  • Charles Booth Online Archive: The online archive provides access to guides, digitised images and maps from the Booth archive collections at the London School of Economics and Political Science and the University of London Library.
  • Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540-1835: A database containing details of the careers of more than 130,000 clergymen of the Church of England between 1540 and 1835, from over 50 archives in England and Wales.
  • House of Commons Parliamentary Papers: The Parliamentary Papers gives access to page images and searchable full text for over 200,000 House of Commons sessional papers and supplementary information from 1688 onwards.
  • John Johnson Collection of Printed Ephemera: The collection provides access to more than 67,000 scanned items from the Bodleian Library’s holdings documenting various aspects of everyday life in Britain from the 18th to the early 20th century.
  • Old Bailey Proceedings Online, 1674-1913: The Old Bailey Online contains accounts of the trials conducted at London’s central criminal court between 1674 and 1913; and also the Ordinary’s Accounts – detailed narratives of the lives and deaths of convicts executed at Tyburn, published between 1676 and 1772.
  • London Lives 1600-1800: London Lives provides a fully searchable edition of 240,000 manuscript pages from eight London archives and 15 datasets, giving access to 3.5 million names.
  • Origins Network: Origins.net offers online access to some of the richest ancestral information available. The collection searchable through Connected Histories focuses on the early modern history of London.
  • John Strype’s Survey of London: This is a full-text electronic version of John Strype’s enormous two-volume survey of 1720, complete with its celebrated maps and plates, which depict the prominent buildings, street plans and ward boundaries of the late Stuart capital.

Oxford Users

Please note that some of the resources searched are free while others require subscriptions. Fortunately Oxford users have access to all resources with the single exception of Origins.net.

Connecting to Burney:

If you find results from British Newspapers, 1600-1900 (aka 17th and 18th Century Burney Collection), you will be prompted with the UserGroup Identification. Type in oxford to proceed.

Remote access to Oxford subscription resources works best if you use VPN.

New: Dictionary of Irish Biography online

We are pleased to announce that we now have online access to the Dictionary of Irish Biography.

DIB is a collaborative project between Cambridge University Press and the Royal Irish Academy. An important reference work, it offers biographical information about Irish men and women who made a significant contribution in Ireland and abroad. It also includes information about the lives of people born outside Ireland, but who made a significant contribution in that county. You have a choice of full-text searching, advanced searching, browsing  or trying the lucky dip (“Read a random life”).

DIB is now on SOLO and OxLIP+. Use your Single Sign On or VPN for remote access.

Digital connections: new methodologies for British history, 1500-1900 – 31 March, IHR

Digital connections: new methodologies for British history, 1500–1900

A workshop introducing two major new digital resources, Connected Histories and Mapping Crime.

Thursday 31 March 2011

Wolfson and Pollard Rooms, Institute of Historical Research, University of London

1.00–1.15 Welcome and introduction

1.15–1.55 Tim Hitchcock (University of Hertfordshire) Towards a history lab for the digital past

1.55–2.05 Break

2.05–3.30 Connected Histories for research – parallel workshops

1500–1700 – facilitated by Peter Webster (Institute of Historical Research)

1700–1900 – facilitated by Bob Shoemaker (University of Sheffield)

3.30–3.45 Tea and coffee

3.45–4.30 David Tomkins (Bodleian Library, University of Oxford) Mapping Crime: making connections and exploring narratives in 18th– and 19th–century crime material

Keynote address

4.45–5.15 David Thomas (The National Archives) Let a hundred flowers bloom – is digital a cultural revolution?

5.15 Reception

Registration is free. Contact Jane Winters (jane.winters@sas.ac.uk) by 24 March. Places for the workshop are limited, but the keynote address will be open to a larger audience.

Database trials until 31/1/11: Early European Books and The Cecil Papers

Oxford users now have trial access to two databases until 31 January 2011:

Early European Books – now with Part 2 (Italian imprints):

Early European Books builds upon and complements Early English Books Online (EEBO) and is largely concerned with providing online access to non-Anglophone early printed materials. It offers scholars new ways of accessing and exploring the printed record of early modern Europe, drawing together a diverse array of printed sources from the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries. All works printed in Europe before 1701, regardless of language, fall within the scope of the project, together with all pre-1701 works in European languages printed further afield.

The Cecil Papers

The Cecil Papers is a collection of documents, principally from the reigns of Elizabethan I and James I/VI, privately held by the Gascoyne-Cecil family at Hatfield House in Hertfordshire. Until now, researchers of Elizabethan & Jacobean history have only been able to view these papers by applying to visit the archives at Hatfield House or by consulting a pair of aging and increasingly-degraded black & white microfilm copies. Now, these documents are available digitally. The resource contains nearly 30,000 documents gathered by William Cecil (1521-98), Lord Burghley and his son Robert Cecil (1563-1612), First Earl of Salisbury. Occupying some of the highest offices of state in the land (both men were Secretary of State to Elizabeth I and Robert Cecil also served her successor, James), these two men were at the heart of events during one of the most dynamic periods in Western history.

Please send feedback to Isabel Holowaty (isabel.holowaty@bodleian.ox.ac.uk).  Note that there is currently no funding for either of these. However, we will use your feedback to help prioritise the desiderata list.

New: World News Connection – online news from 1995

Modern historians will be pleased to know that the Social Science Library has subscribed to World News Connection (WNC), an online news service that offers an extensive array of translated and English-language news and information. Particularly effective in its coverage of local media sources, the material in WNC is provided by the Open Source Center (OSC), a U.S. government agency, and includes full text and summaries of newspaper articles, Websites, conference proceedings, television and radio broadcasts, periodicals, and non-classified technical reports.

A list of sources is available. The content is updated daily with a back archive to 1995.

Access is via OxLIP+ and use SSO for remote access.