London Lives makes available, in a fully digitised and
searchable form, a wide range of primary sources about eighteenth-century
London, with a particular focus on plebeian Londoners. This
resource includes over 240,000 manuscript and printed pages
from eight London archives and is supplemented by
fifteen datasets created by other projects. It provides access
to historical records containing over 3.35 million name
instances. Facilities are provided to allow users to link
together records relating to the same individual, and to compile
biographies of the best documented individuals. Every document display page includes a link to the relevant background page
which provides information about that document type. The site also features historical background notes and a user wiki.
A blog to talk about genealogy and family history, ask questions, highlight useful sites and share tips.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Friday, December 27, 2013
Memoire Des Hommes
Mémoire des hommes intends to provide the public with digitised
documents and data from the archives and collections held by the Ministry of
Defence of France. France lost over 1.4 million men in WW1 and you can find a certificate for each man on the website. Searches are done by name and the scans of the documents show where a man was from and when and where he died. The Minister for Defence proposes that users of the site annotate the pages of
certain useful digitised documents for genealogy and searching in local history.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Photo London
PhotoLondon is a database of 19th Century Photographers and Allied Trades in London:
1841-1901. The site has compiled a
database of approximately 9,000 biographical entries on photographic companies
and the people who worked within the photographic industry in London during the
19th century.
Read about pioneering photographers such as Antoine Claudet, Camille Silvy and Oscar Rejlander and less well known figures such as Walston Caselton, and the sisters Marion, Jane and Anna Dixon.
Read about pioneering photographers such as Antoine Claudet, Camille Silvy and Oscar Rejlander and less well known figures such as Walston Caselton, and the sisters Marion, Jane and Anna Dixon.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Historic Irish Photographs
The National Library of Ireland has begun to put some of their historic
photographs online via the Google Cultural Institute. The purpose of
the initiative is to increase the exposure of these photographs to the general
public. Currently, there are three online exhibits: Witness to War; Dubliners -
The Photographs of JJ Clarke; Power and Privilege – The Big House in Ireland.
The National Library of Ireland’s photographic collection consists of some 5.3
million images. It is expected the online collection, although currently small,
will grow over time. Access is free.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Cymru 2014
The National Library of Wales has launched a new website called Cymru 1914 - The Welsh Experience of the First World War. The website is a collaborative
effort developed in partnership with several universities and archives in Wales.
It commemorates the impact the First World War had on Wales. The website
contains a collection of newspapers, images, sound and archival material from
the era. The collection of war posters is particularly interesting, as shown by the
example below. Access to the website
is free.
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Blaeu Atlas of Scotland
The Blaeu Atlas if the first atlas of Scotland, published in 1654. It contains 49 engraved maps and 154 pages of descriptive text. You can search the entire atlas or browse for respective maps or descriptions individually, with relevant sections for the north east, west and south of Scotland. The atlas has been translated from Latin into English for the first time and is available through the National Library of Scotland.
Monday, December 2, 2013
Bletchley Park - Find Your Code Breakers
Bletchley Park was the home of Alan Turing and the Cypher School of code breakers in World War II. The Bletchley Park Roll of Honour lists all those believed to have worked in
signals intelligence during World War Two, at Bletchley Park and other
locations.
The Bletchley Park Roll of Honour has been compiled from information in official sources, publications and provided by veterans, friends and families.
The Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS) mission was to crack the Nazi codes and ciphers. The most famous of the cipher systems to be broken at Bletchley Park was the Enigma. There were also a large number of lower-level German systems to break as well as those of Hitler's allies.
The Bletchley Park Roll of Honour has been compiled from information in official sources, publications and provided by veterans, friends and families.
The Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS) mission was to crack the Nazi codes and ciphers. The most famous of the cipher systems to be broken at Bletchley Park was the Enigma. There were also a large number of lower-level German systems to break as well as those of Hitler's allies.
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