State Papers Online, 1509-1714
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===Product Icon===
===Product Modules===
• The Tudors, Henry VIII to Elizabeth I, 1509-1603: State Papers Domestic
• The Tudors, Henry VIII to Elizabeth I, 1509-1603: State Papers Foreign, Ireland, Scotland, Borders and Registers of the Privy Council
• State Papers Domestic: Part III: The Stuarts: James I to Anne, 1603–1714
• The Stuarts: James to Anne, 1603-1714: State Papers Foreign: Ireland, Scotland and Registers of Privy Council
• The Stuart and Cumberland Papers from the Royal Archives, Windsor Castle
===Document(s)===
• Part I : 1800 - 1900
• Part II : 1800 - 1900
• Part III : 1741-1950
• Part IV : 1732 - 1950
• Part V : 1746 - 1950
• Part VI : 1783-1950
===Title List===
• Part I: 1800-1900
• Part II: 1800-1900
• Part III: 1741-1950
• Part IV: 1732-1950
• Part V: 1746-1950
• Part VI: 1783-1950

===Product Modules===
• The Tudors, Henry VIII to Elizabeth I, 1509-1603: State Papers Domestic
• The Tudors, Henry VIII to Elizabeth I, 1509-1603: State Papers Foreign, Ireland, Scotland, Borders and Registers of the Privy Council
• State Papers Domestic: Part III: The Stuarts: James I to Anne, 1603–1714
• The Stuarts: James to Anne, 1603-1714: State Papers Foreign: Ireland, Scotland and Registers of Privy Council
• The Stuart and Cumberland Papers from the Royal Archives, Windsor Castle
===Document(s)===
• Part I : 1800 - 1900
• Part II : 1800 - 1900
• Part III : 1741-1950
• Part IV : 1732 - 1950
• Part V : 1746 - 1950
• Part VI : 1783-1950
===Title List===
• Part I: 1800-1900
• Part II: 1800-1900
• Part III: 1741-1950
• Part IV: 1732-1950
• Part V: 1746-1950
• Part VI: 1783-1950
State Papers Online, 1509-1714
This four-part collection of primarily Early Modern materials consists of:
• Facsimile images of almost three million State Papers
• Direct linking between the facsimile images of the manuscripts and their individual calendar entries
• Hyperlinking between all references in the calendar indexes and the calendar entries
• The Irish Manuscript Commission series of Calendars of State Papers Ireland
• The manuscripts collections of Sir William Cecil (Lord Burghley) and his successor, Robert Burghley, from the National Archives and the British Library (Lansdowne Collection), as well as the complete twenty-four volumes of the Calendars of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House and the Haynes/Murdin transcriptions
An international resource
The global reach of the series offers researchers the scope to explore documents covering Britain's diplomatic relations and trade in Europe and with the Ottoman Empire, Russia, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Users can read letters from popes, cardinals and bishops, Holy Roman emperors, and the kings of France and Spain as well as rulers, diplomats, counselors, and agents from every other country in Europe. By providing little-studied volumes online, State Papers Online, 1509-1714 represents enormous potential for new research.
Who is it for?
State Papers Online, 1509-1714 is a core resource for any student or researcher studying and publishing in the following areas:
• modern British and European history, including diplomacy, politics, society, culture, law, religion, kingship and queenship, exploration, travel and trade, and the early empire
• Early modern literature
• Renaissance and Reformation studies
• Tudor and Stuart studies
This four-part collection of primarily Early Modern materials consists of:
• Facsimile images of almost three million State Papers
• Direct linking between the facsimile images of the manuscripts and their individual calendar entries
• Hyperlinking between all references in the calendar indexes and the calendar entries
• The Irish Manuscript Commission series of Calendars of State Papers Ireland
• The manuscripts collections of Sir William Cecil (Lord Burghley) and his successor, Robert Burghley, from the National Archives and the British Library (Lansdowne Collection), as well as the complete twenty-four volumes of the Calendars of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House and the Haynes/Murdin transcriptions
An international resource
The global reach of the series offers researchers the scope to explore documents covering Britain's diplomatic relations and trade in Europe and with the Ottoman Empire, Russia, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Users can read letters from popes, cardinals and bishops, Holy Roman emperors, and the kings of France and Spain as well as rulers, diplomats, counselors, and agents from every other country in Europe. By providing little-studied volumes online, State Papers Online, 1509-1714 represents enormous potential for new research.
Who is it for?
State Papers Online, 1509-1714 is a core resource for any student or researcher studying and publishing in the following areas:
• modern British and European history, including diplomacy, politics, society, culture, law, religion, kingship and queenship, exploration, travel and trade, and the early empire
• Early modern literature
• Renaissance and Reformation studies
• Tudor and Stuart studies
Collections
This collection contains 47 regional and local newspapers that illuminate diverse and distinct regional attitudes, cultures, and vernaculars, providing an alternative viewpoint to the London-centric national press.
This collection contains 22 regional and local newspapers that widen the geographic and political range of the British Library Newspapers series.
Part III adds even more regional and local depth to the British Library Newspaper series, encompassing powerful provincial news journals, local interest publications, and specialist titles.
Part of the most comprehensive range of regional and local newspapers published in Britain between the mid-eighteenth and mid-twentieth centuries ever made available in a digital collection, British Library Newspapers, Part IV: 1732-1950 provides 23 publications (nearly 1.4 million pages) from across the United Kingdom and Ireland to reflect the social, political, and cultural events of the times.
Part V: 1746-1950 adds even more regional and local depth to the British Library Newspaper series, featuring regional and local viewpoints especially from the northern part of the United Kingdom.
With the unparalleled breadth of national and regional Irish newspapers found in Part VI of British Library Newspapers, researchers will find valuable counternarratives to those set by established the British news media regarding core topics to Irish identity: independence, the Irish diaspora, and much more.
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