Showing posts with label Database. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Database. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

LIBRARY: Central and Eastern European Online Library

C.E.E.O.L.

Welcome to the Central and Eastern European Online Library: C.E.E.O.L. is an online archive which provides access to full text PDF articles from 301 humanities and social science journals and re-digitized documents pertaining to Central, Eastern and South-Eastern European topics.

(To see all periodicals listed by subjects, please click HERE )

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Figures of the Week:
Total archived articles: 53.949
Total document pages: 580.698


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Homepage: www.ceeol.com

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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

INTERNET:

Caucasus WWW Virtual Library

Edited by Dr T. Matthew Ciolek
Est.: 24th March 1994. Last updated: 28 Aug 2007. This document is a part of
Asian Studies WWW Virtual Library. This facility is provided by the Australian National University (ANU) and is regularly updated.
The Caucasus section of the Asian Studies WWW Virtual Library covers online resources dealing with the following countries and regions: ARMENIA * AZERBAIJAN * CHECHNYA * GEORGIA

CAUCASUS
Caspian Crossroads: A Quarterly on Caspian Region (US-Azerbaijan Council, US)
[The latest developments in the region, incl. politics, geo-politics, business, economics, law, history and culture. The Council is committed to present information within a framework of objectivity Published since Winter 1995]
Caucasus Context - online journal (www.worldsecurityinstitute.org, US)
Caucasus Context is a comprehensive and multi-disciplinary journal focused on regional integration and cooperation between the three South Caucasus republics: Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. The journal will offer in-depth analyses and commentaries on issues pertinent to the region, including perspectives from individuals in the media, government, civil society and academia. We welcome guest opinions, articles, and contributions.
The Caucasus Foundation - Kafkas Vakfi (The Caucasus Foundation, Istanbul, Turkey)
[About Foundation; [News] Agency Caucasus; Caucasus Today; Analysis; Diaspora; Culture; History; Portraits Remembered; Library; Documents; Music; PhotoArchive; Discussion Platform; Chat Room; Links. A site with a strong anti-Russian profile. It publishes in English, Russian, Arabic and Turkish and has a very useful news section]
Caucasian Regional Studies Journal (Vrije U., Belgium)
E-quarterly of the Intl. Assoc. for Caucasian Regional Studies dealing with "collective security, inter-state relations, ethnic conflicts, democratization, civil society and economics" of Caucasus (Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, North Caucasian part of Russia). This is the first journal in the English and Russian languages exclusively devoted to the affairs of the Caucasus.]
Caucasus - The End of All the Earth (www2.bitstream.net, US?)
[Links to: Abkhazia (which is trying to break away from Georgia - Abkhazian Homepage, Abkhazian Factsheeet); Armenia; Azerbaijan; Chechnya; Georgia, Misc. Caucasian Links (Ethnic Map of Caucasus, Caucasian Languages, Contested Borders in the Caucasus, Khazaria Info Center) North Caucasus areas (Daghestan, Pyatigorsk, North Ossetia)]
Caucasus and Karachay-Balkar people (caucasus.8k.com, US?)
[CV and List of Articles by Dr.Ufuk Tavkul; Wide range of notes on a variety of antropological, ethnic identity and liguistics topics: A bi-lingual site (TR, EN). Unfortunately, the published notes do not provide references to data or research literature - ed.]]
Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst online journal
[The Analyst (launched in Nov 1999 at the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute, The Johns Hopkins University, Washington, DC., US) provides a rigorous, concise and nonpartisan forum where specialists can assess issues and events in the Central Asia-Caucasus region for a broad audience of business people, journalists, policy makers, government officials, diplomats and academics.]
Central Eurasia Project (Open Society Institute, US)
[The site covers Armenia, Azerbaijan, Mongolia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Contents: Latest News (updated every day), Media, Human Rights, Involvement of the United States, United Nations and other international bodies, Doing Business, Analytical Articles, Suggested Reading, and many links to other resources]
Contested Borders in the Caucasus (Vrije U., Belgium)
[An on-line book covering the ethnic conflicts in the Caucasus over Nagorno-Karabakh, South Ossetia, Abkhazia and Ingushetia, and the policies of the OSCE, the UN, Russia, Iran and Turkey in the Caucasus region]
International Institute for Caspian Studies (IICS) (Tehran, Iran)
[A non governmental research and consultancy institute (est. 1998) based in Tehran and aimed at promoting and undertaking scholarly studies regarding political, economic, social, cultural, environmental, and legal issues of the Caspian region.]
Japan-NIS Cooperation Committee Home Page (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Japan)
[Cooperation Committe is an international organization, based on an agreement among governments of Japan and 12 New Independent States (Former Soviet Union). It describes Japan's official assistance to NIS mainly through the Cooperation Committee in three languages, Russian(koi8), English and Japanese]
Articles from the French newspaper "Le Monde Diplomatique"
Caucase (www.ina.fr, France)
Local Times in the Near and Middle East (www.hilink.com.au,Australia)
Northern Caucasus, Russia (Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido U, Japan)
[Rostov Region; Krasnodar; Stavropol Krai; Dagestan; North Osetiya - Alaniya; Ingushetia; Adygheya; Karachay-Cherkessiya; Kabardino-Balkariya]
Russian & East European Studies - WWW VL (U.Pittsburgh,US)
[REESWeb - Russian & East European Studies: Resources by Discipline, Resources by Type, National Homepages, Major Sites and Archives of Information, WWW Servers in the Former Soviet Union, New Items, Related WWW VL Sites]
Transcaucaus Home Page (U. Frankfurt, Germany)
[A collection of links to Transcaucasus-related sites in the WWW, some useful links to Intl Organisations (NGOs as well as GOs), Peace and Conflict Research-Institutes, Elections, News(groups), Job openings, etc, and, finally, a collection of articles by V.Jacoby.]
West Asia History Archives (neal.ctstateu.edu,US)
[Covers government & other official documents dealing with: West Asia in General, Turkey, Israel and Palestine, Arabic states, Iraq, Iran, Azerbaijan]
see also
OMRI Daily Digest (www.omri.cz, Czech Republic)
see also
Turkish World home page (Research Centre for Turkestan and Azerbaijan (SOTA), Netherlands)
see also
Middle East Studies - WWW Virtual Library (Columbia,US)
[About this VL; Bibliographies on Middle East; Libraries with strong Middle East collections; Middle East Resources - Regional and by Country; Middle East Resources by Subject (Ancient and Medieval History, Biographical Information, Food, Languages, Literatures, Minorities, Music, Political Violence, Religion [Christianity, Druze Faith, Islam, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, other religions in the ME], Water, Weather, Women) Directories; Encyclopaedia of the Orient (CiAS); Electronic Journals and Newspapers on the Middle East; Graphics and Images on Islam and Middle East; Publishers and Bookstores on Middle East Studies]

