Skip to content

Data derived from the Bibliography of British and Irish History.

About the Bibliography of British and Irish History (BBIH)

The Bibliography of British and Irish History is an essential tool for the study, research, and teaching of British and Irish history. It is the largest and most comprehensive guide available to published writing on:

  • Local histories – covering British and Irish history from 55 BCE to the present.
  • Global histories – covering Britain and Ireland’s relations overseas including former British colonies and Commonwealth countries.
  • Interdisciplinary and emerging areas within history – such as the histories of migration, race and ethnicity, gender and sexual identities, social class, dis/ability, mental health, environmental history and the history of emotions.

The Bibliography is the essential resource for historical study, teaching and research and is a research project of the UK’s Institute of Historical Research (IHR) and Brepols. With new records added three times a year, BBIH provides up-to-date information on over 670,000: 

  • History books, articles, book chapters and edited collections (published from the early 1900s to present).
  • History theses (submitted late 1990s to present).

These records are searchable by a wide range of facets including: title, author, chronology, date and form of publication, historical topic, and geographical region.

Researching historical methods in BBIH

The Bibliography contains more than 3500 publications related to historiography and methodically approaches to the history discipline. Topics range from prosopography, oral history, palaeography and sigillography, and historians’ uses of queer theory or maps.

BBIH’s subject tree offers a powerful way of searching by subject because it uses terminology systematically applied to records by BBIH’s editors: your results will not depend on the appearance of words in titles or in keywords provided by authors. You can learn more about the subject tree by watching this video.

Researching digital histories in BBIH

The following reading list offers 451 publications focusing on digital histories in Britain, Ireland, the British empire and the Commonwealth. It uses as it’s starting points the following keywords in BBIH’s hierarchical subject tree:

  • Digital methods and approaches.
  • Historians’ use of social media.

Both these terms are subcategories of Historical methods (within the top level subject category Historiographical and methodological).

The books, articles, book chapters and theses in this reading list were published between 2016 and 2025. Our coverage in this growing area of historical research is ongoing, and further publications will be added in future updates of the Bibliography.

Access the full text from BBIH

Records for journal articles or books may include a ‘Full text’ link.

For journal articles, this link will take you to the abstract via the publisher’s website. If you have access to a library that subscribes to the journal, you’ll then be able to go straight to the full text (you may need to log on to your institutional library).

For books, this link will connect you to the eBook or open access versions of the work where they’ve been made available by the publisher.

BBIH online help pack

You can learn more about using BBIH by visiting our page of online tutorials, which include: 

  • The basics of searching, including how to use the subject tree 
  • How to use your results 
  • How to keep up-to-date with the latest published research in your field or manage your reference lists or bibliographies 
  • Behind-the-scenes guide to how BBIH is compiled. 

Short video guides are designed for: 

  • New undergraduates and those planning and researching a final year dissertation 
  • MA and PhD students for whom BBIH is essential for writing a literature review and studying secondary fields of interest. 

Lecturers, teachers and librarians will find it helpful that the Bibliography’s online tutorials can all be embedded in a virtual learning environment (VLE). Presentations are also available here to promote the Bibliography to your students and staff.  

Subscribe to BBIH
Full access to BBIH’s 670,000+ records is via subscription: many UK and international university and research libraries subscribe and provide full access to members. Individual subscriptions are also available for personal use including substantially reduced rates for:

  • IHR Friends and Fellows.
  • Royal Historical Society Fellows and members.
  • Members of the British Association for Local History and Historical Association.

Reading list

Adams, R., 1977- and Ferlier, L. (2018) ‘Building a Library Without Walls: The Early Years of the Bodleian Library’, in A. Bautz and J. Gregory (eds) Libraries, books, and collectors of texts, 1600-1900. London: Routledge (Routledge studies in cultural history), pp. 11–27. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429489600-2.

Adelusi-Adeluyi, A. (2020a) ‘“Africa for the Africans?” – Mapmaking, Lagos, and the Colonial Archive’, History in Africa, 47, pp. 275–296. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/hia.2020.9.

Adelusi-Adeluyi, A. (2020b) ‘Mapping old Lagos: digital histories and maps about the past’, The Historian [Albuquerque, NM etc.], 82(1), pp. 51–65. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00182370.2020.1734725.

Ahnert, R. (ed.) (2023) Collaborative historical research in the age of big data: lessons from an interdisciplinary project / Ruth Ahnert, Emma Griffin, Mia Ridge, Giorgia Tolfo. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Elements in historical theory and practice).

Ahnert, R. and Ahnert, S.E. (2019) ‘Metadata, Surveillance and the Tudor State’, History Workshop Journal, 87, pp. 27–51. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/hwj/dby033.

Akgün, Ö. et al. (2020) ‘Linking Scottish vital event records using family groups’, Historical Methods, 53(2), pp. 130–146. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2019.1571466.

Alberti, M. and Mountain, K. (eds) (2022) Hadrian’s Wall: exploring its past to protect its future / edited by Marta Alberti, Katie Mountain. Oxford: Archaeopress Archaeology (Archaeopress Roman archaeology).

Allison, S. (ed.) (2018) Reductive reading: a syntax of Victorian moralizing / Sarah Allison. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Alter, G., Newton, G. and Oeppen, J. (2020) ‘Re-introducing the Cambridge Group Family Reconstitutions’, Historical Life Course Studies, 9, pp. 24–48.

Ambuske, J.P. (2019) ‘“Ours is a Court of Papers”: Exploring Scotland and the British Atlantic World using the Scottish Court of Session Digital Archive Project’, International Review of Scottish Studies, 44, pp. 10–19. Available at: https://doi.org/10.21083/irss.v44i0.5883.

Anbinder, T., Ó Gráda, C. and Wegge, S.A. (2019) ‘Networks and Opportunities: A Digital History of Ireland’s Great Famine Refugees in New York’, American Historical Review, 124(5), pp. 1591–1629. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhz1023.

Anderson, R. (Richard P. (2017) ‘Uncovering testimonies of slavery and the slave trade in missionary sources : the SHADD biographies project and the CMS and MMS archives for Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and the Gambia’, Slavery & Abolition, Slavery & Abolition, 38(3), pp. 620–644. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0144039X.2016.1223709.

Armoudian, M. (2016) ‘Introducing new datasets on Northern Ireland’s media in the peace process and a test of newsworthiness in times of “troubles”’, Media, War & Conflict, 9(2), pp. 137–161. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/1750635216643112.

Aston, J. (2022) ‘Petitions to the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes: A New Methodological Approach to the History of Divorce, 1857–1923’, Journal of Legal History, 43(2), pp. 161–186. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01440365.2022.2092942.

Atkinson, P. and Gregory, I.N. (2017) ‘Child Welfare in Victorian Newspapers : Corpus-Based Discourse Analysis’, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 48(2), pp. 159–186.

Aucott, P. and Southall, H. (2019) ‘Locating Past Places in Britain: Creating and Evaluating the GB1900 Gazetteer’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 13(1–2), pp. 69–94. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2019.0232.

Aucott, P., Southall, H. and Ekinsmyth, C. (2019) ‘Citizen science through old maps: Volunteer motivations in the GB1900 gazetteer-building project’, Historical Methods, 52(3), pp. 150–163. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2018.1559779.

Badley, C. et al. (2024) ‘Computational Approaches to Manuscript Books: Quaker Correspondence and the History of Its Reconstruction’, Eighteenth-century Life, 48(1), pp. 236–261.

Bagnall, K. and Sherratt, T. (2021) ‘Missing Links: Data Stories from the Archive of British Settler Colonial Citizenship’, Journal of World History [Honolulu], 32(2), pp. 281–300. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/jwh.2021.0025.

Baird, I.P. (ed.) (2021) Data Visualization in Enlightenment Literature and Culture. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-54913-8.

Baker, H.S., Brezina, V. and McEnery, T., 1964- (2017) ‘Ireland in British parliamentary debates 1803–2005 : Plotting changes in discourse in a large volume of time-series corpus data’, in T. Säily (ed.) Exploring future paths for historical sociolinguistics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company (Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics), pp. 83–107.

Baker, H.S., McEnery, T., 1964- and Hardie, A. (2017) ‘A corpus-based investigation into English representations of Turks and Ottomans in the early modern period’, in M. Pace-Sigge and K.J. Patterson (eds) Lexical priming: applications and advances. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company (Studies in corpus linguistics), pp. 42–66.

Banta, M. and Linard, L. (2020) ‘The South Sea Bubble Collection at Baker Library, Harvard Business School’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 54(1), pp. 23–32. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/ecs.2020.0083.

Barber, B. (2023) ‘The Docket Books of the Manor of Wakefield, 1559–1800, and the Docket Books Digitisation Project, 2013–2023’, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, 95, pp. 162–179. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00844276.2023.2233244.

Barr, M.W.C. (2016) ‘Selected Highlights of a Building Stone Survey of Devon’, Devonshire Association Report and Transactions, 148, pp. 29–62.

Battles, P. (2023) ‘Andreas, Intertextuality, and Three Modes of Philology: Traditional, Oral, Digital’, Neophilologus, 107(4), pp. 611–624. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11061-023-09767-8.

Beals, M.H. (2017) ‘Stuck in the Middle : Developing Research Workflows for a Multi-scale Text Analysis’, Journal of Victorian Culture, Journal of Victorian Culture, 22(2), pp. 224–231. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2017.1301178.

Beals, M.H. (Melodee H.) (2018) ‘Close Readings of Big Data : Triangulating Patterns of Textual Reappearance and Attribution in the Caledonian Mercury, 1820–40’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 51(4), pp. 616–639. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2018.0046.

Behre, K.S. (2021) ‘Practical Paleography and the Baumfylde Manuscript: An Undergraduate Research Unit for Literature Classes’, Early Modern Studies Journal, 7, p. [unpaged].

Behrendt, S.D. and Hurley, R.A. (2017) ‘Liverpool as a trading port : Sailors’ residences, African migrants, occupational change and probated wealth’, International Journal of Maritime History, International Journal of Maritime History, 29(4), pp. 875–910.

Bennett, A.R. (2021) ‘What Do the Numbers Mean? The Case for Corpus Studies’, in J.N. Brown and N.R. Rice (eds) Manuscript culture and medieval devotional traditions: essays in honour of Michael G. Sargent. York: York Medieval Press (York manuscript and early print studies), pp. 48–83. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781787448223.004.

Bennett, R.J. and Hannah, L. (2022) ‘British employer census returns in new digital records 1851–81; consistency, non-response, and truncation – what this means for analysis’, Historical Methods, 55(2), pp. 61–77. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2021.2018373.

Beshero-Bondar, E. and Raisanen, E. (2017) ‘Recovering from Collective Memory Loss : the Digital Mitford’s feminist project’, Women’s History Review, Women’s History Review, 26(5), pp. 738–750. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2016.1166882.

Bevan, A. and Cock, R. (2018) ‘High Court of Admiralty prize papers, 1652-1815 : Challenges in improving access to older records’, Archives, 137, pp. 34–58.

Biały, F. (2022) ‘Freedom, silent power and the role of an historian in the digital age – Interview with Quentin Skinner’, History of European Ideas, 48(7), pp. 871–878. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01916599.2021.2020970.

Biggs, E. (2024) ‘Forging the medieval amidst loss: The Public Record Office of Ireland and Ireland’s medieval history’, Postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, 15(2), pp. 529–547. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41280-024-00320-7.

Bishop, C. (2017) ‘The Serendipity of Connectivity : piecing together women’s lives in the digital archive’, Women’s History Review, Women’s History Review, 26(5), pp. 766–780. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2016.1166883.

Bishop, C., Aston, J. and Lieshout, C. van, 1982- (2021) ‘Bringing Businesswomen to a Count: A Transnational Methodological Experiment Researching Nineteenth-Century Businesswomen’, Australian Historical Studies, 52(2), pp. 227–246. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1031461X.2020.1833950.

Black, R.I.M. (2021) ‘The Dewar Project’, in W. McLeod, A. Gunderloch, and R. Dunbar (eds) Cànan is cultar =: language and culture: Rannsachadh na Gàidhlig 10. Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press (Rannsachadh na Gàidhlig), pp. 73–86.

Blaney, J. et al. (eds) (2021) Doing digital history: a beginners guide to working with text as data. Manchester: Manchester University Press (IHR research guides). Available at: https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526157713.

Blaney, J. and Siefring, J. (2017) ‘A Culture of non-citation : Assessing the digital impact of British History Online and the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership’, Digital Humanities Quarterly, 11(1). Available at: http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/11/1/000282/000282.html (Accessed: 16 June 2025).

Blaxill, L. (ed.) (2020) The war of words: the language of British elections, 1880-1922 / Luke Blaxill. Woodbridge; Rochester (NY): The Boydell Press (Royal Historical Society studies in history. New series). Available at: https://reviews.history.ac.uk/review/2432 (Accessed: 16 June 2025).

