Digitising History
CHAPTER 7 : GLOSSARY AND BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

Guide to Good Practice Navigation Bar








































































































































































































































































































































Guide to Good Practice Navigation Bar


7.2 Bibliography

Acun, R., Anane, R. and Laflin, S., 1994. Database design for Ottoman tax registers. In: H.J. Marker and K. Pagh (eds.) Yesterday. Proceedings from the 6th international conference Association of History and Computing Odense 1991. Odense: Odense University Press, 109-23.

AHDS and TASI, 1999. Copyright FAQ. [online] http://ahds.ac.uk/bkgd/copyrightfaq.html (7 July 1999).

Albrecht, U., 1991. Factory tables as a source for a databank on the economic and social history of Flensburg of the 18th and 19th centuries. History and computing, 3(1), 36-44.

Anderson, M., Collins, B. and Stott, C., 1979. National Sample from the 1851 Census of Great Britain [computer file]. Colchester, Essex: The Data Archive [distributor]. SN: 1316.

Anderson, S., 1992. The future of the present - the ESRC Data Archive as a resource centre of the future. History and computing, 4(3), 191-96.

Bloothooft, G., 1995. Multi-source family reconstruction. History and computing, 7, 90-104.

Booth, C., 1892-1897. Life and labour of the people in London. 9 vols. 2nd ed. London: Macmillan & Co.

Bouchard, G. and Pouyez, C., 1980. Name variations and computerized record linkage. Historical methods, 13(2), 119-25.

Bradley, J., and Dupree, M., 1993. Interpreting datasets. The experience of third-party use of a machine readable 'source'. History and computing, 5(3), 169-79.

Burnard, L., 1989. Relational theory, SQL and historical practice. In: P. Denley, S. Fogelvik, and C. Harvey (eds.) History and computing II. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 63-71.

Burt, J. and Beaumont James, T., 1996. Source-orientated data processing. The triumph of the micro over the macro? History and computing, 8(3), 160-68.

CCTA, 1997. PRINCE2, Project management for business. London: The Stationary Office.

Champion, J., 1993. Relational databases and the Great Plague in London 1665. History and computing, 5 (1), 2-12.

Date, C.J., 1986. Relational database. Selected writings. New York: Addison-Wesley.

Date, C.J., 1989. A guide to the SQL standard. A user's guide to the Standard Relational Language SQL. Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley.

Date, C.J., 1994. An introduction to database systems. 6th ed. New York: Addison-Wesley.

Davies, H.R., 1992. Automated record linkage of census enumerators' books and registration data. Obstacles, challenges and solutions. History and computing, 4(1), 16-26.

Davis, V., 1990. Medieval English clergy database. History and computing, 2(2), 75-87.

Day, P.J., 1995. Microsoft Project 4.0 for Windows and the Macintosh. Setting project management standards. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.

Denley, P., 1994. Models, sources and users. Historical database design in the 1990s. History and computing, 6(1), 33-44.

Dupree, M., 1990. The medical profession in Scotland, 1911. The creation of a machine-readable database. In: E. Mawdsley et al. (eds.) History and computing III. Historians, computers and data. Applications in research and teaching. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 195-201.

Evans, R.J., 1997. In defence of history. London: Granta Books.

Feldman, M.S., 1995. Strategies for interpreting qualitative data. London: Sage.

Gahan, C. and Hannibal, M., 1997. Doing qualitative research using QSR NUD*IST. London: Sage.

Gervers, M.L.G. and McCulloch, M., 1990. The deeds database of mediaeval charters. Design and coding for the RDBMS Oracle 5. History and computing, 2(1), 1-11.

Green, E.M., 1989. Social structure and political behaviour in Westminster, 1748-1788. In: P. Denley, S. Fogelvik, and C. Harvey (eds.) History and computing II. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 239-42.

Green, E.M., 1990. The taxonomy of occupations in late eighteenth-century Westminster. In: P.J. Corfield and D. Keene (eds.) Work in Towns, 850-1850. Leicester: Leicester University Press, 164-81.

Greenstein, D.I., 1989. A source-oriented approach to history and computing. The relational database. Historical social research/Historische sozialforschung, 14(3), 9-16.

Greenstein, D I., 1991a. Standard, meta-standard. A framework for coding occupational data. Historical social research/Historische sozialforschung, 16(1), 3-22.

Greenstein, D I. (ed.), 1991b. Modelling historical data. Towards a standard for encoding and exchanging machine-readable texts. St Katharinen: Max-Planck-Institut für Geschichte In Kommission bei Scripta Mercaturae Verlag.

Greenstein, D. I., 1994. A historians guide to computing. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

GSU, 1988. How transcribe the 1881 British census. GSU: Salt Lake City.

