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0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z [show all]
Search database:
www.lieberman-institute.com
Subjects:
Jewish Studies
Summary:
This database, which previously was available only through the purchase of a CD, consists of an extraordinary collection of virtually all original documents of the Babylonian Talmud. Such documents include all full surviving manuscripts of Oriental, Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Yemenite provenance; hundreds of complete manuscripts and first printed editions of the Babylonian Talmud; and more than a thousand fragments from the Cairo and European archives. Many of these documents are available both as texts and digital images.
Search database:
hebrew-treasures.huji.ac.il
Subjects:
Jewish Studies; Language
Summary:
Makes available the sources processed in the preparation of the historical dictionary project database. Covers the period from ancient times to the modern era. Search capability enables retrieval of citations according to roots, lemmas, declined forms, and derivations. User can also retrieve works according to title, author, date, or genre.
Search database:
www.ebi.ac.uk
Subjects:
Chemistry and Chemical Engineering; Biology
Summary:
The macromolecular structure database, the European project for the collection, management and distribution of data about macromolecular structures, is derived in part from the Protein Data Bank (PDB). MSD presents primarily data for macromolecular structures associated with the metabolism of living organisms, that is, the atomic coordinates of proteins, nucleic acids and molecules that bind with these. The database also offers links to protein sequence information, textual information from scientific publications and a number of derived properties that augment the macromolecular structure information.
Search database:
lib.haifa.ac.il
Subjects:
Jewish Studies; General and Reference Works; Language
Title:
Mafteaḥ le-khitve-ʻet be-ʻIvrit (Online)
Search database:
mek.oszk.hu
Subjects:
Slavic and Eastern European Studies
Summary:
Contains thousands of full-text works in the humanities and social sciences. Most texts are in Hungarian. Version 2.1, which opened on July 1, 2003, is now hosted by the National Szechenyi Library. From this date on new acquisitions are available only on this site. The former collection is currently being transferred to the new location, lately mostly with works of technical literature. (Page contains a link to the old site). During the the past few years the Hungarian Electronic Library became one of the most popular and most significant text-archives of the Hungarian webspace.
Search database:
dlxs2.library.cornell.edu
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; News
Summary:
Digital versions of selections from Cornell University Library's collection. Features monograph volumes and journal articles published in the nineteenth century. Focuses on the major journal literature of the period, ranging from general interest publications to those with more targeted audiences such as agriculture. Links to the University of Michigan's collection by the same title. "The Making of America (MOA) is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the Antebellum period through Reconstruction. A joint effort of the University of Michigan and Cornell University, the database is housed on two servers, one at Cornell and one at Michigan. At this writing, MOA contains 1.5 million pages from 19th century monographs and journals. According to the site, particular strengths of the Michigan collection are education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology, while Cornell focuses mainly on digitizing general interest periodicals. The sites are comprised of pages scanned from the original volumes using Optical Character Recognition software, and are full-text searchable and accessible through screen reader software. The collections can be searched using limiters, proximity operators, material types and time periods. It is also possible to browse by journal title and volume or article title and author. Both sites also feature excellent help guides. Given the wide variety of resources, MOA is useful for upper-elementary through graduate school study"--"Best Free Reference Web Sites 2003, " RUSA Quarterly, Fall 2003; reviewed Apr. 12, 2003.
Search database:
quod.lib.umich.edu
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; News
Summary:
Digital versions of selections from University of Michigan Library's collection. Features monograph volumes and journal articles published in the nineteenth century. Focuses on the major journal literature of the period, ranging from general interest publications to those with more targeted audiences such as agriculture. Links to the Cornell University Library collection by the same title. "The Making of America (MOA) is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the Antebellum period through Reconstruction. A joint effort of the University of Michigan and Cornell University, the database is housed on two servers, one at Cornell and one at Michigan. At this writing, MOA contains 1.5 million pages from 19th century monographs and journals. According to the site, particular strengths of the Michigan collection are education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology, while Cornell focuses mainly on digitizing general interest periodicals. The sites are comprised of pages scanned from the original volumes using Optical Character Recognition software, and are full-text searchable and accessible through screen reader software. The collections can be searched using limiters, proximity operators, material types and time periods. It is also possible to browse by journal title and volume or article title and author. Both sites also feature excellent help guides. Given the wide variety of resources, MOA is useful for upper-elementary through graduate school study"--"Best Free Reference Web Sites 2003, " RUSA Quarterly, Fall 2003; reviewed Apr. 12, 2003.