Bleier, R. et al. (2017) ‘Writing history in the digital age : the battle of Clontarf goes online’, in S. Duffy (ed.) Medieval Dublin XVI: proceedings of Clontarf 1014-2014: national conference marking the millennium of the Battle of Clontarf, 11-12 April 2014. Dublin: Four Courts, pp. 307–326.

Bloom, G. (2020) ‘Theater History in 3D: The Digital Early Modern in the Age of the Interface’, English Literary Renaissance, 50(1), pp. 8–16. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1086/706213.

Blue, L.K. (2021) ‘Underwater Malta: the virtual museum’, Antiquity, 95(383), pp. 1344–1347. Available at: https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2021.124.

Bode, K. (2016) ‘Thousands of Titles Without Authors : Digitized Newspapers, Serial Fiction, and the Challenges of Anonymity’, Book History, 19, pp. 284–316. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/bh.2016.0008.

Bode, K. (2017) ‘Fictional Systems : Mass-Digitization, Network Analysis, and Nineteenth-Century Australian Newspapers’, Victorian Periodicals Review, Victorian Periodicals Review, 50(1), pp. 100–138. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2017.0005.

Bolintineanu, A. (2019) ‘Project Paradise: A Geo-Temporal Exhibit of the Hereford Map and The Book of John Mandeville’, in E. Turnator, T. Mahoney-Steel, and M.E. Davis (eds) Meeting the Medieval in a Digital World. Baltimore (MD): Project Muse (Medieval media cultures), pp. 45–68.

Bonacchi, C. (ed.) (2022) Heritage and nationalism: understanding populism through big data. London: UCL Press.

Bones, H. and Fox, K. (2022) ‘Re-membering Tasman Lives’, New Zealand Journal of History, 56(1), pp. 67–93.

Booth, A. (2023) ‘Mary Carpenter, Frances Power Cobbe, “Noble Workers,” and Evangelical Discourse in Action’, Victorian Literature and Culture, 51(4), pp. 661–675. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s1060150323000657.

Booth, A. and Bielat, I. (2022) ‘A Mid-Range Team of Rivals: Women Novelists in the Collective Biographies of Women Database’, Victorian Studies, 65(1), pp. 17–23.

Bourke, E. (2022) ‘Networking early modern Irish women’, Irish Historical Studies, 46(170), pp. 270–285. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2022.44.

Bournival, J.-S., St-Hilaire, M. and Vézina, H. (2021) ‘Historical Canadian Censuses and Quebec Civil Registers: An Assessment of Linked Datasets to Compare Population Microdata’, Histoire sociale / Social History, 54(110), pp. 145–171.

Bourrier, K. (2016) ‘Victorian Memes’, Victorian Studies, 58(2), pp. 272–282. Available at: https://doi.org/10.2979/victorianstudies.58.2.08.

Bourrier, K., Brosz, J. and Jacobson, D. (2022) ‘Mornington Crescent: A Miniature Portrait’, Victorian Studies, 65(1), pp. 24–31.

Brake, L., 1941- (2016) ‘Revolutions in journalism : W.T. Stead, indexing, and “searching”’, in J. Bristow and J. McDonagh (eds) Nineteenth-century radical traditions [19th century radical traditions]. London: Palgrave Macmillan (Palgrave studies in nineteenth-century writing and culture), pp. 157–185.

Bressey, C. (2020) ‘Surfacing black and brown bodies in the digital archive: domestic workers in late nineteenth-century Australia’, Journal of Historical Geography, 70, pp. 1–11. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2020.07.001.

Brey, A.P. and Doyle, M.K. (2023) ‘Beyond Comparative Analysis: Making Arguments with Similarity Metrics and Structured Manuscript Data, with a Case Study in Marginal Iconography’, Manuscript Studies, 8(2), pp. 232–281. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/mns.2023.a916130.

Briggs, C. (Chris D. and Schofield, P.R., 1964- (2020) ‘The Evolution of Manor Courts in Medieval England, c.1250–1350: The Evidence of the Personal Actions’, Journal of Legal History, 41(1), pp. 1–28. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01440365.2020.1731189.

Bright, J., Dolan, T. and Doughty, R. (2020) ‘What do we mean by public history? The view from Writing the “Troubles”’, Studia Hibernica, 46, pp. 98–104. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3828/sh.2020.8.

Brock, M.D. and Langley, C.R. (2019) ‘Mapping the Scottish Reformation: Tracing Careers of the Scottish Clergy, 1560-1689’, International Review of Scottish Studies, 44, pp. 27–34. Available at: https://doi.org/10.21083/irss.v44i0.5834.

Brooke, C.J. (2020) ‘Discovering groups in ecclesiastical data: the use of cluster analysis in the Southwell and Nottingham Church History Project’, in R.A. Gaunt (ed.) Church, Land and People: Essays Presented to John Beckett. Nottingham: Thoroton Society (Thoroton Society record series), pp. 209–228. Available at: http://www.thorotonsociety.org.uk/publications/recordseries.htm (Accessed: 16 June 2025).

Broun, D. (2022) ‘Rethinking Medieval Scottish Regnal Historiography in the Light of New Approaches to Texts as Manuscripts’, Cambrian Medieval Celtic Studies, 83, pp. 19–48.

Brown, P. (2018) ‘The Lost Plays Database’, Renaissance and Reformation, 41(4), pp. 178–180.

Brown, V., 1967- (2016) ‘Narrative Interface for New Media History : Slave Revolt in Jamaica, 1760-1761’, American Historical Review, American Historical Review, 121(1), pp. 176–186. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/121.1.176.

Browne, J. (2022) ‘Reflections on Darwin Historiography’, Journal of the History of Biology, 55(2), pp. 381–393. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-022-09686-5.

Bryant, R., Hare, M. and Heighway, C.M. (2021) ‘St. Mary’s Church, Deerhurst: excavations in 2012 and the recording of the South Aisle 2015-19’, Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, 139, pp. 183–211.

Buchanan, A. and Webb, N. (2017) ‘Creativity in Three Dimensions : An Investigation of the Presbytery Aisles of Wells Cathedral’, British Art Studies, British Art Studies, 6. Available at: https://doi.org/10.17658/issn.2058-5462/issue-06/abuchanan/000.

Bucholz, R.O. (2022) ‘“The King’s turnspit was a member of Parliament”: And other Tales from the Expanded Database of Court Officers 1660–1837’, Court Historian, 27(2), pp. 116–134. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14629712.2022.2093478.

Burge, C. (2024) ‘Mapping the Archives: Epistolary Networks and the State Papers of England, 1523–1540’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 18(1), pp. 95–108. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2024.0323.

Burkert, M., 1987- (2023) ‘From Manual to Digital: Women’s Hands and the Work of Eighteenth-Century Studies’, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 52, pp. 491–516. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/sec.2023.0036.

Burn, A. (2017) ‘Wage labour, wealth, and the power of a database : unlocking communities of work outside urban guilds in Newcastle upon Tyne’, in J. Colson and A. van Steensel (eds) Cities and solidarities: urban communities in pre-modern Europe. London: Routledge (Routledge research in early modern history), pp. 169–187.

Burrows, T. (2017) ‘The History and Provenance of Manuscripts in the Collection of Sir Thomas Phillipps : New Approaches to Digital Representation’, Speculum, Speculum, Speculum, 92(S1), pp. 39–64. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1086/693438.

Burton, M.D. and Nicholas, T. (2017) ‘Prizes, patents and the search for longitude’, Explorations in Economic History, Explorations in Economic History, Explorations in Economic History, 64, pp. 21–36. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2016.09.001.

But, R. (2017) ‘“He said he was going on the scamp” : Thieves’ cant, enregisterment and the representation of the social margins in the Old Bailey Sessions Papers’, Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 3(2), pp. 151–172. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsl-2017-1001.

Butler, C. (2018) ‘Hiding in documents : the lives of women in a patriarchal society – sixteenth-century Southampton’, Local Historian, Local Historian, 48(2), pp. 90–103.

Calado, F. da G. (2022) ‘Encoding Queer Erasure in Oscar Wilde’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray”’, Open Library of Humanities, 8(1), p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.6407.

Calomino, D. et al. (2023) ‘Imaging Hadrian in Britain between Coinage and Sculpture: A New Digital Approach to the Study of Roman Imperial Portraiture’, Britannia, 54, pp. 251–274. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0068113X23000387.

Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure (2018) ‘PopulationsPast : an Interactive Atlas of Victorian and Edwardian Population’, Local Population Studies, 100, pp. 77–81.

Cayley, S. (2017) ‘Digitization for the Masses : Taking Users Beyond Simple Searching in Nineteenth-Century Collections Online’, Journal of Victorian Culture, Journal of Victorian Culture, 22(2), pp. 248–255. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2017.1301180.

Cazzola, M. and Küsters, A. (2024) ‘Transnational Echoes of Spenceanism: A Text-Mining Exploration in English-Language Newspapers (1790–1850)’, International Review of Social History, 69(1), pp. 67–97. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020859024000014.

Ceserani, G. et al. (2017) ‘British Travelers in Eighteenth-Century Italy : The Grand Tour and the Profession of Architecture’, American Historical Review, American Historical Review, 122(2), pp. 425–450. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/122.2.425.

Chapman, L. (2022) ‘“The highest salary ever paid to a human being”: Creating a Database of Film Costs from the Bank of England Archive’, Journal of British Cinema and Television, 19(4), pp. 470–494. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2022.0643.

Chatwin, D. (2018) ‘Findings From An Analysis Of Data In The British Southern Whale Fishery (1775-1859) Datasets’, The Great Circle: journal of the Australian Association for Maritime History, 40(2), pp. 28–49.

Chavaz, M. and Flandreau, M. (2017) ‘“High & Dry” : The Liquidity and Credit of Colonial and Foreign Government Debt and the London Stock Exchange (1880–1910)’, Journal of Economic History, Journal of Economic History, 77(3), pp. 653–691. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050717000730.

Cherkesly, I., Dillon, L. and Gagnon, A.-G. (2019) ‘Creating the 1831 Canadian Census Database’, Historical Methods, 52(2), pp. 110–127. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2019.1567419.

Chiocchetti, F. and Grossi, E. (2022) ‘Global sea routes. La navigazione europea commerciale transoceanica tra XVI e XX secolo [Global sea routes. Transoceanic European commercial navigation between the 16th and 20th centuries]’, Quaderni storici, 1, pp. 273–286. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1408/106206.

Cilliers, J. and Mariotti, M. (2019) ‘The shaping of a settler fertility transition: eighteenth- and nineteenth-century South African demographic history reconsidered’, European Review of Economic History, 23(4), pp. 421–445. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ereh/hey019.

Clarke, P. (Pauline M. and Williams, H., 1972- (eds) (2020) Digging into the Dark Ages: early medieval public archaeologies / edited by Howard Williams and Pauline Clarke. Oxford: Archaeopress Publishing (Access archaeology).

Clarke, V. (2020) ‘Time, Space, and Gender in the Digitised Periodical’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 53(4), pp. 479–495. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2020.0045.

Clifford, J., 1980- et al. (2016) ‘Geoparsing history : Locating commodities in ten million pages of nineteenth-century sources’, Historical Methods, 49(3), pp. 115–131. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2015.1116419.

Collins, W.J. (William J., 1971- and Zimran, A. (2019) ‘The economic assimilation of Irish Famine migrants to the United States’, Explorations in Economic History, 74, p. [s.p.]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2019.101302.

Colson, J. (2020) ‘Reinterpreting space: mapping people and relationships in late medieval and early modern English cities using GIS’, Urban History, 47(3), pp. 384–400. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963926820000164.

Connell, S. and Flanders, J. (2020) ‘Writing, Reception, Intertextuality: Networking Women’s Writing’, Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 50(1), pp. 161–180. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1215/10829636-7986649.

Connor, D.S. (2019) ‘The Cream of the Crop? Geography, Networks, and Irish Migrant Selection in the Age of Mass Migration’, Journal of Economic History, 79(1), pp. 139–175. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050718000682.

Cook, K.S. (2018) ‘Drawn for the Mind’s Eye: Map Metaphors in Early Modern English Literature’, Cartographic Journal, 55(2), pp. 170–177. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00087041.2018.1436734.

Coolahan, M.-L. (2020) ‘New Technologies of Research and Digital Interpretation for Early Modern Irish Studies’, Irish University Review, 50(1), pp. 175–186. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/iur.2020.0444.

Coomans, T., Cattoor, B. and Jonge, K. de (eds) (2019) Mapping landscapes in transformation: multidisciplinary methods for historical analysis / edited by Thomas Coomans, Bieke Cattoor, Krista De Jonge. Leuven, Belgium: Leuven University Press. Available at: https://doi.org/10.11116/9789461662835.

Corns, A., O’Keeffe, J. and Swan, R. (2023) ‘Developing Access to Digital Archaeology Data Resources in Ireland’, Internet Archaeology, 63, p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.63.4.

