Internet History of Science Sourcebook
Editor: Paul Halsall
This page is a subset of texts derived from the three major online Sourcebooks listed below.
Notes: |
In addition to direct links to documents, links are made to a
number of other web resources. |
2ND
|
Link to a secondary article, review or discussion on a given
topic. |
WEB
|
Link to a website focused on a specific issue.. These are not
links to every site on a given topic, but to sites of serious educational value. |
Contents
- General
- Ancient Near East
- Egypt
- Theory
- Mathematics
- Technology
- Medicine
- Greco-Roman Culture
- PreSocratics
- Materialists
- Pythagoreanism
- Eleatic School
- Sophists
- Atomists
- Critical Thought
- Theoretical Science
- Mathematics
- Medicine
- Engineering
- Travel: Geography
- Latin Authors
- Byzantium
- Islam
- General
- Theory
- Medicine
- Impact
- Famous Muslim Scientists
- Latin Christendom
- Attitudes
- Medicine
- Technology
- Late Medieval Physics
- China
- India
- Scientific Revolution
- General
- Earlier/Alternative Ways of Understanding the Cosmos
- Theory
- Astronomy and Physics
- Medicine
- Freedom of Thought
- Scientific Societies
- The Enlightenment
- Spread of Scientific Ideas
- Attitudes
- Opposition to Religion
- Classical Science
- Astronomy
- Physics
- Chemistry
- Geology
- Medicine
- The Industrial Revolution
- The Agricultural Revolution of the 17th-18th Centuries
- The Revolution in the Manufacture of Textiles
- The Revolution in Power
- The Great Engineers
- The Process of Industrialization
- New Technologies
- The Steel Industry
- The Chemical Industry
- Electricity
- Efficiency, Automation and the Assembly Line
- Aviation
- Confidences and Disasters
- New Science: Darwin, Freud, Einstein
- General
- Geology
- Biology: Red in Tooth and Claw
- Reaction to Darwin
- Social Implications of Evolution
- Mathematics
- Physics: The End of the Classical Synthesis
- Chemistry
- Astronomy
- Psychology: The Obscurity of the Mind
- Philosophical Reflections: The End of Reason?
- Science and War Technology
- Scientists Reflections on Science and Meaning
- Science, Technology and the Transformation in the Means
of Production
- Biology: The DNA Revolution
- Space Exploration
- Computers
- Knowledge Based Production
- The Internet
- The World Environment: Cornucopeian Plenty or a Crisis Situation
- Moral Issues and Modern Science
- Use of Atomic Bomb
- Genetics and Human Society
- Further Resources in the History
of Science
- Webguides
- Source Material
- Other
General
-
2ND Thomas S. Kuhn: Structure of Scientific Revolutions,
1962 [Was At Emory, now Internet Archive]
Very good summary of theories of an important modern theorist of the idea of scientific
revolution.
- Wikipedia: History of Science
- Women in the History of Science A Sourcebook, Edited by Hannah Wills, Sadie Harrison, Erika Jones, Farrah Lawrence-Mackey and Rebecca Martin , 2023 [At UCL] [Local backup version here]
This is the full text of a sourcebook with 50 documents, and discussion about women in the history of science. At some points the usual definition of "science" is pushed somewhat. [Published w under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC 4.0). This licence allows you to share and adapt the work for non-commercial use providing attribution is made to the author and publisher (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work)]
Back to Index
Ancient Near East
Back to Index
Egypt
- Theory
- The Memphite Theology [At Internet Archive, from Creighton]
Ptah as creator god. This text has been presented as the source of Greek science. This is
unlikely!
- Mathematics
- 2ND Egyptian Mathematiics [Was At eyelid.co.uk, now Internet Archive]
- 2ND Egyptian Mathematics [At Buffalo] [Internet Archive version here]
With translations of problems.
- WEB Egyptian Fractions [At UCI] [Internet Archive version here]
A website which discusses Egyptian fractions, and which has links to other sites on Egyptian mathematics.
