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Showing posts with label Primary Sources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Primary Sources. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 March 2010

Fabian Society Online Archive - Fabian Society online archive - Online resources - Archives - Library Home - Home

Fabian Society Online Archive

"Why are the many poor?" is the title of the very first Fabian tract and its just one of around 580 such pamphlets which are now available on this site. In addition, some of the earliest Fabian Society minute books are also available online.
The Fabian Society started publishing tracts in 1884, and included in this site are most tracts up to 1997. Many of the early tracts were written by LSE founders George Bernard Shaw and Sidney Webb. Among the many other notable authors in the collection are:

Clement Attlee; Tony Benn; Tony Blair; Gordon Brown; Edward Carpenter; G D H Cole; Robin Cook; Tony Crosland; R H S Crossman; Denis Healey; Harold Laski; David Lipsey; Kingsley Martin; Peter Shore; Chris Smith; Richard Titmuss; Peter Townsend; Beatrice Webb; Harold Wilson...


The tracts relate to a great variety of topics including:

cultural matters; economics; electoral reform; foreign policy (such as colonialism, the Cold War and relations with Europe); industrial relations; the Labour Party; local government; politics (such as electoral and parliamentary reform); poverty; social reform (such as education, health and pensions); socialism; women's issues...


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National Trust libraries: 155,000 books catalogued; 75,000 to go!

 



National Trust libraries

"The National Trust owns 140 historic libraries (around 230,000 books in 400,000 volumes), generally preserved in the places where they were originally assembled and read. Many are country house libraries, some collected by wealthy bibliophiles, others containing more practical everyday books, including rare provincial printing. Other collections reflect the interests of middle-class readers; some were assembled by literary figures, such as Kipling and Shaw. Together these libraries provide an unparalleled resource for the study of the history of private book ownership in Britain and Ireland. Our cataloguing project is ongoing and approximately 155,000 books have so far been catalogued. Please contact us if you would like to know whether work has been done on a particular collection"

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You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

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Sunday, 14 March 2010

British Library - virtual books

Virtual Books at THe British Library:

"Use the award-winning 'Turning the Pages™' software to leaf through some of The British Library's great books and magnify the details. Choose the volume you'd like to see from the lists below."




Vesalius's stunning 16th-century anatomy treatise
Written and illustrated by Lewis Carroll
Epitome of sumptuous Arabic calligraphy
Commissioned by Emperor Iyasu in around 1700
Sketches and poems, including 'The Tyger'
Extracts from the 1911 Antarctic expedition
Elizabeth Blackwell's remarkable Herbal
Extracts from a 1,600-year-old-Bible courtesy of the Partners of the Codex Sinaiticus Project
The oldest printed ‘book’, made in China in 868
Country houses and magnificent gardens
Compiled by Mercator in the 1570s
The superb so-called 'Golf Book'
Selections from the famous Luttrell Psalter
The lavishly illustrated Golden Haggadah
From the draft score of the composer’s most famous work
Lavish production of 1540, with Henry’s own notes
The impeachmnent of Warren Hastings
'The History of England' in her own hand
Complete manuscript of notes and drawings (565 pages)
A selection of his sketches (29 pages)
Survivor of 15th-century Jewish culture
Beautiful images from the Sforza Hours
The composer's own notes, from 1784 until his death
Complete manuscript of William Byrd’s keyboard music
From the manuscript of William Byrd’s keyboard music
The wonderful, and weighty, Sherborne Missal
The priceless Lindisfarne Gospels
India's great epic in 17th-century paintings
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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
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