There are 2443 matching records.
Displaying matches 1291 through 1320 .
World History to 1500
Michael Markowski, Westmister College.
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.
Bring History Alive!
Gary Nash, National Center for History in the Schools.
Resources Available: TEXT.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.
World History
Vagel Keller, Carnegie Mellon University.
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.
World History Center
Northeastern University.
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.
The Post-Traumatic Gazette
Patience Mason, Patience Press.
A newsletter providing a healing perspective for all trauma survivors, their families, friends and therapists. Author’s husband was a Vietnam Vet. Not a lot of information on the site yet, more to come.
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.
Timeline of Diplomatic History
Office of the Historian, U.S. State Department.
See state dept. site
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.

Matrix: A Collection of Resources for the Study of Women’s Religious Religious Communities, 500 to 1500
Divinity School, Yale University.
Provided by the Divinity School at Yale University, Matrix is a collection of resources for the study of women’s religious communities, 500–1500CE. The core of the site is the Monasticon, a repertory of profiles of religious women’s communities. The Monasticon, which currently contains information on over 1100 religious communities and three in-depth community profiles, can be used to find individual histories of communities or can be searched as a database. Additional resources include a Chartulary of primary source documents, a Glossary, On-Line Articles, a modest collection of Images, Maps, and Site Plans, and a Bibliography (under development).
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.


Rutgers Oral History Archives
Sandra Stewart Holyoak, Rutgers University.
See JAH web review by James T. Sparrow.
Reviewed 2003-03-01.
Directed by Sandra Stewart Holyoak and maintained through the Rutgers History Department, this site provides access to oral history interviews of men and women who served overseas and on the homefront during World War II, the Korean War, Vietnam, and the Cold War. The archive currently contains 444 full-text interviews, primarily of Rutgers College alumni and Douglass College (formerly New Jersey College for Women) alumnae. Many of these interviews were conducted by Rutgers undergraduate students. The easily navigable site provides an alphabetical interview list with the name of each interviewee, date and place of interview, college of affiliation and class year, theater in which the interviewee served, and branch of service, if applicable. The list also provides “Description” codes that indicate the nature of the interview contents. These description codes include military occupations, such as infantry and artillery members, nurses, navy seamen, and engineer corps, and civilian occupations, such as air raid warden, student, clerical worker, and journalist. The site also contains links to 34 World War II, Vietnam, and oral history websites; 32 wartime photographs including two of concentration camp victims; four images of shoulder patches for the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines; memoirs; and 16 images of medals with links to the interviews of those men who were awarded each type of medal. A Memorial link provides brief (roughly 75-word) biographies of the over 200 Rutgers alumni who died in the war. This site is ideal for research on World War II battle and home front experiences and provides a model oral history project.
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 2007-11-20.

A Teacher’s Guide to the Holocaust
Florida Center for Instructional Technology.
world war II, nazi, Germany
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.
The Aerodrome: Aces and Aircraft of World War I
The Aerodrome.
Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, England, France, Germany, India, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Russia, Scotland, South Africa, United States, Wales
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 2001-10-24.



CWIHP: Cold War International History Project
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
See JAH web review by Mark Atwood Lawrence.
Reviewed 2013-12-01.
Much scholarship on the Cold War has been written by Westerners with little access to sources in Soviet archives. This extensive collection seeks to remedy the holes in Cold War historiography by actively collecting sources from the former Communist bloc. Thousands of documents in the diplomatic history of the Cold War are currently available, stretching in time from the 1945–46 Soviet occupation of northern Iran through the late 1990s. These sources, all carefully annotated, are divided both into collections and by geographic region. The 50 document collections cover a wide range of topics, including both specific events (1954 Geneva Conference on Indochina, 1956 Hungarian Revolution, 1980–81 Polish Crisis) and broader topics stretching over longer periods of time (Economic Cold War, Nuclear Non-Proliferation, The Cold War in Africa). The collections vary widely in size, between three and several hundred documents, and include primarily official documents and communication—meeting minutes, memoranda, transcribed conversations between leaders, reports, and several personal letters and diary entries.
Resources Available: TEXT.
Website last visited on 2007-10-28.

Britannia
Britannia.com, LLC.
Britain: ancient, medieval, through present
Resources Available: TEXT, IMAGES.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.
Library Research Papers
House of Commons.
England: gives access to the text of Research Papers which are compiled for the benefit of British Members of Parliament by the staff of the House of Commons Library
Resources Available: TEXT.
Website last visited on 0000-00-00.