Find the best library databases for your research.
Loading...
LIVE CHAT (click to open)
Chat to a librarian:
Use of Oxford e-resources
Oxford subscribes to a wide range of e-resources, e-journals and
e-books to support your research and study. Use of these is governed
strictly by licence agreements.
Remember:
E-resources may be used for study and research but NOT for
commercial purposes
You may NOT share your password or pass content from e-resources
to anyone else
Systematic downloading or viewing of excessive amounts of data
is strictly forbidden
Failure to comply may result in:
Referral to the University Proctors
Publishers withdrawing content from the whole university
ArabDigest is a source of information and political analysis on current events in the Middle East and North Africa. Arab Digest members have access to articles and podcasts containing a mix of material drawn from a wide range of published sources together with original input from the editor and Arab Digest’s high-level network. Members have the option to sign up to receive the daily newsletter and podcasts direct to their emails or can access them at any time via the website.
Eastern European Newspaper Archive, containing scientific and professional journals, weekly and daily newspapers, encyclopaedias, and thematic book collections.
Digitised primary sources for the study of the British Indian Empire and the history, culture and literature of the Indian subcontinent from 1712 to 1942. Highlights include:
The official and personal papers of Lord Curzon, Viceroy of India, 1898-1905, from the India Office Records at the British Library
Rare printed works of colonial literature from India and volumes of travel writing from Indians travelling to the West, 1712-1933
Printed weekly abstracts compiled by the India Office, summarising both English- and Indian-language newspapers from British India
Alternate Name(s)
The Civil & Military Gazette Online, 1876-1963
The Civil and Military Gazette Online, 1876-1963
The Civil & Military Gazette stood as an unrivalled media institution, offering extraordinarily broad perspectives on South Asia during the late 19th and 20th centuries. This database offers access to holdings from 1876-1963 and covers British rule in India at its height, partition and the early years of the independent countries of India and Pakistan. As well as political events, the paper also cultivated and published literary talent, including Rudyard Kipling, some of whose earliest works first appeared in the Gazette.
This collection is a mixture of issues and papers from Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, Virginia, and Alabama ranging from 1861-1865. These newspapers "recorded the real and true history of public opinion during the war. In their columns is to be found the only really correct and indicative 'map of busy life, its fluctuations and its vast concerns' in the South, during her days of darkness and of trial." From the collections of Western Reserve Historical Society.
This collection of ephemera (brochures, clothing items, booklets, flyers, etc.) offers important insights into LGBTQ activism in Eastern Europe and the Balkans in the past decade. It includes 140 items (more than 2,000 pages) of valuable research materials collected by East View in Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Poland and Serbia.
This collection offers a rich array of sources for the study of the British Empire. It features material on British colonial policy and government; perspectives on life in British colonies; the relationship between gender and empire; race; and class.
Highlights include:
Letterbooks and personal papers of Duncan Campbell, a key figure in the founding of the Sydney colony in New South Wales
Manuscript sources on the condition of indigenous women and the extension of suffrage to women within the Empire from The National Archives
The personal papers of Lachlan Macquarie, Governor of New South Wales from 1810-1821
Correspondence and papers relating to Jamaican plantation life in the eighteenth and nineteenth-centuries
HALI is an international quarterly magazine covering the world of carpets, textiles and Islamic art, offering a range of scholarly articles, book and exhibition reviews and market commentary, in one beautifully presented package.
Digital access is available for all back issues of the magazine via Exact Editions. Of potential interest to students and researchers in textiles and the history of art, including Islamic art.
Follow the link and register using your oxford.ox.ac.uk email. You will receive a welcome email followed by an access confimation email later to be able to use the resource.
Klassiki is a video-on-demand platform which is dedicated exclusively to cinema from Eastern Europe – including Ukraine, Russia, and the Baltics – the Caucasus and Central Asia. Klassiki features a library of over 100 titles, spanning silent cinema to the 2020s, a film Pick of the Week feature, and a Journal area of related content including interviews, essays and national cinema overviews. A potentially useful resource to students of film, visual culture and modern languages.
LexiQamus is an aggregator for all major dictionaries of Ottoman Turkish matching the given restrictions. With LexiQamus, you can find a word with missing or unclear letters almost immediately, a task that would have been almost impossible with a regular dictionary. (https://www.lexiqamus.com/en)
This collection of digitised primary material includes literary manuscripts, rare printed works, and personal papers of a range of leading literary figures, as well as rare and obscure literary texts and genres. Collections included are as follows:
Walden and Other Manuscripts of Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) from the Huntington Library
Autobiographies from Men of All Ranks: manuscripts and rare printed autobiographies of men in Britain; a portrait of life in Britain from 1760-1820
Gothic Fiction: Rare Printed Works from the Sadleir-Black Collection of Gothic Fiction at the Alderman Library, University of Virginia
Nineteenth Century Literary Manuscripts: manuscript sources from libraries across the world. Split up into 7 different parts; highlights include autograph manuscripts of literary texts from writers such as George Eliot, Robert Browning and Anthony Trollope
Poetic Commonplace Books and Manuscripts of Thomas Gray, 1716-1771
The Diaries and Papers of Elizabeth Inchbald, from the Folger Shakespeare Library and the London Library
Gaskell and the Brontës: literary manuscripts of Elizabeth Gaskell (1810-1865) and the Brontës from the Brotherton Library, University of Leeds
The Literary Manuscripts of Felicia Hemans (1793-1835)
Irish Women Writers of the Romantic Era: Papers of Mary Tighe (1772-1810) and Lady Sydney Morgan (1776-1859) from the National Library of Ireland
The Collected Writings of Geraldine Jewsbury (1812-1880)
Nineteenth Century Women Writers: authors including Matilda Betham-Edwards, Florence Marryat, Helen Mathers, Charlotte Riddell, Dora Russell, Adeline Sergeant and Emma Jane Worboise
Collected Writings of Caroline Norton (1808-1877)
Collected Writings of Margaret Oliphant (1828-1897), plus Correspondence and Literary Manuscripts of Margaret Oliphant (1828-1897) from the National Library of Scotland
Recollections, Conversations and Commonplace Books of the Reverend John Mitford (1781-1859) from the British Library, London
Al Manhal is a full-text searchable database of scholarly and scientific publications from the Middle East, Africa and Asia giving access to hundreds of thousands of full-text searchable publications (books, peer-reviewed journals, strategic studies, academic dissertations and educational videos) from the Arab world’s leading publishers, across a diverse range of topics.