Corti, G., Minardi, S. and Barban, N. (2024) ‘Trends in assortative mating in the United States, 1700–1910. Evidence from FamiLinx data’, History of the Family, 29(4), pp. 461–481. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1081602X.2024.2352539.

Crafts, N. and Mills, T.C. (2020) ‘Sooner than you think: the Pre-1914 UK Productivity Slowdown was Victorian not Edwardian’, European Review of Economic History, 24(4), pp. 736–748. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ereh/hez022.

Craig, D.H., 1952- and Greatley-Hirsch, B. (eds) (2017) Style, computers, and early modern drama: beyond authorship / Hugh Craig, Brett Greatley-Hirsch. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Crawford, C. (2017) ‘Transforming working-class writers and writing: digital editions, projects and analyses’, in J. Goodridge and B. Keegan (eds) A history of British working class literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 398–412. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108105392.027.

Crone, R. (2018) ‘Educating the labouring poor in nineteenth-century Suffolk’, Social History [London], 43(2), pp. 161–185. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03071022.2018.1419702.

Cronin, M. (2017) ‘Irish History Online and in Real Time : Century Ireland and the Decade of Centenaries’, Éire-Ireland, 52(1 & 2), pp. 269–284.

Crymble, A. et al. (2023) ‘Three Thousand Dishes on a Georgian Table: The Data of Royal Eating in England, 1788-1813’, Food & History, 21(2), pp. 161–189. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1484/J.FOOD.5.134745.

Crymble, A., Dennett, A. and Hitchcock, T., 1957- (2018) ‘Modelling regional imbalances in English plebeian migration to late eighteenth‐century London’, Economic History Review, 71(3), pp. 747–771. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/ehr.12569.

Curry, E. and Winyard, B. (2016) ‘Our Virtual Friends : Dickens, Digital Communities, and Performative Learning’, Journal of Victorian Culture, Journal of Victorian Culture, 21(4), pp. 567–574. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2016.1233908.

Cushing, N., McIntyre, J. and Coleborne, C. (2018) ‘Letters to Lizzie : Archival Practice and the Entangled Worlds of Charlie Fraser’, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, 49(3), pp. 341–358. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1031461X.2018.1480638.

Davies, H. (2020) ‘Multispectral Imaging of the Vercelli Mappamundi: A Progress Report’, Imago Mundi, 72(2), pp. 181–191. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03085694.2020.1748378.

Davis, L., 1960- (2024) ‘“A Piece of History the Most Remarkable & Interesting That Ever Happened in Any Age or Country”: “The Lyon in Mourning” Manuscript of Robert Forbes’, Eighteenth-century Life, 48(1), pp. 159–182.

Davison, K. (2019) ‘Early Modern Social Networks: Antecedents, Opportunities, and Challenges’, American Historical Review, 124(2), pp. 456–482. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhz253.

De Bolla, P. et al. (2020) ‘The Idea of Liberty, 1600–1800: A Distributional Concept Analysis’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 81(3), pp. 381–406.

De Juan, A. and Wegenast, T. (2019) ‘Temperatures, food riots, and adaptation: A long-term historical analysis of England’, Journal of Peace Research, 57(2), pp. 265–280. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343319863474.

De Mulder, A. (2021) ‘London Calling from the Auction World: A Methodological Journey through Eighteenth-Century London Auction Advertisements’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 54(4), pp. 979–1004.

De Stefani, C. and Smith, P. (2020) ‘The Great Parchment Book Project’, in A. Campagnolo (ed.) Book conservation and digitization: the challenges of dialogue and collaboration: The Challenges of Dialogue and Collaboration. Leeds: Arc Humanities Press (Collection development, cultural heritage, and digital humanities), pp. 145–156. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/9781641890540-011.

Delgado, É.M. (2021) ‘Freedom Narratives: The West African Person as the Central Focus for a Digital Humanities Database’, History in Africa, 48, pp. 35–59.

Dimitruk, K. (2021) ‘Political coalitions in the House of Commons, 1660–1690: New data and applications’, Historical Methods, 54(3), pp. 172–187. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2021.1906809.

Doherty, S. et al. (2021) ‘Inquiring into the Corpus of Empire’, Journal of World History [Honolulu], 32(2), pp. 219–240. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/jwh.2021.0022.

Dolan, F.E. (Frances E., 1960- (2020) ‘Hester Pulter’s Renaissance’, English Literary Renaissance, 50(1), pp. 32–39. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1086/706216.

Donaldson, C., Gregory, I., 1970- and Taylor, J.E. (2017) ‘Locating the beautiful, picturesque, sublime and majestic : spatially analysing the application of aesthetic terminology in descriptions of the English Lake District’, Journal of Historical Geography, 56, pp. 43–60. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2017.01.006.

Douglas, B. (2022) ‘Mapping the once and future strait: Place, time, and Torres Strait from the sixteenth century to the Pleistocene’, History and Anthropology, 33(1), pp. 17–43. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/02757206.2019.1607849.

Douglass, R.W. and Harkness, K.A. (2018) ‘Measuring the landscape of civil war: Evaluating geographic coding decisions with historic data from the Mau Mau rebellion’, Journal of Peace Research, 55(2), pp. 190–205. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343318754959.

Dowdey, D. (2017) ‘@Shakespeare : Shakespeare in Popular Culture 400 Years after his Death’, in D.N. Hill (ed.) Reflections on medieval and renaissance thought. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, pp. 124–137.

Dryburgh, P.R. (2018) ‘Genealogical records among the medieval deeds and evidences in the Court of Wards and Liveries’, Foundations: Newsletter of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 10, pp. 2–18.

Duncan, M. (2020) ‘Public history in the digital age: Century Ireland and the decade of centenaries’, Studia Hibernica, 46, pp. 105–113. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3828/sh.2020.9.

Dunley, R. and Pugh, J. (2021) ‘Do Archive Catalogues Make History?: Exploring Interactions between Historians and Archives’, 20th Century British History, 32(4), pp. 581–607. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwab021.

Dunn, O. (2020) ‘A Sea of Troubles? Journey Times and Coastal Shipping Routes in Seventeenth-Century England and Wales’, Journal of Transport History, 41(2), pp. 184–207. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0022526619886061.

durkee, D. (2017) ‘A cursus for craftsmen? : career-cycles of the worsted weavers of late-medieval Norwich’, in J. Colson and A. van Steensel (eds) Cities and solidarities: urban communities in pre-modern Europe. London: Routledge (Routledge research in early modern history), pp. 151–168.

Easley, A., 1963- (2016) ‘Chance Encounters, Rediscovery, and Loss : Researching Victorian Women Journalists in the Digital Age’, Victorian Periodicals Review, Victorian Periodicals Review, 49(4), pp. 694–717. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2016.0045.

Eastop, D. (2016) ‘New Ways of Engaging with Historic Textiles : Interactive Images Online’, Textile History, Textile History, 47(1), pp. 82–93. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00404969.2016.1144866.

Eiseman, J. et al. (2016) ‘Litchfield Unbound : Unlocking Legal History with Metadata, Digitization, and Digital Tools’, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, 34(4), pp. 831–855. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248016000328.

Ell, P.S., Hughes, L.M. and Southall, H. (2016) ‘Digitally exposing the place names of England and Wales’, in R. Mostern, H. Southall, and M.L. Berman (eds) Placing names: enriching and integrating gazetteers. Bloomington: Indiana University Press (The Spatial Humanities), pp. 129–145.

Emerson, R.L. (2020) ‘Assembling the Enlightened Scots: Fifty Years of Research’, Journal of Scottish Philosophy, 18(1), pp. 105–111. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/jsp.2020.0258.

Endres, B. (ed.) (2019) Digitizing Medieval Manuscripts: The St. Chad Gospels, Materiality, Recoveries, and Representation in 2D & 3D. Leeds [England]: Arc Humanities Press (Medieval media cultures). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/9781942401803.

Estill, L., Jakacki, D.K. and Ullyot, M., 1976- (eds) (2016) Early modern studies after the digital turn. Toronto: Iter Press (Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies).

Estill, L. and Meneses, L. (2018) ‘Is Falstaff Falstaff? Is Prince Hal Henry V? : Topic Modeling Shakespeare’s Plays’, Digital Studies / Le champ numérique, 8(1). Available at: https://doi.org/10.16995/dscn.295.

Evans, M. (2018) ‘Styling Power: A Corpus-Linguistic Approach to the Correspondence of Queen Elizabeth I’, in D. Montini and I. Plescia (eds) Elizabeth I in writing: language, power and representation in early modern england. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan (Queenship and power), pp. 59–82.

Ezell, M.J.M. (2017) ‘Big Books, Big Data, and Reading Literary Histories’, Eighteenth-century Life, Eighteenth-century Life, Eighteenth-century Life, 41(3), pp. 3–19. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1215/00982601-4130753.

Fenwick, V. (2023) ‘Sutton Hoo: re-imaging the ship and chamber’, Antiquaries Journal, 103, pp. 36–62. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0003581523000021.

Ferlier, L. (2022) ‘Collective Wisdom in the Digital Age: Digitizing Early Modern Collections at the Royal Society’, in A.M.E. Roos and V. Keller (eds) Collective wisdom: collecting in the early modern academy. Turnhout: Brepols (Techne : knowledge, technique, and material culture), pp. 289–307. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1484/M.TECHNE.5.130325.

Finch, G. (2016) ‘’Dukesfield Documents’ : a new North East history online research archive’, Local Historian, Local Historian, 46(2), pp. 129–135.

Finnane, M. and Piper, A. (2016) ‘The Prosecution Project : Understanding the Changing Criminal Trial Through Digital Tools’, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, 34(4), pp. 873–891. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248016000316.

Fitzmaurice, S.M. (2021) ‘Looking for concepts in Early Modern English : Hypothesis building and the uses of encyclopaedic knowledge and pragmatic work’, Journal of Historical Pragmatics, 22(2), pp. 282–300. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.00057.fit.

Fleming, S.D.I. (2021) ‘Foreign composers, the subscription market, and the popularity of continental music in eighteenth-century Britain’, in S.D.I. Fleming and M. Perkins (eds) Music by subscription: composers and their networks in the British music-publishing trade, 1676-1820. London: Routledge (Routledge research in music), pp. 221–241. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003163558-12.

Fleming, S.D.I. and Perkins, M., 1975- (2021a) ‘A big data study: Musical societies in subscription lists’, in S.D.I. Fleming and M. Perkins (eds) Music by subscription: composers and their networks in the British music-publishing trade, 1676-1820. London: Routledge (Routledge research in music), pp. 152–176. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003163558-9.

Fleming, S.D.I. and Perkins, M., 1975- (2021b) ‘Introduction’, in S.D.I. Fleming and M. Perkins (eds) Music by subscription: composers and their networks in the British music-publishing trade, 1676-1820. London: Routledge (Routledge research in music), pp. 15–18. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003163558-1.

Floud, R. (2019) ‘Pricing the Past’, History Today, History Today, 69(3), pp. 40–45.

Ford, A. et al. (2019) ‘Vikings go digital: using the Ridgeway mass burial to investigate skeletal injuries in three dimensions’, Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society, 140, pp. 81–84.

Freebury-Jones, D. (2018) ‘Exploring Verbal Relations between Arden of Faversham and John Lyly’s Endymion’, Renaissance and Reformation, 41(4), pp. 93–108.

Froehlich, H., Nicosia, M. and Riehman-Murphy, C. (2022) ‘Transcribing Recipe Manuscripts Online: V.b. 380 and the “What’s in a Recipe?” Undergraduate Research Project at Penn State Abington’, Early Modern Studies Journal, 8, p. [unpaged].

Fyfe, P. (2016) ‘An Archaeology of Victorian Newspapers’, Victorian Periodicals Review, Victorian Periodicals Review, 49(4), pp. 546–577. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2016.0039.

Fyfe, P. (2018) ‘Access, Computational Analysis, and Fair Use in the Digitized Nineteenth-Century Press’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 51(4), pp. 716–737. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2018.0051.

Fyfe, P. and Menke, R. (2016) ‘Data Copperfield : A Pedagogical Experiment in Distributed Collaboration’, Journal of Victorian Culture, Journal of Victorian Culture, 21(4), pp. 559–566. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2016.1233907.

Fyfe, P. (Paul C. et al. (eds) (2017) Victoria’s lost pavilion: from nineteenth-century aesthetics to digital humanities. New York, NY, U.S.A.: Palgrave Macmillan (Palgrave pivot). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95195-6.

Galey, A., 1975- and Niles, R. (2017) ‘Moving Parts: Digital Modeling and the Infrastructures of Shakespeare Editing’, Shakespeare Quarterly, 68(1), pp. 21–55. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/shq.2017.0002.

Galli, S. and Rönnbäck, K. (2020) ‘Colonialism and rural inequality in Sierra Leone: an egalitarian experiment’, European Review of Economic History, 24(3), pp. 468–501. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ereh/hez011.