Armenia
Status: Republic Capital: Yerevan
Armenia WWW Virtual Library (Arminco, Armenia)
[A www.arminco.com/ArmeniaVL.html site by Samvel Stepanian, est. 14 Oct 96, no longer in existence]

Azerbaijan
Status: Republic Capital: Baku
Azerbaijan WWW VL (U.Sth California, US)
[maintained since 5 Mar 1997 by: Adil T. Baguirov (baguirov@scf.usc.edu)]
Readers are invited to register with Azerbaijan WWW VL all relevant networked resources.

Checheno-Ingush Republic, Chechen Republic-Ichkeria (Chechnya)
Status: Autonomous Republic of Russian Federation Capital: Grozny
The Chechen HomeLand (www.smns.montclair.edu,US)
[Resources about Chechnya and Caucasus wars]
Chechen Info. File (ANU,Australia)
[16Kb document, Jan 1995, 'Who Are The Chechen ?' by Johanna Nichols (johanna@uclink.berkeley.edu)]
Chechen Republic (Russia) - Detailed Maps (CIA & U.Texas,US)
Chechen Republic Online (www.amina.com,???)
[Russia - Chechnya War; Images of Chechnya; People of Chechnya; Maps of the Chechen Republic; News Archives; Articles about Chechnya; Audio-Video Files]
Chechnya.co.uk (chechnya.co.uk, UK)
[We're a nonprofit, non-governmental project and we provide the web's most comprehensive independent resource for Chechnya-related news, analysis, culture, chat, business, events, meetings and much more. Now with the web's biggest links section!]
Informational, Cultural and Economic Representation of Chechen Republic Ichkeria in Finland
[News from Finland-based pro-Caucasian groups and associations]
Readers are invited to
register with this Virtual Library all relevant networked resources.

Georgia
Status: Republic Capital: Tbilisi
Link to
Georgia WWW VL (U. of Tennessee, US)
[maintained since 19 Feb 1998 till May 2005 by: David Zlotchenko (zlotchen--at--voyager.rtd.utk.edu)]
[A site no longer maintained. Archival copy is used instead.]