Search database:
infotrac.galegroup.com
Subjects:
Law
Summary:
International and foreign law, including monographs on the laws of foreign jurisdictions. Primarily 19th and early 20th century; also several hundred classics in European international law since the 17th century. "International Law" constitutes the largest category in the archive. It corresponds mainly to the period of MoML: Legal Treatises, 1800-1926, with classics since the seventeenth century, including Gentili, Grotius, Selden, Zouche, Pufendorf, Bijnkershoek, Wolff, Vattel, Martens, Mackintosh, Wheaton, among many others. "Foreign Law" encompasses foreign legal treatises of a variety of countries. Because the term "treatise" is more of a common-law category, the equivalent works in civil-law systems may have other names such as commentaries, encyclopedias, textbooks, monographs, or festschriften. "Comparative Law" compares more than one legal system and includes Ancient, Roman, Jewish Law, and Islamic Law. It recognizes that the roots of English common law will be found in the deep recesses of European history
Search database:
infotrac.galegroup.com
Subjects:
Law
Summary:
Based on holdings of the law libraries of Harvard and Yale, and the Library of the Bar of the City of New York as well as some from the British Library. Collections include not only published trial transcripts, but also popular printed accounts of sensational trials for murder, adultery and other scandalous crimes. Access also to unofficially published accounts of trials, as well as briefs, arguments and other trial documents where these were printed as separate publications.
Search database:
infotrac.galegroup.com
Subjects:
British and Commonwealth History; Germanic Studies; French and Italian Studies; Language; American History; Economics and Business; Government Information: International and Foreign; Government Information: United States
Summary:
Digital facsimiles of literature on economics and business published from the last half of the 15th century to the mid-19th century from the collections of the Goldsmiths' Library of Economic Literature at the University of London, England, and the Kress Collection of Business and Economics at the Harvard Business School; with supplementary materials from the Seligman Collection in the Butler Library at Columbia University, and from Sterling Library at Yale University. Collection contains materials on commerce, finance, social conditions, politics, trade and transport; documents the dynamics of Western trade and wealth; focuses on economics interpreted in the widest sense, including political science, history, sociology; special collections on banking, finance, transportation and manufacturing. Includes facsimiles of rare books and primary source materials such as political pamphlets and broadsides, government publications, proclamations, and a wide range of ephemera.
Search database:
malmad.iucc.ac.il
Subjects:
General and Reference Works; Jewish Studies
Summary:
MALMAD, the Israel Center for Digital Information Services, was set up in 1998 by the Israel Association of University Heads. Its purpose is to serve as a joint framework (consortium) for the acquisition, licensing and operation of information services to all the Israeli universities. Includes links to Israeli union lists, electronic serials, databases, and the MALMAD newsletter.
Search database:
maplight.org
Summary:
MapLight is a non-partisan, non-profit organization that "connects data on campaign contributions, politicians, votes, industries, companies, and more to show patterns of influence that could never be seen before." The result is visual, easy-to-understand data that shows how campaign contributions influence voting patterns in the US Congress. The intended audience is American taxpayers and consumers, as well as students, researchers, and journalists. Users can view the data in various ways: by bill, by legislator, by company, and by interest groups. Contributions data comes from the Center for Responsive Politics. The site is well-designed and easy-to-use, and is an excellent resource for researching the influence of campaign contributions and promoting government transparency and accountability. The video tour of how the website works is worth checking out: https://maplight.org/us-congr ess/guide/video-tour. There's also Maplight California, Maplight Wisconson, and Maplight Los Angeles.
Search database:
insight.stanford.edu
Subjects:
African Studies; Geography
Search database:
dlib.stanford.edu
Subjects:
American Literary Studies
Summary:
SGML encoded digital edition of Twain's works.
Author/Creator:
Twain, Mark, 1835-1910.
Search database:
www.gsb.stanford.edu
Subjects:
Economics and Business
Summary:
Full-text service of market research reports on many topics. Includes more than 40,000 market intelligence publications from 350 publishers worldwide: Market Research reports by Packaged Facts (consumer goods), Kalorama Information (health science), Specialists in Business Information, Simba Information (media industry), Executive Summaries, and MarketLook Reports.
Search database:
search.marquiswhoswho.com
Subjects:
General and Reference Works
Summary:
Marquis Who's Who on the Web provides biographies of over 1.3 million people of note, in the United States and around the world. It is the online counterpart of Marquis' renowned biographical dictionaries, such as Who's Who in America, Who's Who in the World, Who's Who of American Women, Who's Who in American Art, and Who's Who in American Politics. All biographies since 1985 are included.
Search database:
mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu
Subjects:
American History; Race and Ethnicity
Summary:
"Contains secondary documents written about Martin Luther King, Jr., as well as primary documents written during King's life."

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