Gervers, M. et al. (2018) ‘The dating of medieval charters’, Archives, 137, pp. 1–33.

Giles, K. (2017) ‘Digital Creativity and the Wall Paintings of “Shakespeare’s Guildhall”, Stratford-upon-Avon’, Internet Archaeology, 44, p. [s.p.]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.44.9.

Go, S., Iodice, A. and Ceccarrelli, G. (2023) ‘Risky Business: The database of insurance prices (circa 1400 to circa 1900)’, International Journal of Maritime History, 35(3), pp. 493–498. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/08438714231202387.

Goarzin, A. (2017) ‘The Rising Goes Digital : Century Ireland.ie’, Études irlandaises, 42(2), pp. 75–88.

Goddard, R., 1967- (2019) ‘Trust: Business Networks and the Borough Court’, in R. Goddard and T. Phipps (eds) Town courts and urban society in late Medieval England, 1250-1500. Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer, pp. 176–199. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781787445680.011.

Godfrey, B.S. et al. (eds) (2017) Young criminal lives: life courses and life chances from 1850 / Barry Godfrey, Pamela Cox, Heather Shore, Zoe Alker. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Godfrey, B.S. et al. (2021) ‘Crime, Penal Transportation, and Digital Methodologies’, Journal of World History [Honolulu], 32(2), pp. 241–260. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/jwh.2021.0023.

González, A. (2016) ‘Aldridge in Action : Building a Visual Digital Interface’, Theatre Journal, 68(4). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/tj.2016.0136.

Goode, M. (ed.) (2020) Romantic capabilities: Blake, Scott, Austen, and the new messages of old media / Mike Goode. (First Edition). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Gooding, P., 1981- (ed.) (2017) Historic newspapers in the digital age: search all about it! Abingdon: Routledge (Digital research in the arts and humanities).

Goodland, G. (2018) ‘Author and Authority in the OED : Nashe vs. Shakespeare’, in K. Halsey and A. Vine (eds) Shakespeare and authority: citations, conceptions and constructions. London: Palgrave Macmillan (Palgrave Shakespeare studies), pp. 79–111.

Graham, D. (2016) ‘“Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts” : Lessons from the History of Emblem Studies’, Emblematica, 22, pp. 1–42.

Grajzl, P. and Murrell, P. (2022) ‘Using Topic-Modeling in Legal History, with an Application to Pre-Industrial English Case Law on Finance’, Law and History Review, 40(2), pp. 189–228. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0738248022000153.

Grayson, R.S., 1969- (2016) ‘A Life in the Trenches? The Use of Operation War Diary and Crowdsourcing Methods to Provide an Understanding of the British Army’s Day-to-Day Life on the Western Front’, British Journal for Military History, 2(2), pp. 120–159.

Green, S., 1959- (2017) ‘Inclusions and Exclusions : considerations for a Stopes digital collection’, Women’s History Review, Women’s History Review, 26(5), pp. 721–737. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2016.1166884.

Gregg, S.H., 1960- (ed.) (2020) Old Books and Digital Publishing: Eighteenth-Century Collections Online. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Cambridge elements. Elements in publishing and book culture).

Gregg, S.H., 1960- (2022) ‘Eccentric Connections: Toward a Decolonial (Digital) Book History’, Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 34(4), pp. 471–482.

Gregory, D. (2024) ‘A Box in the Desert: Using Open Access Satellite Imagery to Map the 151st Infantry Brigade’s Field Defences on the Gazala Line, 1942’, International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 28(2), pp. 272–294. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-023-00712-8.

Greteman, B. (ed.) (2021) Networking print in Shakespeare’s England: influence, agency, and revolutionary change / Blaine Greteman. Redwood City (CA): Stanford University Press (Stanford text technologies). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/9781503627994.

Grey, D.J.R. (2020) ‘“Monstrous and Indefensible”? Newspaper Accounts of Sexual Assaults on Children in Nineteenth-Century England and Wales’, in M. van der Heijden, M. Pluskota, and S. Muurling (eds) Women’s criminality in Europe, 1600-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 189–205. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108774543.010.

Groundwater, A. (2017) ‘“Tweeting Ben Jonson’s Walk : Experiencing the Spatial-Temporality of the ‘Foot Voyage’”’, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, 14(1), pp. 107–124. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2016.1237408.

Guldi, J. (2022) ‘The Algorithm: Mapping Long-Term Trends and Short-Term Change at Multiple Scales of Time’, American Historical Review, 127(2), pp. 895–911. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhac160.

Guldi, J., 1978- (2019) ‘Parliament’s Debates about Infrastructure: An Exercise in Using Dynamic Topic Models to Synthesize Historical Change’, Technology and Culture, 60(1), pp. 1–33. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/tech.2019.0000.

Guldi, J., 1978- (2021) ‘The Official Mind’s View of Empire, in Miniature: Quantifying World Geography in Hansard’s Parliamentary Debates’, Journal of World History [Honolulu], 32(2), pp. 345–370. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/jwh.2021.0028.

Hale, A.M. and Smith, S.R. (2016) ‘“You see, but you do not observe” : Hidden Infrastructure and Labour in the Strand Magazine and Its Twenty-First-Century Digital Iterations’, Victorian Periodicals Review, Victorian Periodicals Review, 49(4), pp. 664–693. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2016.0044.

Hall, C., 1946- (2016) ‘Writing History, Making ’Race’ : Slave-Owners and Their Stories’, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, 47(3), pp. 365–380. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1031461X.2016.1202291.

Hamilton, C. and McNulty, G. (2022) ‘Refiguring the Archive for Eras before Writing: Digital Interventions, Affordances and Research Futures’, History in Africa, 49, pp. 131–157. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/hia.2021.19.

Hammond, M. (2016) ‘Le paradoxe de l’Écosse médiévale, 1093 à 1286 : les sources et les prénoms’, in D. Bates and P. Bauduin (eds) 911-2011, penser les mondes normands médiévaux: actes du colloque international de Caen et Cerisy (29 septembre-2 octobre 2011). Caen: Office universitaire d’études normandes (OUEN) : Centre de recherches archéologiques et historiques anciennes et médiévales (CRAHAM) : Université de Caen Normandie, pp. 263–289.

Hammond, M. (2020) ‘Status Anxiety in Medieval Society: Elite Titles in Charters, c. 1160–c. 1260’, Scottish Historical Review, 99(2), pp. 171–222. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/shr.2020.0461.

Hartshorne, S.A. (2021) ‘Urban history “on the go”: discovering and developing Leicester’s cultural quarter’, Urban History, 48(2), pp. 320–333. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963926819001135.

Harvey, A. (2016) ‘Muirchú and his remi cymba : Whence his Latin and its Wordstore?’, Peritia, 27, pp. 43–62. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1484/J.PERIT.5.112195.

Heeks, J. (2023) ‘Searching for “larrikin*”: Using Digitised Newspapers to Trace the Transnational Coverage of Australian Street Gangs, 1870–98’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 56(2), pp. 271–292.

Heinrich, A.R. and Gall, M.J., 1979- (2023) ‘Zooarchaeology and GIS: Enslaved and Free Black Diet at a Late Eighteenth- to Mid-Nineteenth-Century Delaware Farm, New Castle County, Delaware, United States’, International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 27(2), pp. 424–457. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-021-00622-7.

Hepburn‐Roper, S. (2024) ‘In search of an empirical foundation: Firearms trade and Pacific history’, History Compass, 22(6), p. e12814. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12814.

Herbert, L.A. (2019) ‘Ownership, Censorship, and Digital Repatriation: Excavating Layers of History in the Carrow Psalter’, in J.M. Feltman and S. Thompson (eds) The long lives of medieval art and architecture. London: Routledge (AVISTA studies in the history of medieval technology, science, and art), pp. 165–185. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351181129-11.

Hersee, K. (2024) ‘Urban Green Space and the Blitz: Constructing New Parks and Gardens in Post-War Southwark’, London Journal, 49(3), pp. 229–262. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03058034.2024.2380563.

Hershinow, S.I., 1982- (2023) ‘Clarissa, by the Numbers: Novel Experience and the Aesthetics of Quantification’, Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 35(2), pp. 215–234.

Hewitt, C. (2018) ‘How did East Sussex Really Appear in 1066? The Cartographic Evidence’, Digital Studies / Le champ numérique, 8(1). Available at: https://doi.org/10.16995/dscn.278.

Hewitt, C.M. (2021) ‘Supplying the Conquest: A Geospatial Visualization and Interpretation of Available Environmental Resources at the Battle of Hastings in 1066’, in C. Travis, F. Ludlow, and F. Gyuris (eds) Historical geography, GIScience and textual analysis: landscapes of time and place. Cham: Springer (Historical geography and geosciences), pp. 179–196. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-37569-0_11.

Higgett, N., Chen, Y. and Tatham, E. (2016) ‘A User Experience Evaluation of the use of Augmented and Virtual Reality in Visualising and Interpreting Roman Leicester 210AD (Ratae Corieltavorum)’, Athens Journal of History, 2(1), pp. 7–23.

Higgins, R. (2018) ‘Imposing the law’, Catholic Ancestor, 17(3), pp. 87–98.

Hil, G. (2021) ‘Remade ground: Modelling historical elevation change across Melbourne’s Hoddle Grid’, Australian Archaeology, 87(1), pp. 21–35. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2020.1840079.

Hill, M.J. and Tolonen, M. (2021) ‘A Computational Investigation into the Authorship of Sister Peg’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 54(4), pp. 861–885.

Hinnie, L. (2019) ‘A Modern Bannatyne’, International Review of Scottish Studies, 44, pp. 20–26. Available at: https://doi.org/10.21083/irss.v44i0.5830.

Hintikka, M. and Nevala, M. (2017) ‘Representations of prostitutes and prostitution as a metaphor in nineteenth-century English newspapers’, Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 3(2), pp. 219–240. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsl-2017-1018.

Hitchcock, T., 1957- (2017) ‘Digital Affordances for Criminal Justice History’, Crime, Histoire et Sociétés, 21(2), pp. 335–342.

Hitchcock, T., 1957- and Turkel, W.J. (2016) ‘The Old Bailey Proceedings, 1674–1913 : Text Mining for Evidence of Court Behavior’, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, 34(4), pp. 929–955. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248016000304.

Hotson, H., Ahnert, S.E. and Lewis, M. (2023) ‘Searching for Missing Links in the Republic of Letters: Vossius and the Dutch Dimension of Hartlib’s Circle’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 86(2), pp. 283–313.

Hotson, H. and Lewis, M. (2020) ‘A Commonwealth of Letters: From the Index of Literary Correspondence to Early Modern Letters Online’, Bodleian Library Record, 33(1–2), pp. 16–217.

Houlihan, B. (ed.) (2021) Theatre and archival memory: Irish drama and marginalised histories 1951-1977 / Barry Houlihan. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-74548-6.

Houston, N.M. (2019) ‘Modeling the Poem on the Page: Encoding the Database Schema for the Periodical Poetry Index’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 52(3), pp. 626–635. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2019.0040.

Houston, N.M., Lawrence, L. and Patrick, A. (2019) ‘Indexing, Checking, and Encoding in the Periodical Poetry Index’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 52(3), pp. 604–607. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2019.0037.

Hsy, J. (2018) ‘Queer environments: Reanimating “Adam Scrivyen”’, Postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, 9(3), pp. 289–302. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41280-018-0091-5.

Hudson, A. and Duffy, C. (2022) ‘Under the impression: multispectral imaging of Lord Frederick Campbell charter xxi 5’, Antiquaries Journal, 102, pp. 111–133. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0003581521000354.

Hughes, B., Campbell, B. and Schreibman, S. (2017) ‘Contested Memories : Revisiting the Battle of Mount Street Bridge, 1916’, British Journal for Military History, 4(1), pp. 2–22.

Hughes, L.M. (2016) ‘Finding Belgian refugees in Cymru1914.org : using digital resources for uncovering the hidden histories of the First World War in Wales’, Immigrants & Minorities, Immigrants & Minorities, 34(2), pp. 210–231. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/02619288.2016.1171148.

Hulle, D.V. (2016) ‘Digital Library History; The Virtual Bookcases of James Joyce and Samuel Beckett’, Quaerendo, 46(2–3), pp. 192–204. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/15700690-12341348.

Hunter, D. (2021) ‘Profiting from the slave economy and subscribing to music: The British experience in the eighteenth century’, in S.D.I. Fleming and M. Perkins (eds) Music by subscription: composers and their networks in the British music-publishing trade, 1676-1820. London: Routledge (Routledge research in music), pp. 198–220. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003163558-11.

Hunter, E., 1980- (2024) ‘Writing: The World of Newspapers’, American Historical Review, 129(2), pp. 551–555. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhae166.