- Technology
- Medicine
Back to Index
Greco-Roman Culture
- PreSocratics
- Materialists
- Pythagoreanism
- Eleatic School
- 2ND Parmenides, Empedocles [IEP Articles]
- Parmenides (c.515-after 450 BCE) [At Hanover] [Internet Archive version here]
- Parmenides (c.515-after 450 BCE): Fragments [At this Site]
- Parmenides of Elea (c.515-after 450 BCE): On Nature (Peri Physis) [Was at Elea, now Internet Archive]
- Parmenides of Elea (c.515-after 450 BCE): On Nature In Greek, with facing English translatin PDF[Internet Archive]
- Zeno of Elea (c.490-after 445 BCE) [At Hanover]
The puzzles still work!
- Zeno of Elea (c.490-after 445 BCE): Paradoxes [At this Site]
- Melissos (5th Cent BCE)[At Hanover]
- Empedocles (c.493-c.433 BCE): Fragments [At this Site]
A pluralistic answer to Parmenides.
- Empedocles (c.493-c.433 BCE): Going Among Men as an Immmortal fragments 112, 146, 147 [Was At Eliade, now Internet Archive]
- Sophists
- Xenophanes (c.570-c.470 BCE) [At Hanover] [Internet Archive version here]
- Heraklitos (c.540-c.480 BCE) [At
WSU]
- Heraklitos [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- 2ND Heraklitos [IEP Article]
- 2ND Heraklitos [Was At Evansville, now Internet Archive]
- Heraklitos (c.540-c.480 BCE): Fragments [At this Site]
- Heraklitos (c.540-c.480 BCE): Fragments, In Greek from the Diels edition with facing translation by John Burnet, PDF format. [Internet Archive version here]
- Atomists
- Critical Thought
- Theoretical Science
- Aristotle (384-323 BCE): The Four Causes, [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
-
Aristotle (384-323 BCE): : On Generation and Corruption.[At
MIT]
The first five parts of Book
II in particular discuss elements, and the system of four elements that predates
Aristotle.
- Mathematics
-
2ND Donald Lancon: An Introduction to the Works of Euclid [At OBKB][Modern Account] [Internet Archive version here]
- WEB Euclid (c.300 BCE): Elements [At
Clark][Full Text] [Internet Archive version here]
The site has Java applets which let you play around with the geometric figures.
- Medicine
- Engineering
- Travel: Geography
-
The Periplus [At Internet Archive, from CCNY]
Written by a Greek resident of Alexandria in Egypt during the first century BCE, this text
is one of the oldest surviving accounts of the countries on Africa's east coast. A map
gives some idea of the size and scope of Africa and of the author's journey.
- Latin Authors
-
Pliny the Elder (23/4-79 CE): Natural
History in Latin [At Lacus Curtius][Full Text]
Back to Index
Byzantium
- Mathematics
- Medicine
- Paul of Aigina: The Epitome,
excerpts. [a medical text]
Back to Index
Islam
- General
- Theory
- Ibn Rushd (Averroës) (1126-1198 CE): Religion & Philosophy,
c. 1190. The text is On the Harmony of Religions and Philosophy, or in Arabic Kitab
fasl al-maqal, with its appendix (Damina). Appended is an extract from Kitab
al-kashf`an manahij al-adilla.
- Ibn Hazm (d. 1064): On Specialization of Knowledge, trans Mohammed Ballan [At Ballandalus] [Internet Archive version here]
- Ibn Hazm (d. 1064) On Pseudo-Scholars, trans Mohammed Ballan [At Ballandalus] [Internet Archive version here]
- Emir Abd al-Qadir al-Jaza’iri (d. 1883): On Critical Reasoning vs. Blind Emulation, trans Mohammed Ballan [At Ballandalus] [Internet Archive version here].
- Medicine
- Impact
Back to Index
Latin Christendom
- Attitudes
- Agobard of Lyons (9th Century): On Hail and
Thunder translated by Wendy Lewis
- Agobard of Lyons (9th Century): On
the Deception of Certain Signs translated by Wendy Lewis
- A Medieval Bestiary, c 1180 from British Library Additional Manuscript 11283 [translated by Martin Nelson with his advanced Latin class students]
- Adelard of Bath: Natural
Questions, c. 1137, on the impact of Muslim science in the West.