GSU and FFHS, 1997. 1881 Census for England, Wales, Channel Islands and Isle of Man [computer file]. Colchester, Essex: The Data Archive [distributor]. SN: 3643.

Harvey, C. and Press, J., 1991. The business elite of Bristol. A case study in database design. History and computing, 3(1), 1-11.

Harvey, C. and Press, J., 1992. Relational data analysis. Value, concepts and methods. History and computing, 4(2), 98-109.

Harvey, C. and Press, J., 1993. Structured query language and historical computing. History and computing, 5(3), 154-69.

Harvey, C. and Press, J., 1996. Databases in historical research. Theory, methods and applications. London: Macmillan.

Harvey, C. and Taylor, P., 1987. Computer modelling and analysis of the individual aggregate capital stocks, cash flows and performance of British mining companies in Spain, 1851-1913. In: P. Denley and D. Hopkin (eds.) History and computing. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 115-20.

Harvey, C. and Taylor, P., 1988. The measurement and comparison of corporate productivity. Foreign and domestic firms in Spanish Mining in the late nineteenth century. Histoire et mesure, 3(1), 19-51.

Harvey, C., Green, E.M. and Corfield, P.J., 1996. Record linkage theory and practice. An experiment in the application of multiple pass linkage algorithms. History and computing, 8, 78-90.

Hatton, T.J. et al., 1997. New Survey of London Life and Labour, 1929-1931 [computer file]. Colchester, Essex: The Data Archive [distributor]. SN: 3758.

Higgs, E., 1992. Machine-readable records, archives and historical memory. History and computing, 4(3), 183-190.

Howard, K. and Sharp, J.A., 1994. The management of a student research project. Aldershot: Gower.

Jaritz, G., 1991. The image as historical source or: Grabbing contexts. Historical social research / Historische sozialforschung. 16(4), 100-05.

Kelle, U. (ed.), 1995. Computer-aided qualitative data analysis. Theory, methods and practice. London: Sage.

King, S., 1992. Record linkage in a protoindustrial community. History and computing, 4(1), 27-33.

King, S., 1996. Historical demography, life-cycle reconstruction and family reconstruction. New perspectives. History and computing, 8, 62-78.

Mawdsley, E. and Munck, T., 1993. Computing for historians. An introductory guide. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Miles, M.B. and Huberman, A.M., 1994. Qualitative data analysis. 2nd ed. London: Sage.

Millet, H., 1987. From sources to data. The construction of a prosopographical data-bank. In: P. Denley and D. Hopkin (eds.) History and computing. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 63-67.

Morris, R.J., 1990. Occupational coding. Principles and examples. Historical social research/Historische sozialforschung, 15(1), 3-29.

Morris, R.J. and McCrum, A., 1995. Introduction. Wills, inventories and the computer. History and computing, 7, iv-xi.

Morrison, I.O., 1989. Data validation and dBase. Computers and the history of art, 10, 27-34.

Oldervoll, J., 1991. The machine-readable description of highly structured historical documents. Censuses and parish registers. In: D. Greenstein (ed.) Modelling historical data. Towards a standard for encoding and exchanging machine-readable texts. St Katharinen: Max-Planck-Institut für Geschichte In Kommission bei Scripta Mercaturae Verlag, 169-78.

Overton, M.A., 1995. Computer management system for probate inventories. History and computing, 7, 135-43.

Piotukh, N.V., 1996. The application of GIS techniques to Russian historical research. The Novorgev district used as a case study. History and computing, 8, 169-84.

Pöttler, B., 1990. Modelling historical data. Probate inventories as a source for the history of everyday life. In: F. Bocchi and P. Denley (eds.) Storia & multimedia. Atti del settimo congresso internazionale - Association for History and Computing. Bologna: Manchester University Press, 1990, 74-82.

Price, G. and Gray, A., 1994. Object oriented databases and their application to historical data. History and computing, 6(1), 44-52.

Robinson, P., 1993. The digitisation of primary textual sources. Oxford: Office for Humanities Communication.

Robinson, P., 1994. The transcription of primary textual sources using SGML. Oxford: Office for Humanities Communication.

Ruggles, S. and Menard, R.R., 1990. A public use sample of the 1880 U.S. Census of Population. Historical methods. 23(3), 104-15.

Scammell, L., 1997. Learning about relational databases. [online] http://seastorm.ncl.ac.uk/itti (15 April 1999).

Scammell, L., 1999. History, sailing and pages to support database advice. [online] http://seastorm.ncl.ac.uk/ (15 April 1999).

Schürer, K., 1990. The historical researcher and codes, master and slave or slave and master. In: E. Mawdsley et al. (eds.) History and computing III. Historians, computers and data. Applications in research and teaching. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 74-82.

