Full Member
Wien bleibt Wien
Posts: 155
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Post by Austria on Aug 13, 2013 21:34:12 GMT -5
Sometimes you exhaust google yet you still can't find what exactly you need for your thread research, and that is very frustrating. Sometimes there just are no good libraries around. Everything can happen. This is one of the best resource online to find peer-reviewed scholarly articles on history: jstor.orgHowever, access to full articles are limited to only affiliates of certain academic institutions, so if you search through the database and find something you want to download (leisure reading or actual research, it's all good), please just leave a comment here (or IM me via skype), and I will download and send the requested items to you. I hope this will help many of you to find proper resources for your threads. :3 And please abuse me because I might graduate soon (and lose my access). If you are interested in my collection (mostly HRE, Italy, Austria, Prussia), I am more than willing to send those to you as well. <3
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Post by North Italy on Aug 14, 2013 7:34:22 GMT -5
Already said as much on Skype but... let me love yooou! -hug- This is a wonderful idea, so many thanks from me. If I find anything I want I'll be sure to pester you. ;P
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New Member
Wenn wir alle geschlossen stehen, alle gemeinsam, Gott Mit Uns.
Posts: 10
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Post by Prussia on Jun 4, 2014 17:02:04 GMT -5
I just wanted to tack on that I have a fair few sites that deal with primary source documents. These are great because they give those eye witness accounts that I know I like. Europe European History Primary SourcesLondon Lives 1690-1800EurodocsGallica (note: This is the national library of France, so everything's in French.) United States American Memory (from the Library of Congress) National Security ArchiveMaking of America (MoA) National ArchivesAlso, have a few secondary source sites as well. Europe Windows on the Past (by Cornell University's Library) Historical Research in Europe (often times in said nation's native language, fair warning) Country Study (from the Library of Congress) German History in Documents and Images (from the German Historical Institute; offered in both English and German) United States AmdocsChronicling America (from the Library of Congress) The Avalon Project (documents of law, history, and diplomacy from Yale Law School) Annenberg LearnerImmigration to the U.S. from 1789 to 1930 (from Harvard University) And if you need help from any of these sources, like you need an account and password, I can help you with that by trying to find what you need. Hopefully most sites do not require that of you though, but I'm not sure with every one. Hopefully this has been a bit helpful! I'll see if I can get more from professors and edit this post once I get back to college, as I'm lacking with the rest of North and South America, Africa, and Asia/Oceania.
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