Inwood, K.E., 1951- and Ross, J.A. (2016) ‘Big Data and the Military : First World War Personnel Records in Australia, Britain, Canada, New Zealand and British Africa’, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, 47(3), pp. 430–442. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1031461X.2016.1205639.

Jackson, V. (2020) ‘Enriching “Hands on History” through Community Dissemination: A case study of the Pebble Mill project’, in N. Hall and J. Ellis (eds) Hands on media history: a new methodology in the humanities and social sciences. London: Routledge, pp. 160–171.

James, K. et al. (2019) ‘Greetings from Scotland: Postcards and the Digitisation of Travel Ephemera in the University of Guelph’s Scottish Collections’, International Review of Scottish Studies, 44, pp. 3–9. Available at: https://doi.org/10.21083/irss.v44i0.5836.

Jamison, A. (2017) ‘Women’s Literary History in Ireland : digitizing The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing’, Women’s History Review, Women’s History Review, 26(5), pp. 751–765. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2016.1166886.

Jenkins, J. (2020) ‘Modelling the Cult of Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral’, Journal of the British Archaeological Association, 173(1), pp. 100–123. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00681288.2020.1771897.

Jenks, T. (2018) ‘Spatial Identities, Online Strategies, and the Teaching of Britain’s “Long Eighteenth Century”’, The History Teacher [Long Beach, CA], 51(4), pp. 597–610.

Jenstad, J.D. (2016) ‘Building a gazetteer for early modern London, 1550-1650’, in R. Mostern, H. Southall, and M.L. Berman (eds) Placing names: enriching and integrating gazetteers. Bloomington: Indiana University Press (The Spatial Humanities), pp. 129–145.

Jenstad, J.D. and Kaethler, M. (2020) ‘Building a digital geospatial anthology of the mayoral Shows’, in J.C. Finlayson and A. Sen (eds) Civic performance: pageantry and entertainments in early modern London. Abingdon: Routledge (Studies in Performance and Early Modern Drama), pp. 219–238. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315392707-11.

Jenstad, J.D., Kaethler, M. and Roberts-Smith, J. (eds) (2018) Shakespeare’s language in digital media: old words, new tools. New York: Routledge (Digital research in the arts and humanities). Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315608747.

Jessen, C., 1980- (2024) ‘The archive’s order. Ernst Simon’s notes on Heinrich Heine’, Jewish Culture & History, 25(1), pp. 151–170. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1462169X.2024.2312327.

Johansson, M. and Van Waarden, B. (2024) ‘Structural reading: Developing the method of Structural Collocation Analysis using a case study on parliamentary reporting’, Historical Methods, 57(3), pp. 185–198. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2024.2414259.

John, J.M. (2024) ‘Prosiect treftadaeth ddiwylliannol Harlech ac Ardudwy: Murddunnod coll Ardudwy [Harlech and Ardudwy cultural heritage project: Ardudwy’s lost Murddunnod]’, Journal of the Merioneth Historical and Record Society, 19(3), pp. 257–273.

Johnson, B., 1980- and Parry, K. (2022) ‘Jo Cox, public feeling and British political culture: #MoreInCommon’, European Journal of Cultural Studies, 25(5), pp. 1504–1526. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/13675494221090332.

Johnson, E.J. and Gwara, S. (2016) ‘“The Butcher’s Bill” : Using the Schoenberg Database to Reverse-Engineer Medieval and Renaissance Manuscript Books from Constituent Fragments’, Manuscript Studies, 1(2), pp. 235–262.

Johnston, D., 1955- (2017) ‘The History And Future Of The Dictionary Of Welsh Biography’, Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 23, pp. 163–170.

Jolly, M. and DeCourcy, E., 1986- (2018) ‘Heritage in the Limelight, a Collection in Progress: Uncovering, Connecting, Researching and Animating Australia’s Magic Lantern Past’, Open Library of Humanities, 4(1), p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.275.

Jones, J., Smith, N. and May, M., Dame, d. 1681 (2017) ‘The Strange Case of Dame Mary May’s tomb: The performative value of Reflectance Transformation Imaging and its use in deciphering the visual and biographical evidence of a late 17th-century portrait effigy’, Internet Archaeology, 44, p. [s.p.]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.44.9.

Jurkowski, M. (2016) ‘The History of Clerical Taxation in England and Wales, 1173–1663 : The Findings of the E 179 Project’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 67(1), pp. 53–81. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022046915001608.

Kavanagh, J. (2019) ‘Using the digitised “Irish Army Census” (1922), with a sample of January 1922 recruitment [with index]’, Archivium Hibernicum, 72, pp. 397–443.

Kearns, E. and Morin, C. (2023) ‘Irish Minerva Writers and the Affordances of Big Data: Some Preliminary Findings’, Irish University Review, 53(1), pp. 27–47. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/iur.2023.0588.

Keating, J. (2021) ‘Say her name: Madge Donohoe and the promise and problems of using Trove to write Australian suffrage histories’, History Australia, 18(4), pp. 849–852. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14490854.2021.1993741.

Keenan, T. (2016) ‘A Database of Restoration Stage Directions’, Restoration & 18th Century Theatre Research, 31(2), pp. 65–75.

Kelley, S.M., 1966- (2019) ‘DB or not DB: Writing the history of the slave trade to North America in the era of the database’, History Compass, 17(5), p. e12530. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12530.

Kelly, J.M. (2017) ‘Reading the Grand Tour at a Distance : Archives and Datasets in Digital History’, American Historical Review, American Historical Review, 122(2), pp. 451–463. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/122.2.451.

Kennedy, M. (2016) ‘Open Annotation and Close Reading the Victorian Text : Using Hypothes.is with Students’, Journal of Victorian Culture, Journal of Victorian Culture, 21(4), pp. 550–558. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2016.1233905.

Kilroy, D. (2021) ‘All the king’s men? A demographic study of opinion in the first English Parliament of James I, 1604–10’, Parliaments, Estates & Representation, 41(1), pp. 1–23. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/02606755.2020.1857546.

Kim, H. (2021) ‘Victorian400: Colorizing Victorian Illustrations’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 15(1–2), pp. 186–202. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2021.0269.

Kim, S.-J.H. (2024) ‘Staging: Intercultural Publics’, American Historical Review, 129(2), pp. 578–586. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhae171.

King, F.D. (2016) ‘The Decadent Archive and the Long History of New Media’, Victorian Periodicals Review, Victorian Periodicals Review, 49(4), pp. 643–663. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2016.0043.

King, R.S. et al. (2024) ‘Visualizing Linearity: Religion, Gender, and Progress in an Eighteenth-Century Quaker Archive’, Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 36(4), pp. 597–623.

Kirby, A. and Pickles, J.D., 1945-2022 (2019) ‘Mapping Cambridgeshire: retrospect and prospects’, Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, 108, pp. 95–104.

Kissling, N.M. (2024) ‘Obituaries of Ernst A. Simon – chances of biographical research in the context of archival digitization’, Jewish Culture & History, 25(1), pp. 112–121. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1462169X.2024.2313308.

Kleinman, S. (2021) ‘Ireland and the “£20 million swindle’, History Ireland, 29(3), pp. 26–29.

Knowles, J. (2019) ‘Ghastly vignettes : Pierce the Plowman’s Crede : the ghost of Shakespeare’s Blackfriars, and the future of the digital past’, in E. Turnator, T. Mahoney-Steel, and M.E. Davis (eds) Meeting the Medieval in a Digital World. Baltimore (MD): Project Muse (Medieval media cultures), pp. 69–92.

Kozaczka, A. (2021) ‘The precariousness of human life: Jane Austen, pandemic, and the coping mechanisms of nineteenth-century literature’, Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 43(5), pp. 541–546. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/08905495.2021.1976037.

Lack, P. (2021) ‘Using word analysis to track the evolution of emotional well-being in nineteenth-century industrializing Britain’, Historical Methods, 54(4), pp. 228–247. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2021.1952915.

Laird, M., Mehling, L. and Tung, B. (2020) ‘Schoch and “schrubs” : translation of a German shrubbery manual of 1794’, Garden History, 48(1), pp. 79–96.

Lansdall-Welfare, T. and others (2016) ‘Content analysis of 150 years of British periodicals’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(4), pp. 457–465. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1606380114.

Laroche, R. et al. (2018) ‘Becoming Visible: Recipes in the Making’, Early Modern Women, 13(1), pp. 133–143. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/emw.2018.0056.

Last, J. (2020) ‘“Hidden Landscape Characterisation”: Some Thoughts on the Relationship of HLC to Archaeological Data’, Landscapes, 21(2), pp. 135–151. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14662035.2020.1978708.

Lawrence, L. (2019) ‘Indexing Periodical Poetry: First Steps in Building a Digital Bibliographic Project’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 52(3), pp. 608–617. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2019.0038.

LeBlanc, Z. (2024) ‘More Than Keywords: Histories of Decolonization and Digitized Newspapers’, American Historical Review, 129(1), pp. 164–168. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhad499.

Lee, R. (2017) ‘Editing in Technicolor : The Blake Archive’s Edition of the Vala or The Four Zoas Manuscript’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 80(3), pp. 499–515. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/hlq.2017.0028.

Lefkowitz, J. (2018) ‘“Tabloidization” or Dual-Convergence : Quoted speech in tabloid and “quality” British newspapers 1970–2010’, Journalism Studies, 19(3), pp. 353–375. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1461670X.2016.1190662.

Legg, R., Ludlow, F. and Travis, C., 1964- (2021) ‘Mapping the Irish Rath (Ringfort): Landscape and Settlement Patterns in the Early Medieval Period’, in C. Travis, F. Ludlow, and F. Gyuris (eds) Historical geography, GIScience and textual analysis: landscapes of time and place. Cham: Springer (Historical geography and geosciences), pp. 197–210. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-37569-0_12.

Lesser, Z. (2019) ‘Xeroxing the Renaissance: The Material Text of Early Modern Studies’, Shakespeare Quarterly, 70(1), pp. 3–31. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/sq/quz001.

Levy, M., 1968- and Schellenberg, B.A. (eds) (2021) How and why to do things with eighteenth-century manuscripts / Michelle Levy, Betty A. Schellenberg. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Elements in eighteenth-century connections).

Lewis, E. (2019) ‘Resistance, Self-Defence, or Sticking Up for Your Friends? A Discussion of Purgation in the Prosecution of Fifteenth-Century Lollardy’, Nottingham Medieval Studies, 63, pp. 169–190. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1484/J.NMS.5.118199.

Liddle, D. (2016) ‘The News Machine : Textual Form and Information Function in the London Times, 1785–1885’, Book History, 19, pp. 132–168. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/bh.2016.0003.

Lightman, B.V., 1950- (2022) ‘The Darwin Correspondence Project and Pedagogy’, Journal of the History of Biology, 55(2), pp. 403–409. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-022-09684-7.

Lindenbaum, S. (2018) ‘Hiding in Plain Sight: How Electronic Records Can Lead Us to Early Modern Women Readers’, in L. Knight, M. White, and E. Sauer (eds) Women’s bookscapes in early modern Britain: reading, ownership, circulation. Ann Arbor (MI): University of Michigan Press, pp. 193–213.

Linley, M. (2016) ‘Lake District Online : Studies in Book Ecology and Digital Migration’, Victorian Studies, 58(2), pp. 258–271. Available at: https://doi.org/10.2979/victorianstudies.58.2.07.

Little, M. and Peplow, S. (2019) ‘A Validation of England’s Nineteenth Century Tithe Files, Using GIS as a Primary Tool’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 13(1–2), pp. 116–135. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2017.0186.

Lonati, E. (2016) ‘The language of medicine in the Philosophical Transactions : Observations on style’, Token: A Journal of English Linguistics, 5, pp. 5–24.

Loy, M. (2021) ‘From Archive to GIS: Recovering Spatial Information for Tholos IV at the Palace of Nestor from the Notebooks of Lord William Taylour’, Internet Archaeology, 56, p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.56.5.

Luddy, M. (2024) ‘Sources for Irish women’s history’, Women’s History Review, 33(2), pp. 302–303. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2023.2186328.

Lünen, A. von, 1971- et al. (2023) ‘Hansard at Huddersfield: Adapting Corpus Linguistic Methods for Non-Specialist Use’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 17(1), pp. 25–46. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2023.0298.

Lunnon, H.E. (2017) ‘Inventio Porticus—Imagining Solomon’s Porches in Late Medieval England’, British Art Studies, British Art Studies, 6. Available at: https://doi.org/10.17658/issn.2058-5462/issue-06/hlunnon/000.

Mac Con Iomaire, M. and Nic Philibín, C. (2022) ‘Exploring the Food-Related Intangible Cultural Heritage of Bealtaine (May Day) within the Irish Folklore Commission’s Schools’ Collection Digital Archive’, Études irlandaises, 47(1), pp. 15–32. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4000/etudesirlandaises.12548.