Georgia & South Caucasus (georgien.blogspot.com)
[Politik, Kultur, Geschichte, Wirtschaft, Internet und andere Aspekte ueber den Sued-Kaukasus - vor allem georgien // politic, culture, history, economy, internet and another aspects about south-caucasus - above all georgia // [A blog] posted by Ralph Haelbig ]

Readers are invited to register with Georgia WWW VL all relevant networked resources.
This WWW server is provided by the Internet Publications Bureau, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies at the Australian National University, Canberra.
Maintainer: Dr T. Matthew Ciolek (tmciolek@coombs.anu.edu.au), ANU, Canberra
Copyright 1994-2007 by T. Matthew Ciolek. This Web page may be linked to any other Web pages. Contents may not be altered.

This page has been tested for full accessibility

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

WISSENSCHAFT & REISELITERATUR:

Gia Gelaschwili: Deutsche Reisende in Georgien im 18. und 19. Jahrhundert
(Vortrag am 2.7.2007 im Institut für Vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft (Prof. Dr. Jost Gippert) an der JohannWolfgang Goethe-Universität/Frankfurt am Main. Der Vortragsstil wurde beibehalten.)

Für das Studium der Geschichte Georgiens sind neben georgischen Quellen die Berichte ausländischer Schriftsteller und Reisender von größter Bedeutung. Erst der Vergleich beider erlaubt ein wahres Bild. Insbesondere, soweit die Schilderungen von hochgebildeten wissenschaftlichen Reisenden stammen. Ich kann hier nur kurz wichtige Berichte von Ausländern aus früheren Zeiten streifen:
Die Erforschung der georgischen Vergangenheit ist ohne Heranziehung griechischer und byzantinischer Quellen unmöglich. Das gleiche gilt für persische, arabische und türkische Zeugnisse. Von großer Bedeutung sind zudem armenische Geschichtsschreiber, und nicht zuletzt sei auf russische Überlieferungen hingewiesen.
Weiter möchte ich wenigstens einige der bedeutendsten westeuropäischen Reisenden aus Italien, beziehungsweise Frankreich erwähnen, die im späten Mittelalter und in der Neuzeit Georgien bereisten und darüber berichteten: der Franzose Rubruk (≈1255), die Italiener Marco Polo (≈1295), Contarini (1474-76), Pietro della Valle (1615-23), Lamberti (1630-50), Castelli (1632-50) und die Franzosen Chardin (1672-73), Tournefort (1801), Gamba (1820-24).
Von den sowjetischen Forschern nenne ich M. Polievktov. Von ihm stammt die grundlegende Bibliographie („Die europäischen Reisenden im Kaukasus vom 13ten bis 18ten Jahrhundert“, Tiflis, 1935, und „Die europäischen Reisenden im Kaukasus 1800-1830“, Tiflis, 1946).
In den 50er Jahren des 20. Jahrhunderts gründete die Akademie der Wissenschaften Georgiens eine Kommission, die ausländische Quellen erforschte und zahlreiche Bücher veröffentlichte. Diese Arbeit wird bis heute fortgeführt.
Ich beschränke mich auf die deutschen Reisenden, die ab 1770 bis Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts sehr kenntnisreich über Georgien berichtet haben.
Die deutschen Quellen des 18. Jahrhunderts kann man in zwei Gruppen teilen: Die erste Gruppe bilden Teilnehmer an Expeditionen, die die russische Kaiserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften in Sankt Petersburg ausstattete. Sie führten einen politischen, ökonomischen Auftrag im Rahmen der russischen Expansion sowohl nach dem Osten wie nach dem Süden des Zarenreiches aus. Geleitet wurden diese Expeditionen von eingeladenen deutschen Wissenschaftlern, die regelmäßig zu Mitgliedern der Akademie ernannt wurden.
Die zweite Gruppe der Georgienreisenden kamen ohne staatlichen Auftrag, quasi als Privatgelehrte. Sie trieb allein Neugierde und Forscherdrang.

Der ganze Text: Deutsche Reisende in Georgien im 18. und 19. Jahrhundert

Quelle:
ARMAZI არმაზი
Kaukasische Sprachen und Kulturen: Elektronische Dokumentation
კავკასიური ენები და კულტურები: ელექტრონული დოკუმენტაცია
Caucasian Languages and Cultures: Electronic Documentation