Blogs Cliopatria New to the History Blogroll
Jul 21, 2007New to the History Blogroll
At more than 95 theses, Alan Jacobs of Wheaton College, a columnist for Books & Culture, keeps a miscellany.
The Natural History of Selborne transcribes the journals of the 18th century English naturalist, Gilbert White, from 1768-1793.
Heather McDougall's Cabinet of Wonders, is"bringing the Early Age of Englightenment to the modern world."
In Curious Expeditions, a pair of travelers tell you what they found when they gave up"normal lives" and went in search of things that interest them and us.
Paul Harvey's Religion and American History has just become a group blog, with two editors and two contributing editors.
Nagaeyari's Ancient Japan has special interests in kofun symbolism, architecture, evolution, state formation and foreign relations.
Sam van Schaik's Early Tibet keeps his notes about manuscripts from the library cave at Dunhuang, which was sealed in the 11th century and not opened until the early 20th century.
Zoom is the new blog by the film documentarian, Errol Morris.
comments powered by Disqus
More Comments:
Ralph E. Luker - 7/21/2007
Thanks. I've now made the correction of the post.
Sam van Schaik - 7/21/2007
A correction: the earlytibet.com blog is by me, Sam van Schaik, and not Sebastian Schmeig (who is the designer of the style templates for Wordpress.com)!
News
- Health Researchers Show Segregation 100 Years Ago Harmed Black Health, and Effects Continue Today
- Understanding the Leading Thinkers of the New American Right
- Want to Understand the Internet? Consider the "Great Stink" of 1858 London
- As More Schools Ban "Maus," Art Spiegelman Fears Worse to Come
- PEN Condemns Censorship in Removal of Coates's Memoir from AP Course
- Should Medicine Discontinue Using Terminology Associated with Nazi Doctors?
- Michael Honey: Eig's MLK Bio Needed to Engage King's Belief in Labor Solidarity
- Blair L.M. Kelley Tells Black Working Class History Through Family
- Review: J.T. Roane Tells Black Philadelphia's History from the Margins
- Cash Reparations to Japanese Internees Helped Rebuild Autonomy and Dignity