Macks, A. (2021) ‘Data Sanctorum: The Corpus Kalendarium Database of Devotional Calendars’, Manuscript Studies, 6(2), pp. 338–348. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/mns.2021.0019.

Macleod, G. et al. (2024) ‘Identifying a research agenda for postgraduate taught education in the UK: lessons from a machine learning facilitated systematic scoping review’, Oxford Review of Education, 50(1), pp. 95–112. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03054985.2023.2203376.

MacNeill, R.J. (2024) ‘Interactive Analysis of Lidar Data: Reanimating a Chinese Camp on the Victorian Goldfields’, International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 28(2), pp. 525–543. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-023-00720-8.

Makovi, K. (2019) ‘The Signatures of Social Structure: Petitioning for the Abolition of the Slave Trade in Manchester’, Social Science History, 43(3), pp. 625–652. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/ssh.2019.25.

March, E. et al. (2023) ‘Defining the Carceral Characteristics of the “Dickensian prison”: A Corpus Stylistics Analysis of Dickens’s Novels’, Victoriographies: A Journal of the Long Nineteenth Century, 13(1), pp. 15–41. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/vic.2023.0477.

Martín Párraga, J. (2016) ‘Beowulf in the Electronic Age’, in J. Martín Párraga and J. de D. Torralbo Caballero (eds) New Medievalisms. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, pp. 65–78.

Marzo, F. (2020) ‘British Library/ Qatar Foundation Partnership and the Digitization Project: A Case Study about Conservation Processes within Mass Digitization of Library Material’, in A. Campagnolo (ed.) Book conservation and digitization: the challenges of dialogue and collaboration: The Challenges of Dialogue and Collaboration. Leeds: Arc Humanities Press (Collection development, cultural heritage, and digital humanities), pp. 105–116. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/9781641890540-008.

Matthews-Jones, L. (2016) ‘Blogging the Victorians for the Journal of Victorian Culture Online’, Journal of Victorian Culture, Journal of Victorian Culture, 21(1), pp. 102–111. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2015.1127283.

Maxwell-Stewart, H. (2016) ‘The State, Convicts and Longitudinal Analysis’, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, 47(3), pp. 414–429. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1031461X.2016.1203963.

McAlister, V.L. and Immich, J.L. (2023) ‘What Is Lost Can Be Found: History and Geographical Information Systems as Tools for Identifying Deserted Medieval Rural Settlement’, in V.L. McAlister and L. Shine (eds) Rethinking Medieval Ireland and Beyond: Lifecycles, Landscapes, and Settlements, Essays in Honor of T.B. Barry. Leiden: Brill (Explorations in medieval culture), pp. 189–216. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004528864_010.

McCliskie, S. (2020) ‘Dangerous Ground or Rich New Research Methods? Using Digital Genealogy to Trace Colonial Mobility’, Britain and the World, 13(2), pp. 105–125. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/brw.2020.0346.

McEnery, T., 1964- and Baker, H.S. (2017a) ‘The poor in seventeenth-century England : A corpus based analysis’, Token: A Journal of English Linguistics, 6, pp. 51–83.

McEnery, T., 1964- and Baker, H.S. (2017b) ‘The public representation of homosexual men in seventeenth-century England : a corpus based view’, Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 3(2), pp. 197–217. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsl-2017-1003.

McGillivray, M. and Duffy, C. (2017) ‘New Light on the Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Manuscript : Multispectral Imaging and the Cotton Nero A.x. Illustrations’, Speculum, Speculum, Speculum, 92(S1), pp. 110–144. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1086/693361.

McGregor, U. (2018) ‘Thomas Chippendale, Ingenious Business Leader and Promoter of the Cabinet-Maker’s Craft in Eighteenth-Century London: New Insights from the Burney Collection of Newspapers’, Furniture History, 54, pp. 43–58.

McLean, M.A., Roberts, D.A., 1969- and Gibbs, M., 1966- (2024) ‘Ghosts and the machine: testing the use of Artificial Intelligence to deliver historical life course biographies from big data’, Historical Methods, 57(3), pp. 146–162. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2024.2398455.

Mclean-Fiander, K. and Daybell, J., 1972- (2016) ‘Postscript : New directions in early modern women’s letters : WEMLO’s challenges and possibilities’, in J. Daybell and A. Gordon (eds) Women and epistolary agency in early modern culture, 1450-1690. London: Routledge (Women and gender in the early modern world), pp. 223–238.

McMahon, C.T. (2021) ‘Tracking the Great Famine’s “Coffin Ships” across the Digital Deep’, Éire-Ireland, 56(1–2), pp. 81–109.

McShane, A. (2017) ‘Digital Broadsides : The upsides and the downsides’, Media History, 23(2), pp. 281–302. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13688804.2017.1307099.

Medici, C. (2018) ‘Using Network Analysis to Understand Early Modern Women’, Early Modern Women, 13(1), pp. 153–162. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/emw.2018.0058.

Midura, R., Ahnert, S.E. and Ahnert, R. (2023) ‘Shadow Networks: Identifying Intercepted Letters in the Elizabethan State Papers Foreign’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 86(2), pp. 345–375.

Millican, K. et al. (2017) ‘Mapping the Historic Landscape : Historic Land-Use Assessment in Scotland’, Landscapes, Landscapes, Landscapes, 18(1), pp. 71–87. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14662035.2017.1318613.

Moffat, I. (2020) ‘Mapping unmarked graves with Ground Penetrating Radar at the Walkerville Wesleyan Cemetery, Adelaide’, Australian Archaeology, 86(1), pp. 57–62. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2020.1748831.

Mold, A. and Berridge, V. (2019) ‘Using Digitised Medical Journals in a Cross European Project on Addiction History’, Media History, 25(1), pp. 85–99. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13688804.2018.1506698.

Money, D., 1988- (2021) ‘Rebalancing the Historical Narrative or Perpetuating Bias? Digitizing the Archives of the Mineworkers’ Union of Zambia’, History in Africa, 48, pp. 61–82.

Monter, W. (2020) ‘Anno Domini-Dated Coins in Europe, 1450—1600: Numismatics and Early Modern Political Culture’, Sixteenth Century Journal, 51(4), pp. 1059–1082.

Montoya, A. (2021) ‘Enlightenment? What Enlightenment? Reflections on Half a Million Books (British, French, and Dutch Private Libraries, 1665–1830)’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 54(4), pp. 909–934.

Moore. Gaywyn and Harries, B.J. (2021) ‘Undergraduate Archival Research in Early Modern Studies: Digital Possibilities for Small Colleges and Universities’, Early Modern Studies Journal, 7, p. [unpaged].

Moore, P.J.B. (2021) ‘The hidden medieval landscape of Cirencester Park’, Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, 139, pp. 165–169.

Moreshead, A. (2022) ‘Gender and Para-Academic Labor: The Invisible Translators of Old English and their Legacy in Digital Humanities’, Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies, 18(2), p. [unpaged].

Munger, K. et al. (2022) ‘Political Knowledge and Misinformation in the Era of Social Media: Evidence From the 2015 UK Election’, British Journal of Political Science, 52(1), pp. 107–127. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123420000198.

Munroe, J. et al. (2022) ‘Reconstructing Recipes, Recovering Losses, Telling Stories’, Early Modern Studies Journal, 8, p. [unpaged].

Murphy, O. and Aguiar, L. (2019) ‘When a 1981 Diary Meets Twitter: Reclaiming a teenage girl’s ordinary experience of the Northern Irish Troubles’, British Journal for Military History, 5(1), pp. 49–70. Available at: https://doi.org/10.25602/GOLD.bjmh.v5i1.823.

Murray, H.-R., 1989- (2019) ‘“With almost electric speed”: mapping African American abolitionists in Britain and Ireland, 1838–1847’, Slavery & Abolition, 40(3), pp. 522–542. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0144039X.2018.1551296.

Mussell, J. (2016) ‘Digitization [Nineteenth-century British periodicals and newspapers]’, in A. King, A. Easley, and J. Morton (eds) The Routledge handbook to nineteenth-century British periodicals and newspapers. London; New York: Routledge, pp. 17–28.

Nance, J.V. (2017) ‘“We, John Cade” : Shakespeare, Marlowe, and the authorship of 4.2.33–189 2 Henry VI’, Shakespeare, 13(1), pp. 30–51. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/17450918.2015.1102166.

Navickas, K. and Crymble, A. (2017) ‘From Chartist Newspaper to Digital Map of Grass-roots Meetings, 1841–44 : Documenting Workflows’, Journal of Victorian Culture, Journal of Victorian Culture, 22(2), pp. 232–247. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2017.1301179.

Nevalainen, T. et al. (2020) ‘History of English as punctuated equilibria? A meta-analysis of the rate of linguistic change in Middle English’, Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 6(2), p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsl-2019-0008.

Ng, M., Chow, T.E. and Wong, D.W.S. (2016) ‘Geographical Dimension of Colonial Justice : Using GIS in Research on Law and History’, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, 34(4), pp. 1027–1045. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S073824801600033X.

Nolan, M. (2019) ‘The Invention of Style’, Studies in the Age of Chaucer, 41, pp. 33–71, A1–A12. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/sac.2019.0001.

North, M.L. (2022) ‘Using Digital Finding Aids to Define Manuscript Miscellanies of English Verse, 1575–1675: A Broad Picture of a Material Genre and Its Conventions’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 85(4), pp. 705–730. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/hlq.2022.a920285.

Ó Siochrú, M., 1966- (2019) ‘Rebuilding the past: The transformation of early modern Irish history’, Seventeenth Century, 34(3), pp. 381–404. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0268117X.2018.1445552.

Ogg, G. and Wartmann, F.M. (2024) ‘Geographies of landscape aesthetics: mapping landscape terminology in digitised historical travel accounts of Loch Lomond and the Trossachs’, Scottish Geographical Journal, 140(1–2), pp. 210–232. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14702541.2023.2289495.

Oksanen, E. and Lewis, M. (2020) ‘Medieval Commercial Sites: As Seen Through Portable Antiquities Scheme Data’, Antiquaries Journal, 100, pp. 109–140. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003581520000165.

Oldham, J. (2018) ‘The Law of Negligence as Reported in The Times, 1785–1820’, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, 36(2), pp. 383–419. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248018000032.

Ormrod, W.M. (2020) ‘England’s Immigrants, 1330–1550: Aliens in Later Medieval and Early Tudor England’, Journal of British Studies, 59(2), pp. 245–263. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2019.282.

Orr, L. (2021) ‘From Methods to Conclusions: The Limits of the Knowable in Digital Book History’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 54(4), pp. 785–801.

Ortolja-Baird, A. et al. (2019) ‘Digital Humanities in the Memory Institution: The Challenges of Encoding Sir Hans Sloane’s Early Modern Catalogues of His Collections’, Open Library of Humanities, 5(1), p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.409.

Ottaway, S.R., 1967- and Mason, A. (2021) ‘Reconsidering poor law institutions by virtually reconstructing and re-viewing an eighteenth-century workhouse’, Historical Journal, 64(3), pp. 557–582. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x20000448.

Palander-Collin, M., 1967- and Liukkonen, I. (2017) ‘Constructing the defendant role in the trial proceedings of the Old Bailey : Guilty or not guilty’, Token: A Journal of English Linguistics, 6, pp. 173–203.

Palmer, J.J.N. (2016) ‘A Digital Latin Domesday’, in D. Roffe and K.S.B. Keats-Rohan (eds) Domesday now: new approaches to the inquest and the book. Martlesham: The Boydell Press, pp. 61–80.

Pangallo, M.A. (2020) ‘“A Great Deale of Good Stuffe”: The Cyberspace Renaissance Continues’, English Literary Renaissance, 50(1), pp. 116–123. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1086/706227.

Parker, J. (2018) ‘The Elusive Turnpin Chair’, Regional Furniture, 32, pp. 69–91.

Parsons, S., Parker, C.S. and Seales, W.B. (2017) ‘The St. Chad Gospels : Diachronic Manuscript Registration and Visualization’, Manuscript Studies, 2(2), pp. 483–498.

Paton, C., 1970- (ed.) (2020) Tracing your Scottish family history on the Internet: a guide for family historians / Chris Paton. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Family History.

Patrick, A. (2019) ‘Zooming In and Out: Theories of Poetry from Checking the Periodical Poetry Index’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 52(3), pp. 618–625. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2019.0039.

Patrick, A. (2021) ‘Models and Methods for Collaboration in Periodical Studies, 1990–2020’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 54(2), pp. 327–344. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2021.0021.

Peirson-Webber, E. (2021) ‘Mining Men: Reflections on Masculinity and Oral History during the Coronavirus Pandemic’, History Workshop Journal, 92, pp. 242–250. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/hwj/dbab012.

Pendlebury, C. (2020) ‘Tune Families and Tune Histories: Melodic Resemblances in British and Irish Folk Tunes’, Folk Music Journal, 11(5), p. [s.p.].

