Notre Dame Library Digital Exhibits
The Hesburgh Libraries at the University of Notre Dame have several exhibits of material from their digital special collections, some Catholic-themed.
TARA: Teaching and Research Archive for the History of Christianity
Sponsored by the American Society of Church History
The Hesburgh Libraries at the University of Notre Dame have several exhibits of material from their digital special collections, some Catholic-themed.
The ongoing Project is constructing inventories of books found in Jesuit library book catalogs, as well as of physical copies of those books and their provenance information.
Loyola University Archives and Special Collections hosts several digital collections on Catholic and Jesuit themes.
Loyola University Archives and Special Collections hosts several digital collections on Catholic and Jesuit themes.
The goal of the project is to uncover the history of the acquisition and use of Loyola’s original library books. It grew out of an initiative to digitally reconstruct the earliest surviving library catalogue of St Ignatius College (founded 1870), the forerunner to Loyola University Chicago.
The Catholica Collection makes available digital content of Catholic materials including books, journals, papers, and manuscripts dealing with the Roman Catholic Church in general, and in particular works created or published in the Americas. This includes a number of collections featuring periodicals, publications, references, personal papers, parish and diocese records, photographs, etc.
Digitization of Galerie Illustrée de la Compagnie de Jésus (Paris: 1893), the gallery contains 405 engravings of notable Jesuits from the 16th century to the 19th century.
Holdings from the Vatican Library and document archives that have been digitized and made accessible.
Database of images of Orthodox religious art, browsable by topic, school, artist, region, manuscript source, and location.
The Institute is an international forum for the promotion of research into the Reformation and post-Reformation eras, particularly through the use and development of digital tools and sources.