Clionauta is the new blogsphere project of our colleague historian and “pioneer” in the use of the WWW among Spanish history professors Anaclet Pons. This new blog on history aims to create an space for discussion and debate on contemporary history trends, news, publications, scientific debates and other related issues.
You are currently browsing the archive for the Early Modern [blogspots] category.
Grand Tour is a new blog by Anaclet Pons. Some of you, either veterans of the internet or simply interested in the first large collections of on-line historical resources available in the world wide web probably know already Prof. Pons. He is the father of D´Història: il fil d´Ariadna, one of the first internet collections of interest for historians (both in Spanish and Catalan), and listed in the VL:Spanish History section already for more than one decade.
Bon vent Anaclet!
Historiad@rs: is a blogspot by Maria Antònia Martí Escayol (Department of Modern and Contemporary History, U. Autonoma of Barcelona). It includes links and articles of general interest for early modern historians.
In-extenso is a search engine specifically designed for social sciences. It does explore “only” part of the web, and its main objective is to avoid all that “noise” and inaccuracies frequently seen when using generic search engines. The work is coordinated by the Revues.org team, which guarantees a good selection of sites and article. It contains over 130.000 articles and lists over 4.000.000 pages.
Dhistoria is a Spanish blog on general aspects of World and Spanish history
Mundos Modernos is a growing portal on Early Modern Spanish history. It provides news on Early Modern publications and events. Besides it hosts also an on-line forum and the review Tiempos Modernos
Historiad@rs is a blogspot on Spanish History covering mostly the Spanish Habsburgs period.
Language: Catalan
Finding the Anglo-Dutch Wars by Jim Bender in the blogsphere has been really a good surprise. The site and discussion is devoted mainly to the Anglo-Dutch Wars (at sea), including ships, battles. It is not an academic site proper, but hey… are professional historians out there doing anything better?