- Theophilus: An Essay
Upon Diverse Arts, c. 1125.
- Peter Abelard (1079-1142): Prologue to
Sic et Non, translated by Wendy Lewis
- Peter Abelard: Sic et
Non, excerpts, [At Internet Archive, from Clinch Valley College]
- Roger Bacon: On Experimental
Science, 1268.
-
Roger Bacon: On Experimental Science, from Opus Majus, 13th century [Was At UVA, now Internet Archive]
- Roger Bacon: Despair About
Thirteenth Century Scholarship, from Compendium Studii Philosophiae, 1271.
- Medicine
- A Treatise from Salerno on Nutrition: De flore dietarum, in
Latin and Italian, [Was At Liber Liber, now Internet Archive]
- Technology
Late Medieval Physics
- 2ND The Aristotelian Tradition and Problems in the Theory of Motion [PDF Illustrated lecture] [At NYU] [Internet Archive version here]
- Ockham, Scotus, Buridan [Was at Mq, now Internet Archive]
- John Buridan: Questions [c.1290-c.1360]
- Wikipedia: Jean Buridan (c.1301-1359/62)
Buridan moved beyond Aristotle's theory of motion and developed a theory of impetus, and important stage before the idea of inertia.
- 2ND John Buridan [Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy] [Internet Archive version here]
- Wikipedia: Theory of Impetus
With primary source excerpts.
- Nicholas Oresme (1323-1382): Basic Information [Was At St. Andrews, now Internet Archive]
An important late medieval scientist. Not all was dark before Copernicus. Oresme, Catholic
Bishop of Lisieux, wrote on the nature of light, and invented coordinate geometry long
before Descartes.
- John Buridan (c.1301-1359/62): Questions on Aristotle’s Physics Book One, Question 10 PDF [At Colorado] [Internet Archive version here]
- Wikipedia: Nicholas Oreseme
An important late medieval scientist. Not all was dark before Copernicus. Oresme, Catholic
Bishop of Lisieux, wrote on the nature of light, and invented coordinate geometry long
before Descartes.
- 2ND Nicole Oresme [Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy] [Internet Archive version here]
- Nicholas Oresme (1323-1382): On the Book of the Heavens and the World of Aristotle. [At University of Florida] [Internet Archive version here]
- Nicholas Oresme [At Linda Hall] [Internet Archive version here]
Back to Index
China
Back to Index
India
Back to Index
Scientific Revolution
- General
- Earlier/Alternative Ways of Understanding the Cosmos
- Theory
- Bernardino Telesio (1509–1588): from On the Nature of Things According to Proper Principles, 1565[At this Site]
- Francis Bacon (1561-1626): from First Book of Aphorisms [At this Site]
- Francis Bacon (1561-1626): Novum
Organum [Full Text] [At Hanover]
- Francis Bacon (--1626): The New Atlantis,
1626, excerpts [Was At Clinch Valley College, now Internet Archive]
- Francis Bacon (1561-1626): The New Atlantis, 1627
[At this Site]
- Francis Bacon (1561-1626): The New
Atlantis, 1626 [At ArtBin][Full Text] [Internet Archive version here]
- Francis Bacon (1561-1626): Various Texts [Index at
Hanover]
- Voltaire (1694-1778): On Francis Bacon, from Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques, c. 1778 [At this Site]
- Ben Jonson (1573-1625): On Lord Francis Bacon, 1625
[At this Site]
- Wikipedia: René Descartes
- René Descartes (1596-1650): Discourse on Method, 1637, excerpts [At this Site]
- Réne Descartes (1596-1650): Discourse on Method, 1637, extracts [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Réne Descartes (1596-1650): Discourse on Method,
1637 [At Project Gutenberg][Full text]
- Réne Descartes (1596-1650): Méditations, 1641 [At
Wright][Full text][Trilingual edition: Latin, French, and English] [Internet Archive version here]
- Astronomy and Physics
- Nicholas Copernicus (1473-1543): Dedication
of The Revolutions of the Heavenly Bodies, 1543 [At Bartleby] [Internet Archive version here]
- Nicholas Copernicus (1473-1543): Dedication of The Revolutions of the Heavenly Bodies, 1543 [At this Site]
- Nicholas Copernicus (1473-1543): The Revolutions of the Heavenly
Bodies, 1543, selection from main text, [At this Site]
- Wikipedia: Nicolaus Copernicus
- Tycho Brahe: Life [Was At
kth.se, now Internet Archive]
- Wikipedia: Tycho Brahe
- Tycho Brahe (1546-1601): Tico Brahæ his astronomicall coniectur of the new and much admired * which appered in the year 1572 (illustrated translation into English, 1632) [Wikisource]
- Wikipedia: SN 1572 (The New Star, a supernova, withness by Tycho Brage in 1572)
A web page with illustrations of Brahe's observations and system.
