Emily's history page
- Letters from the
Civil War. Written by a soldier to his fiancee. Visit this
site when you've got a lot of time to give it, because these letters
are deeply moving.
- The Library of Congress's American
Memory project. Lots of text and images; fascinating stuff.
- The Britannica Guide to Black
History -- February is Black History Month.
- The general WWW site for the Library of
Congress.
- Some Canadian history
links from my American's Guide to
Canada.
- the Nizkor Project,
a very large collection of resources about the Holocaust.
- Anne Frank Online. I visited
her family's house in Amsterdam this past summer. I don't think I can
write anything about how powerful an experience it was without diminishing
it somehow, so I won't even try.
- The WWW
Virtual Library: History page.
- The ULS
History Page. Large and comprehensive.
- Diotima:
Women and Gender in the Ancient World, from the University of Kentucky.
- The
Ancient World Web.
- A page for the history of
science, technology, and medicine (that is, the stuff I may want to study in
conjunction with Renaissance literature when I finally go back to school).
- Electronic resources (mailing lists, links, etc. from the Johns
Hopkins Institute
of the History of Medicine.
- The Historical
Text Archives. Links to a large number of primary sources for historical
inquiries.
- WWW services for
historians, from a site in the Netherlands.
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Emily Way (emily@vex.net)
Last updated September 24, 1997
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