Penman, L.T.I. (2016) ‘Omnium Exposita Rapinæ : The Afterlives of the Papers of Samuel Hartlib’, Book History, 19, pp. 1–65. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/bh.2016.0000.

Philips, R.C.M. et al. (2022) ‘The regional occupational structure in interwar England and Wales’, Historical Methods, 55(2), pp. 78–97. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2022.2027303.

Piercy, J. (2017) ‘The Moneyers of England Database, 973—1086 : Case Studies from the London and Southwark Mints’, Medieval Prosopography, 32, pp. 40–65.

Pillatt, T. et al. (2020) ‘The Burial Space Research Database’, Internet Archaeology, 55, p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.55.3.

Pinarbasi, S. (2020) ‘Manchester antislavery, 1792–1807’, Slavery & Abolition, 41(2), pp. 349–376. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0144039X.2019.1614324.

Pine, E. et al. (2020) ‘Modes of Witnessing and Ireland’s Institutional History’, in E. Falci and P. Reynolds (eds) Irish literature in transition, 1980-2020. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 278–294. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108564373.019.

Piper, A. (2020) ‘Digital crowdsourcing and public understandings of the past: citizen historians meet Criminal Characters’, History Australia, 17(3), pp. 525–541. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14490854.2020.1796500.

Plante, K. and Sutton-Bennett, K. (2023) ‘“A Numerous and Powerful Generation of Triflers”: The Social Edition as Counterpublic in Charlotte Lennox’s the Lady’s Museum (1760–61) and the Lady’s Museum Project (2021–)’, Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 35(2), pp. 287–301.

Podd, R. (2020) ‘Reconsidering maternal mortality in medieval England: aristocratic Englishwomen, c. 1236–1503’, Continuity and Change, 35(2), pp. 115–137. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0268416020000156.

Porter, C., Atkinson, P. and Gregory, I.N. (2018) ‘Space and Time in 100 Million Words: Health and Disease in a Nineteenth-century Newspaper’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 12(2), pp. 196–216. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2018.0222.

Prescott, A. (2018) ‘Searching for Dr. Johnson: The Digitisation of the Burney Newspaper Collection’, in S.G. Brandtzæg, P. Goring, and C. Watson (eds) Travelling chronicles: news and newspapers from the early modern period to the eighteenth century. Leiden: Brill (Library of the written word), pp. 51–71. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004362871_004.

Pretel, W.G., Amaya, C.A.A. and Jeong, M.-S. (2024) ‘Mapping the Unknown: Early Nineteenth Century Hydrographic Surveys in the Archipelago of San Andres, Old Providence, and Santa Catalina (Western Caribbean)- A GIS Cartographic Assessment’, International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 28(2), pp. 423–468. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-023-00717-3.

Redmond, M. (2019) ‘Two unpublished promontory forts in the south-east of Ireland’, Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, 148, pp. 133–141.

Reid, S.J. (2016) ‘A Latin Renaissance in Reformation Scotland? Print Trends in Scottish Latin Literature, c. 1480-1700’, Scottish Historical Review, Scottish Historical Review, 95(1), pp. 1–29. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/shr.2016.0274.

Richards, J.D. (2021) ‘Archiving Archaeological Data in the United Kingdom’, Internet Archaeology, 58, p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.58.21.

Richards, J.D. (2023) ‘Getting it Together: Combining information about archaeological sites and artefacts in ARIADNE’, Internet Archaeology, 64, p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.64.14.

Rijpma, A., Cilliers, J. and Fourie, J. (2020) ‘Record linkage in the Cape of Good Hope Panel’, Historical Methods, 53(2), pp. 112–129. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2018.1517030.

Roberts, D.A., 1969- (2017) ‘Colonial gulag : the populating of the Port Macquarie penal settlement, 1821–1832’, History Australia, 14(4), pp. 588–606.

Robertson, A.T. (2020) ‘The contribution of Freemasons to social and economic development in North Worcestershire c.1760-1824’, Midland History, 45(1), pp. 55–74. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0047729X.2020.1712072.

Robertson, S. (2016) ‘Searching for Anglo-American Digital Legal History’, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, 34(4), pp. 1047–1069. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248016000389.

Robinson, L. (2016) ‘Collaboration in, Collaboration Out : The Eighties in the Age of Digital Reproduction’, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, 13(3), pp. 403–423. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2016.1202026.

Roffe, D. (2016) ‘Domesday Now : a View from the Stage’, in D. Roffe and K.S.B. Keats-Rohan (eds) Domesday now: new approaches to the inquest and the book. Martlesham: The Boydell Press, pp. 7–60.

Rokem, N. (2024) ‘What not to digitize: the meaning of the empty pages in the archive of Arieh Ludwig Strauss’, Jewish Culture & History, 25(1), pp. 171–185. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1462169X.2024.2306006.

Rosvally, D. (2021) ‘Sifting and Sorting: An Introduction to Database Methods and Pedagogy using Humanist Texts’, Early Modern Studies Journal, 7, p. [unpaged].

Rottmann, M. (2024) ‘“Auf meinem Wege liegen Bücherleichen”: Ernst A. Simon’s book fragments on German-Jewish interactions (Theodor Fontane, Sigmund Freud, Heinrich Heine)’, Jewish Culture & History, 25(1), pp. 122–150. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1462169X.2024.2314357.

Roughley, C. and Anderson, M. (2024) ‘Counting Crofters: Digitised Census Enumerators Books as a New Source for the Later Nineteenth Century’, Northern Scotland, ns 15(1), pp. 51–75. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/nor.2024.0304.

Rousseau, A. (2021) ‘Représenter l’expérience vécue dans les Magdalen Laundries en passant par la « voie longue » de l’herméneutique et l’analyse de textes assistée par ordinateur [Representing the experience lived in the Magdalen Laundries through the “long way” of hermeneutics and computer-assisted analysis of texts]’, Études irlandaises, 46(1), pp. 123–141.

Rumbold, V. (2017) ‘Interpretation, Agency, Entropy: Annotating Pope’s Dunciads’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 11(2), pp. 174–198. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2017.0191.

Rutherford, E. (2021) ‘Researching and Teaching with British Newsreels’, 20th Century British History, 32(3), pp. 441–461. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwab014.

Ryan, L., 1943- (2021) ‘Newspaper evidence of colonial frontier massacres in Australia’, History Australia, 18(4), pp. 845–849. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14490854.2021.1993747.

Sangster, M., Baston, K. and Aitken, B. (2021) ‘Reconstructing Student Reading Habits in Eighteenth-Century Glasgow: Enlightenment Systems and Digital Reconfigurations’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 54(4), pp. 935–955.

Scates, B. (2019) ‘How war came home: reflections on the digitisation of Australia’s repatriation files’, History Australia, 16(1), pp. 190–209. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14490854.2018.1558077.

Schultz, J. (University lecturer) (2016) ‘The impact of Arabic on the English lexicon since 1801’, Token: A Journal of English Linguistics, 5, pp. 75–92.

Schweitzer, F.M. (2020) ‘Notes from the field’, The Historian [Albuquerque, NM etc.], 82(1), pp. 3–6. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00182370.2020.1723969.

Scott, J. (2023) ‘Codes and Crowns.’, History Today, 73(4), pp. 16–18.

Searle, A., Turnbull, J. and Adams, W.M. (2023) ‘The digital peregrine: A technonatural history of a cosmopolitan raptor’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 48(1), pp. 195–212. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12566.

Seipp, D.J. (2016) ‘Big Legal History and the Hundred Year Test’, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, 34(4), pp. 857–871. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248016000377.

Sequera, H. (2019) ‘Reconstructing William Byrd’s consort songs from the Paston lutebooks: a historically informed and computational approach to comparative analysis and musical idiom’, Early Music, 47(4), pp. 455–477. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/em/caz069.

Shep, S.J. and Owen, R. (2019) ‘Unexpected Connections: Reimagining the Nineteenth Century through Generative Art’, Open Library of Humanities, 5(1), p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.220.

Shuttleton, D.E. (2016) ‘’Please put a date to your letters … ’ : The Textual Evidence for Dr William Cullen’s Management of His Epistolary Practice’, Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 39(1), pp. 59–77. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/1754-0208.12260.

Signorello, S. (2020) ‘The Digitization of Medieval Western Manuscripts at Wellcome Collection’, in A. Campagnolo (ed.) Book conservation and digitization: the challenges of dialogue and collaboration: The Challenges of Dialogue and Collaboration. Leeds: Arc Humanities Press (Collection development, cultural heritage, and digital humanities), pp. 117–126. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/9781641890540-009.

Silva, A. (ed.) (2020) The brand of print: marketing paratexts in the early English book trade. Leiden: Brill (Library of the written word. The handpress world). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004410244.

Simon, M., 1975- (2021) ‘The Experience of Scholarly Labor: Recording Affect in Transcription’, Early Modern Studies Journal, 7, p. [unpaged].

Sloan, K. and Nyhan, J. (2021) ‘Enlightenment architectures: the reconstruction of Sir Hans Sloane’s cabinets of “Miscellanies”’, Journal of the History of Collections, 33(2), pp. 199–218. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fhaa034.

Smail, R., Gregory, I.N. and Taylor, J.E. (2019) ‘Qualitative Geographies in Digital Texts: Representing Historical Spatial Identities in The Lake District’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 13(1–2), pp. 28–38. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2019.0229.

Smith, B., 1963- and Jones, M. (2022) ‘The Irish Receipt Roll of 1301–2: Data Science and Medieval Exchequer Practice’, Irish Economic and Social History, 49(1), pp. 3–29. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/03324893211067419.

Smith, C. et al. (2017) ‘Making New South Wales Religion, Education and Population Statistics Accessible’, Local Population Studies, 98, pp. 87–91.

Smith, H., Bennett, R.J. and Radicic, D. (2018) ‘Towns in Victorian England and Wales : a new classification’, Urban History, 45(4), pp. 568–594. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963926818000020.

Smith, M. (2024) ‘Dissimulation as an Editorial Strategy in the Life of William Wilberforce’, Studies in Church History, 60, pp. 387–407. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/stc.2024.18.

Smith, W.H. and Butler, C.L. (2019) ‘Statistical analysis and the boundaries of the genre of Old English Prayer’, in E. Turnator, T. Mahoney-Steel, and M.E. Davis (eds) Meeting the Medieval in a Digital World. Baltimore (MD): Project Muse (Medieval media cultures), pp. 11–26.

Smits, T. (2016) ‘Making the News National : Using Digitized Newspapers to Study the Distribution of the Queen’s Speech by W. H. Smith & Son, 1846–1858’, Victorian Periodicals Review, Victorian Periodicals Review, 49(4), pp. 598–625. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/vpr.2016.0041.

Smits, T. (2017) ‘Looking for The Illustrated London News in Australian Digital Newspapers : Colonial readership and the formation of imagined communities, 1842–1872’, Media History, 23(1), pp. 80–99. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13688804.2016.1196585.

Smurra, R. and Orlandi, M. (2022) ‘The role of women in the shaping of civic identity in Edwardian Leicester: Edith Gittins and the Anglo-Saxon past of Æthelflæd’s fountain. Historical reconstruction and 3D visualization’, Urban History, 49(2), pp. 335–363. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963926821000158.

Smyth, H.K. (2022) ‘“Permanent Reminders”: Digital Archives and the Irish Commemorative Impulse’, Éire-Ireland, 57(1–2), pp. 166–188. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/eir.2022.0008.

Soetaert, A. and Soen, V. (2020) ‘A Catholic International or Transregional Catholicism? The Printing Press, English Catholics, and Their Hosts in the Early Modern Ecclesiastical Province of Cambrai’, Catholic Historical Review, 106(4), pp. 551–575. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/cat.2020.0055.

Sperrazza, W. (2024) ‘The Power of 0: Computing and Modeling Silence in Shakespeare’s Drama’, Shakespeare Quarterly, 75(3), pp. 229–255.

Spongberg, M., 1965-, Walker, G.L., 1942- and Whipp, K. (2017) ‘Female Biography and the Digital Turn’, Women’s History Review, Women’s History Review, 26(5), pp. 705–720. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2016.1167342.

Stahmer, C.G. (2016) ‘Digital Analytical Bibliography : Ballad Sheet Forensics, Preservation, and the Digital Archive’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 79(2), pp. 263–278.

Starzec, A. et al. (2024) ‘Built-up areas of nineteenth-century Britain. An integrated methodology for extracting high-resolution urban footprints from historical maps’, Historical Methods, 57(1), pp. 1–19. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2024.2324163.

Stoneman, W.P. (2016) ‘The Linked Collections of William Bragge (1823–1884) of Birmingham and Dr. Thomas Shadford Walker (1834–1885) of Liverpool’, Manuscript Studies, 1(2), pp. 263–272.

Sullivan, E. (Cultural historian) (2018) ‘Shakespeare, Social Media, and the Digital Public Sphere : Such Tweet Sorrow and A Midsummer Night’s Dreaming’, Shakespeare, 14(1), pp. 64–79. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/17450918.2018.1439092.

