European history, 900-c.1215 (Paper 14)

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Part I, Paper 14

  • ATLA Religion Database*: bibliographic database covering theology and church history; contains over 1.7 million records
  • Cambridge Histories Online*: full texts of the Cambridge Histories series (includes The new Cambridge medieval history of EuropeThe Cambridge history of ChristianityThe Cambridge history of later medieval philosophyThe Cambridge economic history EuropeThe Cambridge history of political thought)
  • EuroDocs: Online Sources for European History: database of European primary historical documents that are transcribed, reproduced in facsimile, or translated
  • European History Primary Sources: an index of scholarly websites that offer online access to digitised primary sources on the history of Europe
  • International Medieval Bibliography*: bibliographic database covering medieval civilization; contains over 440,000 records
  • Internet Medieval Sourcebook: a collection of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts presented for educational use, covering medieval history
  • Iter Bibliography*: bibliographical database covering the Middle Ages and Renaissance (400-1700); contains over 1.1 million records
  • Monumenta Germaniae Historica*: a comprehensive series of carefully edited and published sources for the study of German history from the end of the Roman Empire to 1500
  • ORB (Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies): academic site, written and maintained by medieval scholars; includes encyclopedia, full-length online textbooks, transcriptions and translations of medieval texts, and links to other useful sites
  • Patrologia Latina*: an electronic version of the first edition of Jacques-Paul Migne's Patrologia Latina; comprises the works of the Church Fathers from Tertullian in 200 AD to the death of Pope Innocent III in 1216
  • Prosopography of the Byzantine World: database of a project which is working to record all surviving information about every individual mentioned in Byzantine textual sources, together with as many as possible of the individuals recorded in seal sources, in the period 642-1261

(Resources marked * denote those subscribed to by the University Library; should any of the links not work, go to the eresources@cambridge page and try accessing the resource from there.)