- Wikipedia: Johannes Kepler
- Johannes Kepler (1570-1630): Laws of Planetary Motion [Was At CVC, now Internet Archive]
A web page illustrating the laws in diagrams
- Johannes Kepler (1570-1630): Kepler's Conversation with the Starry Messenger (English translation of Dissertation cum Nuncio Sidereo), trans. Edward Rosen (1965) [Was CMU, now Internet Archive]
- The Question of Discovery and Invention
- Galileo Galilei (1564-1642): The Authority of Scripture [At this Site]
- Galileo Galilei (1564-1642): Letter to the Duchess
Christina of Tuscany, 1615 [At this Site]
RG Reading Guide
- Galileo Galilei (1563-1642): Dialogues on the System of the World, 1612, excerpts [At this Site]
- Galileo Galilei (1564-1642): The Sidereal Messenger, trans Edward Carlos (1880), full text, [Project Gutenberg]
- Wikipedia:
Galileo Galilei [Catholic Enclopedia]
-
Galileo Galilei [Catholic Encyclopedia]
- Galileo's
Pendulum Experiments - a modern recreation [At Rice] [Internet Archive version here]
- The Crime of Galileo: Indictment 1633 [At this Site]
- Cardinal Robert Bellarmine (1542-1621): Letter on
Galileo's Theories, 1615 [At this Site]
- Cardinal Robert Bellarmine (1542-1621): Information [At
Rice] [Internet Archive version here]
- Index of Forbidden Books, Some listed authors,
1559-1964.
- Index of Forbidden Books,
frontpage of 1664 edition [published From 1559 to 1964] [Was At Texas Humanities, now Internet Archive]
Part of Bonfire of Liberties [Was At Texas Humanities, now Internet Archive]
An exhibition of banned books. But see also the Vatican Library Exhibition, which shows the role of the Vatican in preserving culture.
- Medicine
- Freedom of Thought
- Scientific Societies
Back to Index
The Enlightenment
- Spread of Scientific Ideas
- Voltaire (1694-1778): Letters on Newton,
from the Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques, c. 1778 [At this
Site]
- Voltaire (1694-1778): Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques, full text, c. 1778 [At this Site]
- Wikipedia: Encyclopédie (1771-1772)
- Denis Diderot (1713-1784): Encyclopédie [At Chicago] [Internet Archive version here] A complete online version of the Encyclopédie in French .
- L’Encyclopédie/1re édition [Wikisource]
- Denis Diderot (1713-1784): Regrets sur ma vieille robe de chambre ou avis à ceux qui ont plus de goût que de fortune, 1772, in French [Was compuserve, now Internet Archive]
- Jean La Rond D'Alembert: Preliminary Discourse to the Encyclopedia of Diderot [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Voltaire (1694-1778): Letters on Newton, from the Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques, c. 1778 [At this Site]
RGReading Guide
- Voltaire (1694-1778): Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques, full text, c. 1778 [At this Site]
- Attitudes
- Opposition to Religion
Back to Index
Classical Science
The "Scientific Revolution" - understood as the time when a "paradigm
shift" took place, ended with Newton's achievements. From the late 17th century until
the late 19th century that vision of the cosmos was developed and filled in by what we now
call "classical science". The achievements of this period have not been negated
by the discoveries and theories of the late 19th and 20th centuries, but are now seen as
accurate only with certain boundaries.