Szreter, B. (2018) ‘Global Immigration to England and Wales, 1851–1911. Evidence from the Census’, in M. Ruiz (ed.) International migrations in the Victorian era. Leiden: Brill (Studies in global migration history), pp. 241–277. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004366398_011.

Tatler, B.W. et al. (2016) ‘Looking at Domestic Textiles : An Eye-Tracking Experiment Analysing Influences on Viewing Behaviour at Owlpen Manor’, Textile History, Textile History, 47(1), pp. 94–118. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00404969.2016.1144865.

Taylor, J.E. and Gregory, I.N. (eds) (2022) Deep mapping the literary Lake District: a geographical text analysis / Joanna E. Taylor, Ian N. Gregory. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press (Aperçus). Available at: https://doi.org/10.36019/9781684483792.

Taylor, J.E., Gregory, I.N. and Donaldson, C. (2018) ‘Combining Close and Distant Reading: A Multiscalar Analysis of the English Lake District’s Historical Soundscape’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 12(2), pp. 163–182. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2018.0220.

Thain, M. (2016) ‘Perspective : Digitizing the Diary – Experiments in Queer Encoding (A Retrospective and a Prospective)’, Journal of Victorian Culture, Journal of Victorian Culture, 21(2), pp. 226–241. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2016.1156014.

The Age of Entrepreneurship: Business Proprietors, Self-employment and Corporations Since 1851 / Robert J. Bennett, Harry Smith, Carry van Lieshout, Piero Montebruno and Gill Newton. (2019). London: Routledge (Routledge International Studies in Business History). Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315160375.

Thomas, J. (ed.) (2017) Nineteenth-Century Illustration and the Digital: Studies in Word and Image. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan (The digital nineteenth century). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-58148-4.

Thompson-Baum, C. (2020) ‘Large-scale digitization at The National Archives’, in A. Campagnolo (ed.) Book conservation and digitization: the challenges of dialogue and collaboration: The Challenges of Dialogue and Collaboration. Leeds: Arc Humanities Press (Collection development, cultural heritage, and digital humanities), pp. 97–104. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/9781641890540-007.

Tibbs, A. (ed.) (2022) Facing the enemy?: a GIS study of 1st century Roman fortifications in the Scottish landscape / Andrew Tibbs. Oxford: BAR Publishing (BAR, British ser. Archaeology of Roman Britain). Available at: https://doi.org/10.30861/9781407360157.

Ton, M.B. (2019) ‘Magic lantern shows through a macroscopic lens: topic modelling and mapping as methods for media archaeology’, Early Popular Visual Culture, 17(3–4), pp. 341–360. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/17460654.2019.1705651.

Toner, G. and Han, X. (eds) (2019) Language and chronology: text dating by machine learning. Leiden: Brill (Language and Computers). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004410046.

Torabi, K. (2019) ‘If (not “Quantize, Click, and Conclude”) Digital methods in Medieval studies’, in E. Turnator, T. Mahoney-Steel, and M.E. Davis (eds) Meeting the Medieval in a Digital World. Baltimore (MD): Project Muse (Medieval media cultures), pp. 27–44.

Towsey, M.R.M. (2016) ‘Book use and sociability in lost libraries of the eighteenth century : towards a union catalogue’, in F. Bruni and A. Pettegree (eds) Lost books: reconstructing the print world of pre-industrial Europe. Leiden: Brill (Library of the written word), pp. 414–438.

Trettien, W. (ed.) (2021) Cut/copy/paste: fragments from the history of bookwork / Whitney Trettien. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Tuffin, R. (2020) ‘Landscapes of production and punishment: LiDAR and the process of feature identification and analysis at a Tasmanian convict station’, Australian Archaeology, 86(1), pp. 37–56. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2020.1749406.

Tuffin, R. and Gibbs, M., 1966- (2019) ‘Repopulating Landscapes: Using Offence Data to Recreate Landscapes of Incarceration and Labour at the Port Arthur Penal Station, 1830–1877’, International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 13(1–2), pp. 155–181. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2019.0234.

Turner, R. and Jones-Jenkins, C. (2016) ‘The history and digital reconstruction of Holt Castle, Denbighshire’, Archaeologia Cambrensis, 165, pp. 241–282.

Tyrkkö, J. (2017) ‘New Methods of Bringing Image Data into Historical Linguistics: A Case Study with Medical Writing 1500–1700’, Studia Neophilologica, 89(sup1), pp. 90–108. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00393274.2017.1376595.

Underhill, J. (2017) ‘Sound and Vision in the Hereford Screen’, British Art Studies, British Art Studies, 5. Available at: https://doi.org/10.17658/issn.2058-5462/issue-05/junderhill/000.

Vale, M. (2023) ‘The Gascon Rolls: An Anglo-French Project and Its Vicissitudes, 1885–2021. A Personal Memoir’, Nottingham Medieval Studies, 67, pp. 265–278. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1484/J.NMS.5.136401.

Vamplew, W. (2016) ‘Successful workers or exploited labour? Golf professionals and professional golfers in Britain 1888–1914’, Sport in Society, 19(3), pp. 400–424. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2015.1059034.

Van Hattum, M. (2017) ‘The language of “Ribbonmen” : A CDA approach to identity construction in nineteenth-century Irish English threatening notices’, Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 3(2), pp. 241–262. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsl-2017-1007.

Van Puymbroeck, B. (2020) ‘Periodical Studies, Intermediality, and Cinema: Film in The Listener’, in L. Van de Vijver and D. Biltereyst (eds) Mapping movie magazines: digitization, periodicals and cinema history. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan (Global cinema), pp. 57–76. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-33277-8_4.

Vareschi, M. and Burkert, M., 1987- (2016) ‘Archives, Numbers, Meaning : The Eighteenth-Century Playbill at Scale’, Theatre Journal, 68(4), pp. 597–613. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/tj.2016.0108.

Vartiainen, T. (2017) ‘Referential NPs as subtle expressions of attitude in infanticide trials, 1674–1775’, Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 3(2), pp. 173–196. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsl-2017-1006.

Vartiainen, T., Nevala, M. and Hintikka, M. (2017) ‘Linguistic representations of the social margins in Early and Late Modern English’, Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 3(2), pp. 135–150. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/jhsl-2017-1000.

Walker, A. (2023) ‘Interrogating the Growth of a City: Exploring Lincoln’s Building Application Database, 1866-1939’, Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, 53, pp. 129–150.

Wallis, P. and Pirohakul, T. (2016) ‘Medical Revolutions? : The Growth of Medicine in England, 1660–1800’, Journal of Social History, 49(3), pp. 510–531. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/jsh/shv091.

Ward, R. (2021) ‘State Authority and Convict Agency in the Paper Panopticon: The Recording of Convict Ages in Nineteenth-Century England and Australia’, Australian Historical Studies, 52(4), pp. 509–532. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1031461X.2020.1858896.

Ward, R. and Williams, L. (2016) ‘Initial views from the Digital Panopticon : Reconstructing Penal Outcomes in the 1790s’, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, Law and History Review, 34(4), pp. 893–928. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248016000365.

Warner-Smith, A.L. (2020) ‘“Views from Somewhere”: Mapping Nineteenth-Century Cholera Narratives’, International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 24(4), pp. 877–901. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-019-00530-x.

Warren, C.N., 1977- et al. (2021) ‘Canst Thou Draw Out Leviathan with Computational Bibliography? New Angles on Printing Thomas Hobbes’ “Ornaments” Edition’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 54(4), pp. 827–859.

Watson, W.E., Watson, J.F. and Schandelmeir, E.H. (2021) ‘Dead Men Tell Tales: History and Science at Duffy’s Cut’, in C. Travis, F. Ludlow, and F. Gyuris (eds) Historical geography, GIScience and textual analysis: landscapes of time and place. Cham: Springer (Historical geography and geosciences), pp. 33–50. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-37569-0_3.

Wegge, S.A., Anbinder, T. and Ó Gráda, C. (2017) ‘Immigrants and savers : A rich new database on the Irish in 1850s New York’, Historical Methods, 50(3), pp. 144–155. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01615440.2017.1319773.

Wegman, I. (2016) ‘The Causes of Common-Edge Drift : A Norfolk Study’, Norfolk Archaeology, 47(3), pp. 356–373.

Wegman, I. (2020) ‘“A truly sublime appearance”: using GIS to find the traces of pre-colonial landscapes and land use’, History Australia, 17(1), pp. 59–86. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14490854.2020.1717348.

Whearty, B. (2015) ‘The Leper on the Road to Canterbury : The Summoner, Digital Manuscripts, and Possible Futures’, Mediaevalia, 36–37, pp. 223–261. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/mdi.2016.0001.

Whearty, B. (2019) ‘Adam Scriveyn in cyberspace : loss, labour, ideology, and infrastructure in interoperable reuse of digital manuscript metadata’, in E. Turnator, T. Mahoney-Steel, and M.E. Davis (eds) Meeting the Medieval in a Digital World. Baltimore (MD): Project Muse (Medieval media cultures), pp. 157–202.

White, P. (2022) ‘The Many Lives of Darwin’s Letters’, Journal of the History of Biology, 55(2), pp. 395–401. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-022-09685-6.

Wilcox, J., 1960- (2016) ‘The Sensory Cost of Remediation; or, Sniffing in the Gutter of Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts’, in S.C. Thomson and M.D.J. Bintley (eds) Sensory perception in the medieval west. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols (Utrecht Studies in Medieval Literacy), pp. 27–51. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1484/M.USML-EB.5.109503.

Wilkinson, C., 1990- (2024) ‘Out of the Shadowlands : The Digitization of Early Indian Newspapers’, American Historical Review, 129(1), pp. 159–163. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhad497.

Williams, L. and Godfrey, B.S. (2016) ‘Bringing the Prisoner into View : English and Welsh Census Data and the Victorian Prison Population’, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, Australian Historical Studies, 47(3), pp. 398–413. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1031461X.2016.1208258.

Williams, L. and Godfrey, B.S. (2020) ‘“Find the Lady” : Tracing and Describing the Incarcerated Female Population of London in 1881’, in M. van der Heijden, M. Pluskota, and S. Muurling (eds) Women’s criminality in Europe, 1600-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 114–133. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108774543.006.

Wilson, E., 1984- (2016) ‘Social Background and Promotion Prospects in the Royal Navy, 1775–1815’, English Historical Review, 131(550), pp. 570–595. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cew174.

Winters, J. (2019) ‘Web archives and (digital) history : a troubled past and a promising future?’, in N. Brügger and I. Milligan (eds) The SAGE Handbook of Web History. Sage, pp. 593–606.

Wisnicki, A.S. (2016) ‘Digital Victorian studies today’, Victorian Literature and Culture, Victorian Literature and Culture, 44(4), pp. 975–992. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1060150316000322.

Wisnicki, A.S. et al. (2016) ‘Spectrally Illuminating the Hidden Material History of David Livingstone’s 1870 Field Diary’, Victorian Studies, 58(2), pp. 243–257. Available at: https://doi.org/10.2979/victorianstudies.58.2.06.

Withers, D.M. (2017) ‘Ephemeral Feminist Histories and the Politics of Transmission within Digital Culture’, Women’s History Review, Women’s History Review, 26(5), pp. 678–691. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2016.1166887.

Wolf, E.S. (2024) ‘The Second Installment of Arthur Lee’s “Suppressed” Antislavery Essay, the Public Sphere, and the Digital Archive’, William and Mary Quarterly, 81(3), pp. 567–596. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1353/wmq.2024.a933655.

Wood, G., Martin, D. and Taylor, L. (2023) ‘Ebb and flow: Structural and spatial change in Victoria’s brewing industry, 1870–1900’, AsiaPacific Economic History Review, 63(3), pp. 355–381. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/aehr.12262.

Woods, J. and Ludvigsen, J.A.L. (2022) ‘The changing faces of fandom? Exploring emerging “online” and “offline” fandom spaces in the English Premier League’, Sport in Society, 25(11), pp. 2234–2249. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2021.1904902.

Wright, R.K. (2019) ‘Typewriting Mass Observation Online: Media Imprints on the Digital Archive’, History Workshop Journal, 87, pp. 118–138. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/hwj/dbz005.

Yee, J. and Dennett, A. (2022) ‘Stratifying and predicting patterns of neighbourhood change and gentrification: An urban analytics approach’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 47(3), pp. 770–790. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12522.

Zacek, N.A. (2016) ‘Reading the Rebels and Mining the Maps : Digital Humanities and Cartographic Narratives’, American Historical Review, American Historical Review, 121(1), pp. 167–175. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/121.1.167.

Zegarra, L.F. (2022) ‘Living costs and welfare ratios in Western Europe: new estimates using a linear programming model’, European Review of Economic History, 26(1), pp. 38–61. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ereh/heab007.