Scanned from older microfilms, this resource gives access to 13 collections of scanned primary sources which document the rich and evolving cultural, social, political, scientific, and religious life from the 12th to the early 18th centuries. Largely covers British and some European content. Topics include culture, literature, music, history of science & medicine, women studies, domestic life, Reformation and religious history, political history, and global travel.
The sources are largely digitised manuscripts, rare printed works, literary texts, papers of individuals, treatises, correspondence, music scores, advice books, tracts, sermons, recipe books, manuals, travel writing.
The 13 collections are:
Arthurian Legends and the Influence of French Prose Romance: The Grail, Lancelot, Tristan and related manuscripts from the British Library
Black Death: Sources concerning the European Plague
Crown Servants: Papers of Wentworth, Wynns or Gwydir, Lauderdale
Early music: Music sources from Pembroke College, Cambridge and the National Library of Scotland
English Clandestine Satire, 1660-1704: Popular Culture, Entertainment and Information in the Early Modern Period
Foxe and the English Reformation, c1539-1587: Collected manuscript sources from the British Library, London
The History of Science and Technology. Series One: The Papers of Sir Hans Sloane, 1660-1753 from the British Library, London
Masculinity: Men Defining Men and Gentlemen. Part 1: 1600-1800, Sources from the Bodleian Library, Oxford
Medieval and Early Modern Women
Orinda: The Literary Manuscripts of Katherine Philips (1631-1664)
Renaissance Man: The Reconstructed Libraries of European Scholars, 1450-1700 Series One: The Books and Manuscripts of John Dee, 1527-1608
Spanish Historical Writing About the New World, 1493-1700. From the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University
Le Monde is one of the newspapers of record for France. The newspaper website is available in French and English versions, which can be selected at the top of the page.
Muteferriqa, by artificial intelligence company Miletos, is an online research portal containing an exceptionally rich collection of printed materials published in the Ottoman Empire from the 18th to mid-20th century. It lets you perform full-text search in Latin and Arabic scripts within seconds across millions of pages of its corpus, which consists of virtually all the books and a large majority of periodicals ever printed in Ottoman Turkish. Refining queries through rich and extensive metadata gives relevant cross-sections of the material.
Launched in 2022, A Rabbit’s Foot is an independent magazine and online platform covering film, art and culture. Published quarterly, each issue has an overarching theme, including interviews and in-depth articles, on subjects and individuals from the classic to the very contemporary.
This trial is for the digital archive available via Exact Editions. A potentially useful source of inspiration for those interested in visual culture and film.
The OG magazine of film record in the UK, but international in scope, Sight and Sound has been on the scene since 1932. Now most well-known for its once-a-decade 100 Greatest Films of All Time Poll, Sight and Sound covers international film and moving image culture, including archive features as well as new writing. Also included are complete back-issues of Monthly Film Bulletin, published from 1934-1991, providing a comprehensive record of film releases in the UK.
This trial is for the digital archive available via Exact Editions. It may be valuable for students and researchers with an interest in film and visual culture.
Alternative name: South Asian Newspapers, 1864-1922
Online access to a select group of South Asian newspapers from the 19th and early 20th centuries, including such titles as Amrita Bazar Patrika (Calcutta), Bankura Darpana (Bankura, India), Madras Mail (Madras), Kayasare Hinda (Bombay), Pioneer (Allahabad, India), Tribune (Lahore, Pakistan) and the Ceylon Observer (Sri Lanka).
Click on 'Log in via your University or Institution'. Select 'University of Oxford' and enter your SSO.
This resource provides online access to a multimedia archive of primary sources which documents 100 years of youth culture through the scenes, styles, sounds and signifiers of different youth movements. It contains over 75,000 images and photographs; recorded and transcribed oral histories, podcasts and playlists; 15,000 flyers and ephemera; and many examples of fashion, graphic design and printed publications. It illustrates Britain’s evocative subculture and counterculture, as expressed through Mods, Skins and Punks and the rave scene.
This resource is useful for the study of social and cultural history, visual culture, and more generally, the lived experience of the British youth in the 20th century.
Taiwan Nichinichi Sinpou was first published in 1898 and was the most long-lasting and widely circulated newspaper in Taiwan during the Japanese Colonialism.