- Astronomy
- Physics
- Chemistry
-
WEB Selected Classic Papers from the
History of Chemistry [At Lemoyne] [Internet Archive version here]
Full texts of many papers in the history fo Chemistry under the following headings:
- Analytical, instrumental, and spectroscopic techniques
- Atomic hypothesis and discrete nature of matter
- Biochemistry
- Bonding and Structure
- Combustion and calcination
- Electricity, electrochemistry, and electrolyte solutions
- The electron and electronic structure of matter
- Elements: nature, number, and discovery
- Environmental chemistry
- Gases
- Kinetics
- Nomenclature
- The nucleus: isotopes and radioactivity
- Organic chemistry
- Periodic table and periodic law
- Thermodynamics
- Others
-
WEB Classic Chemistry Page, by Carmen
Giunta [At Lemoyne] [Internet Archive version here]
-
WEB Classic Papers from the history of Chemistry (and Some Physics too) [Now at Internet Archive]
Over 50 papers in the the history of physics and Chemistry.
-
WEB ChemTeam [Now at Internet Archive]
Is an all-round site for high school chemistry.
- Joseph Priestley: The
Discovery of Oxygen, 1776 [At this Site]
- Michael Faraday (1791-1867): The Chemical History of
A Candle, 1860 [At this Site]
- Louis Pasteur (1822-1895): Physiological Theory of
Fermentation, 1879 [At this Site]
- Geology
- Medicine
Back to Index
The Industrial Revolution
- The Agricultural Revolution of the 17th-18th Centuries
- The Revolution in the Manufacture of Textiles
- The Revolution in Power
- The Great Engineers
- List of the Great Engineers [Was At Heriot-Watt, now Internet Archive]
- WEB Charles Babbage Page, (1791-1871) [At Exeter University] [Internet Archive backup here]
Babbage was a major pioneer in computing.
- Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806-1859): Works [Was At University of Dundee, now Internet Archive]
- The Process of Industrialization
- Tables Illustrating the Spread of Industrialization, [At this Site]
- Spread of Railways in Europe [At this Site]
- Wikipedia: Lieven Bauwens
An industrial technology spy who smuggled plans from Britan to Flanders, where the steam and textile innovations in the UK first spread to continential Europe.
- Andrew Ure: A Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures and Mines 1840, full text [Project Gutenberg]
- 2ND Jennifer Tann and M. J. Breckin: The International Diffusion of the Watt Engine, 1775-1825, The Economic History Review New Series, Vol. 31, No. 4 (Nov., 1978), pp. 541-564 [Jstor]
- WEB The Industrial Revolution in the United States [Library of Congress]
- New Technologies
- The Steel Industry
- The Chemical Industry
- Electricity
- Efficiency, Automation and the Assembly Line
- Aviation
- Confidences and Disasters
Back to Index
New Science: Darwin,
Freud, Einstein
- General
- Geology
- Biology: Red in Tooth and Claw
- Charles Darwin (1809-1882): The Voyage of the Beagle 1845 [At Literature.Org][Full Text] [Internet Archive version here]
- Charles Darwin (1809-1882): On the Origin of Species 1859 [At Literature.Org][Full Text] [Internet Archive version here]
- Charles Darwin (1809-1882): On the Origin of the Species 1859 [At Project Gutenberg][Full Text]
- Charles Darwin (1809-1882): On the Origin of Species 1859, short extracts [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Charles Darwin (1809-1882): On the Origin of Species 1859, extracts [At Hanover]
-
Charles Darwin (1809-1882): The Descent of Man 1871 [At Project Gutenberg][Full Text]
- Charles Darwin (1809-1882): The
Descent of Man 1871, excerpts [At this Site]
- Charles Darwin (1809-1882): The Descent of Man 1871, excerpts on Sexual Selection [At this Site]
- Thomas H. Huxley (1825-95): The Crayfish: An Introduction to the Study of Zoology, 1880, full text [Was At Alberta, now Internet Archive]
- Maurice Maeterlinck (1862-1949): The
Life of the Bee [La Vie des Abeilles], translated from French into English
by Alfred Sutro, full text [At ibiblio] [Internet Archive version here]
- Reaction to Darwin
- Samuel Wilberforce: On Darwin's Origin of
Species 1860 [At this Site]
A negative reaction.
