[ETAS access ended August 13] From April 2020 to August 2021, HathiTrust provided temporary access to digitized copyrighted books that correspond to print books held at the UConn Library. This was equivalent to 50% of our print book collection - all dates, all subjects, and all languages. Millions of older books that are in the public domain remain available via HathiTrust.
UConn Archives & Special Collections - Digital Primary Resources
UConn Archives & Special Collections has over 750,000 digital primary sources in the Connecticut Digital Archive, including resources on the business, labor, organizational, and cultural history of Connecticut and the surrounding region; children's literature and illustration of the Northeast; political papers; human rights and international political and socio-cultural movements; natural and environmental history; and history of the University of Connecticut. Search these resources and digital collections from more than 40 Connecticut educational and cultural institutions in the CTDA.
Many things you are looking for or will find useful will come up in a search of Google Books. You can customize these searches by limiting them (using the “Search tools” tab) to
- ebooks (these will be complete)
- books with previews (these will not provide a complete view, but will often show tables of contents
- indices, which can be used for requesting chapters to order electronically from Interlibrary Loan), and year or range of years of publication.
The Internet Archive is a vast repository of books and journals useful to scholars, from early printed books to indispensable classics such as Pastor’s History of the Popes. Internet Archive recently launched a National Emergency Library, offering 1.4 million ebooks available for free to support emergency remote teaching, research activities, independent scholarship, and intellectual stimulation while universities, schools, training centers, and libraries are closed. Ebooks are on all topics, in various languages, and from all publication dates. To borrow a book, simply create a free personal account with Internet Archive. You'll be able to borrow any book for two weeks at a time. It's that easy!
Europeana has millions of books, newspapers, letters, diaries and archival papers from a range of Europe’s leading galleries, libraries, archives and museums. Also included are National Libraries, which often offer digitized runs of historic newspapers and periodicals, sometimes in unexpected places. For example, the Austrian State Library has historic German–language periodicals from regions of the former Austro-Hungarian Monarchy that are now separate countries, such as Bohemia and Moravia (Current Czech Republic).
For medieval manuscripts and books or journals printed in German or published in other languages in places where German was spoken, this is a marvelous resource.