Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Burney Newspapers Collection

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Nearly 1 million

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Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Burney Newspapers Collection
Discover the largest single collection of English news media: newspapers, newsbooks, proclamations, and pamphlets.

Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Burney Newspapers Collection represents the largest single collection of early modern English news media available from the British Library and includes more than 1,000 pamphlets, proclamations, newsbooks and newspapers from the period. This collection helps researchers chart the development of the newspaper as we now know it, beginning with irregularly published transcriptions of Parliamentary debates and proclamations to coffee house newsbooks, finally arriving at the newspaper in its current form.

A well-known collection at the British Library, the original Burney volumes are in fragile condition and are restricted from reading-room use except as microfilm. Through a partnership with the British Library, Gale has digitally scanned each page of this collection, and with Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Burney Newspapers Collection brings these rare documents to scholars around the world in an easy-to-use, full-text searchable digital format.

VIEW SAMPLE ARTICLES ON THE GALE PRIMARY SOURCES PLATFORM:

NOTABLE DOCUMENTS

Gathered by Reverend Charles Burney (1757-1817), a notable scholar and son of a well-known music historian of the same name, this collection covers more than two hundred years of accounts, explanations, and points of views. More than 700 bound volumes of newspapers relate political, educational and economic situations -- including English provincial, Irish, Scottish and a handful of papers from British colonies, in the Americas and Asia -- relate political, educational and economic situations chosen from more than three dozen cities. These rare and restricted documents are now available online and students and academics can conduct full-text searches of nearly 1 million pages from approximately 1,270 titles spanning from Parliamentary papers and the London daily news to the latest English humour of the 1600s.

Essential to the study of British history and culture in crucial periods, this collection features many rare news media resources, including:

An Account of the Publick Transactions in Christendom c. 1694
Bath Chronicle c. 1784-1796
Bell's Weekly Messenger c. 1796-1801
Calcutta Chronicle and General Advertiser c. 1788-1790
Collection for Improvement of Husbandry and Trade c. 1692-1702
English Posts with News Foreign and Domestick c. 1700-1709
Kingdomes Intelligencer c. 1660-1663
London Penny Gazette c. 1666-1792
Loyal Protestant and True Domestic Intelligence c. 1681-1683
Mercurius Politicus Comprising the Summ of All Intelligence c. 1650-1660
Moderate Intelligencer c. 1645-1649
Original Weekly Journal c. 1715-1720
Whitehall Evening Post c. 1718-1738

Highlights:

Day-by-day coverage of the financial scandal of the 1720s, the South Sea bubble, with reports in the Weekly Journal or Saturday's Post of how Parliament decided that if they were to leave the country, the directors of the South Sea company would "suffer death as a felon without benefit of clergy and forfeit to the King all his Lands, Goods and Chattels whatsoever" The first advertisement for The Memoirs of Fanny Hill in the Whitehall Evening Post, 6 March 1750, the day it was published, as well as a report in the issue of 17 March of how the publisher was taken into custody and all copies were seized News of the election of George Washington as president of the United States in the St James's Chronicle or the British Evening Post on 21 April 1789 Insight into English attitudes to contemporary events, such as when the English Chronicle or Universal Evening Post used the unusual device of a headline -- FRENCH REVOLUTION!! -- for a whole page article on 18 July 1789, which reported sympathetically on the fall of the Bastille four days earlier, including how the officers were decapitated in "a sad but necessary spectacle . . . a solemnity worthy of the highest admiration"
FEATURED REVIEW
This is an electronic resource worth investing in, and will be indispensable in research libraries’ periodicals collections. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries.
— Choice