- St. George Jackson Mivart (1827-1900): On the Genesis of the
Species 1871 [At this Site]
Mivart was a Catholic convert who wrote a noted reply to the Darwinian thesis, which
he did not dismiss out of hand, in 1871. In 1876, Pope Pius IX conferred on him the degree
of doctor of philosophy.
- J. H. Gladstone: Points of Supposed Collision Between
the Scriptures and Natural Science 1872 [At this Site]
A lecture given at the behest of the Christian Evidence Society, in support of
Christianity against the assault of the New Science upon Biblical authority.
- Social Implications of Evolution
- Mathematics
- Physics: The End of the Classical Synthesis
- Chemistry
- Astronomy
- Simon Newcomb (1835-1909): Extent of The Universe 1884 [At this Site]
It was not realised until the 1920s that there was more than one galaxy in the universe.
- Percival Lowell (1855-1916): Mars 1895, in
chapter files, full text [At Bibliomania]
- A.S. Eddington (1882-1944): Stars and Atoms 1926 in chapter files, full text [At Bibliomania]
- James Nasmyth: Autobiography 1897, in chapter files, full text, [At Bibliomania]
- Psychology: The Obscurity of the Mind
- Philosophical Reflections: The End of Reason?
- Auguste Comte (1798-1857): A General View of Positivism [At this Site]
- Auguste Comte: View of the
Nature and Importance of the Positive Philosophy [At History Guide] [Internet Archive version here]
- Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855): The Present Age [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
See also Richard Hooker's Introduction [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881): Notes From the Underground [Was At Virginia, now Internet Archive]
- Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881): Rebellion and the Grand
Inquisitor [At Online Literature] [Internet Archive version here]
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900): Parable of the Madman [At this Site]
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900): The Gay Science [At
Hanover]
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900): Thus Spake
Zarathustra, 1891 [Full text][At this Site]
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900): Also sprach Zarathustra [At Project Gutenberg][Full Text][In German]
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900): The AntiChrist, 1895 [At
Project Gutenberg]
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900): The Geneology of Morals,
extracts [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
See also Richard Hooker's Introduction [Was At WSU, now Internet Archive]
- Friederich Nietzsche (1844-1900): "Good
and Evil," "Good and Bad" [Was At Warwick, now Internet Archive]
- William James (1842-1910): Essays in Radical Empiricism [Was At Brock U., now Internet Archive][Full Text]
- Science and War Technology
- Wikipedia: Fritz Haber
The Haber Process and Gas Warfare
- Captain Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen [The Red Baron] (1892-1918): Air Warfare [At this
Site]
- Scientists' Reflections on Science and Meaning
Back to Index
Science, Technology and the
Transformation in the Means of Production
- Biology: The DNA Revolution
- Physics
- Space Exploration
- Computers
- Knowledge Based Production
- Mass Education
- Tables showing shift in proportions of economic activity [Agriculture, Manufacture,
Service]
- The Internet
- The World Environment: Cornucopeian Plenty or a Crisis Situation
Back to Index
Moral Issues and Modern Science
Use of Atomic Bomb
Genetics and Human Society
Back to Index
Further
Resources in the History of Science
[Note this was once quite an extensive section, but guides to the web turned out to be very hard to maintain. Good advice now is to look up History of Science topics on Wikipedia and consult the further resources links at the bottom of many articles. Wikipedia is never a place to end research but it is a good place to start.]
- Web Guides
- Source Materials
- Other
Back to Index
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NOTES:
The Internet History of Science Sourcebook is part of the Internet History Sourcebooks Project. The date of inception was 1998. Links to files at other site are indicated by [At some indication of the site
name or location].
WEB indicates a link to one of small
number of high quality web sites which provide either more texts or an especially valuable
overview.
The Internet History Sourcebooks Project is located at the History Department of Fordham University, New York. The Internet
Medieval Sourcebook, and other medieval components of the project, are located at
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© Site Concept and Design: Paul Halsall created 26 Jan 1996: latest revision 15 November 2024 [CV]
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