Schürer, K., 1991. Standards or model solutions? The case of census-type documents. In: D. Greenstein (ed.) Modelling historical data. Towards a standard for encoding and exchanging machine-readable texts. St Katharinen: Max-Planck-Institut für Geschichte In Kommission bei Scripta Mercaturae Verlag, 205-23.

Schürer, K., 1996. Researching the population history of England. In: C. Harvey and J. Press Databases in historical research. Theory, methods and applications. London: Macmillan, 253-256.

Schürer, K. and Diederiks, H., 1993. (eds.) The use of occupations in historical analysis. St Katharinen: Max-Planck-Institut für Geschichte In Kommission bei Scripta Mercaturae Verlag.

Schürer, K. and Oeppen, J., 1990. Calculating days of the week and some related problems with using calendars of the past. History and computing, 2(2), 107-18.

Silveira, L., Lopes, M. and Melo, C.Jd., 1995. Mapping Portuguese historical boundaries with a GIS. Cahiers van de VGI, 9, 245-53.

Southall, H. and Gregory, I., 1998. Historical GIS project home page. [online] http://www.geog.qmw.ac.uk/gbhgis/ (15 April 1999).

Spaeth, D.A., 1991. Court records and their structures. In: D. Greenstein (ed.) Modelling historical data. Towards a standard for encoding and exchanging machine-readable texts. St Katharinen: Max-Planck-Institut für Geschichte In Kommission bei Scripta Mercaturae Verlag, 129-45.

Thaller, M., 1980. Automation on Parnassus. CLIO - a databank orientated system for historians. Historical Social Research/Historische Sozialforschung, 15, 40-65.

Thaller, M., 1988a. A draft proposal for a standard format exchange program. In: J.P. Genet (ed.) Standardisation et échange des bases de données historiques. Paris: Éditions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 329-75.

Thaller, M., 1988b. Databases v. critical editions. Historical social research/Historische sozialforschung, 13(3), 129-39.

Thaller, M., 1989. The need for a theory of historical computing. In: P. Denley, S. Fogelvik, and C. Harvey, (eds.) History and computing II. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2-11.

Thaller, M., 1991. The historical workstation project. Historical social research/Historische sozialforschung, 16(4), 51-61.

Thaller, M., 1993. KLEIO. A database system. St Katharinen: Max-Planck-Institut für Geschichte In Kommission bei Scripta Mercaturae Verlag.

Turner, J., 1989. Sex, age and the Labour vote in the 1920s. In: P. Denley, S. Fogelvik, and C. Harvey (eds.) History and computing II. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 243-54.

Wakelin, P., 1987. Comprehensive computerisation of a very large documentary source. The Portbooks Project at Wolverhampton Polytechnic. In: P. Denley and D. Hopkin (eds.) History and computing. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 109-15.

Wakelin, P. and Hussey, D., 1996. Investigating regional economies. The Gloucester Portbooks Database. In: C. Harvey and J. Press Databases in historical research. Theory, methods and applications. London: Macmillan, 14-21.

Weatherill, L. and Hemingway, V., 1994. Using and designing databases for academic work. A practical guide. Newcastle: Newcastle University.

Webb, C.C. and Hemingway V.W., 1995. Improving access. A proposal to create a database for the probate records at the Borthwick Institute. History and computing, 7, 152-56.

Welling, G.M., 1992. Intelligent large-scale historical direct-data-entry programming. In: J. Smets (ed.) Histoire et informatique. Ve congrès "history and computing", 4-7 Septembre 1990 à Montpellier. Association for History and Computing: Montpellier, 563-71.

Welling, G.M., 1993. A strategy for intelligent input programs for strucutred data. History and computing, 5(1), 35-41.

Woollard, M. and Denley, P. (eds.), 1996. The sorcerers’s apprentice. KLEIO case studies. St Katharinen: Max-Planck-Institut für Geschichte In Kommission bei Scripta Mercaturae Verlag.

Wright, M., 1997. Part II. What do I do with it? [online] http://dawww.essex.ac.uk/~melanie/iassist1.htm (15 April 1999).

Wrigley, E.A. and Schofield, R.S., 1973. Nominal record linkage by computer and the logic of family reconstitution. In: E.A. Wrigley (ed.) Identifying people in the past. Edward Arnold: London, 64-101.

 

© Sean Townsend, Cressida Chappell, Oscar Struijvé 1999

The right of Sean Townsend, Cressida Chappell and Oscar Struijvé to be identified as the Authors of this Work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All material supplied via the Arts and Humanities Data Service is protected by copyright, and duplication or sale of all or any part of it is not permitted, except that material may be duplicated by you for your personal research use or educational purposes in electronic or print form. Permission for any other use must be obtained from the Arts and Humanities Data Service.

Electronic or print copies may not be offered, whether for sale or otherwise, to any third party.

Next Back Glossary Contents