The Medieval History Source Book
The History Faculty - Free video podcasts by professional historians on key historical periods and questions.
Macrohistory and World Report - Trends across the ages, empirical history with maps, book summaries, country profiles, and a timeline from 60,000 BCE to selected news items one or two days old.
Feminae: Medieval Women and Gender Index - Index of journal articles, reviews and essays about women, sexuality and gender during the Middle Ages. Coverage: 1994-present.
Labyrinth: Resources for Medieval Studies - The Labyrinth provides free, organized access to electronic resources in medieval studies through Georgetown University.
Online Medieval Sources Bibliography - Designed by the Center for Medieval Studies at Fordham University, this web site provides a searchable bibliography of texts written in the Middle Ages that are now available in printed or online editions and translations.
Douay-Rheims Catholic Bible - In 1582, the The Douay-Rheims (New Testament) was first printed. Then during the years 1749-1752, the English was revised and footnotes were added by Bishop Richard Challoner. In 1899, the DR Bible was printed by the John Murphy Company. In 1971, it was photographically reproduced from the 1899 printing by Tan Books. This website is an exact copy of the 1971 Tan Books version.
Malleus Maleficarum - of Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger, transcribed by Wicasta Lovelace and Christie Jury.
Medieval Sourcebook: Corpus Iuris Civilis: The Digest andCodex: Marriage Laws - The texts here address the issue of marriage, and date back particularly to the time of Augustus who was very concerned about family matters and ensuring a large population.
St. Augustine's City of God and Christian Doctrine - A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church. Volume 11, edited by Philip Schaff.
Crusades Encyclopedia - The purpose of crusades-encyclopedia is to offer quick reference to various terms related to the crusading movement. Additionally, this site offers catagorized links to online scholarly material about the crusades as a starting point for further research.
Internet Medieval Sourcebook - Part of Fordham University's Internet History Sourcebook, this site is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts presented cleanly (without advertising or excessive layout) for educational use.
Labyrinth: Resources for Medieval Studies - Labyrinth provides free, organized access to electronic resources in medieval studies through Georgetown University.
Medieval Studies Guide - Online guide from Stanford University with links to primary sources, bibliographies, manuscripts and other resources. Some restricted to Stanford only.
Domesday Book - a facsimile copy is also available in Special Collections
EuroDocs: Primary Historical Documents from Western Europe
Internet Ancient History Sourcebook
Internet Medieval History Sourcebook
On-Line Reference Books for Medieval Studies
Catalogue of Digitized Medieval Manuscripts (UCLA)
Old Maps Online - http://www.oldmapsonline.org This site offers digitized versions of old world maps provided by various participating institutions including the British Library's map collection, the Harvard Library, the New York Public library and other institutions. Users can search for a place or zoom on a particular area using a world map found on the main page of the site. It uses GPS technology to pull up maps that span centuries from 1000 to 2010. Searching or zooming on a particular region produces a list of old maps that can be viewed to the street level. A timeline that allows users to look for historical maps from a set period of time is also included.