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The Archives Hub is a Jisc service, [1] and is freely available to all. It provides a cross-search of descriptions of archives held across the United Kingdom , in over 320 institutions, including universities, colleges, specialist repositories, charities, businesses and other institutions. [ 2 ]
Jisc is a United Kingdom not-for-profit organisation that provides network and IT services and digital resources in support of further and higher education and research, as well as the public sector. Its head office is based in Bristol with offices in London , Manchester , and Oxford .
Category for the United Kingdom's Joint Information Systems Committee or Jisc, ... Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives (1 C, 1 P) ... Library Hub Discover; M ...
Copac (originally an acronym of Consortium of Online Public Access Catalogues) was a union catalogue which provided free access to the merged online catalogues of many major research libraries and specialist libraries in the United Kingdom and Ireland, plus the British Library, the National Library of Scotland and the National Library of Wales. [1]
The JISC Digitisation Programme was a series of projects to digitise the cultural heritage and scholarly materials in universities, libraries, museums, archives, and other cultural memory organizations in the United Kingdom, from 2004 to 2010 [1] The program was managed by the UK's Joint Information Systems Committee, the body that supports United Kingdom post-16 and higher education and ...
Library Hub Discover is a union catalog operated by Jisc (jisc.ac.uk). It replaces Copac and SUNCAT . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Its user interface is centred around a simple search engine -like query box.
The University of Brighton Design Archives has its origins in the deposit of the archive of the Design Council (formerly the Council of Industrial Design) in 1994. The organisation was restructured by recommendation of the 1993–94,"Future Design Council" report (also known as the Sorrell Report) and consequently its records needed to be relocated.
Donald MacKinnon (1839–1914), born on Colonsay, an island in the Scottish Inner Hebrides, was a Celtic scholar, the first elected Professor of Celtic languages, literature, history and antiquities at Edinburgh University, a chair he occupied from 1882 [6] to the year of his death in 1914. [7]