


There are 8 state of the art public computers and 4 computer kiosks at the Center for Jewish History that offer access to more than 40 paid subscription databases, with many resources unique to the Center. Benefiting scholars of Jewish Studies as well as generalists, and genealogists the electronic resources are available onsite only in the Lillian Goldman Reading Room reference complex as well as in the Reading Room itself.
To help you begin your research prior to coming down to the Center, we have compiled a list of some free resources that may be of use.
Holocaust Resources: An Annotated Bibliography of Archival Holdings at the Center for Jewish History
Made possible through the generous support of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany, Inc.
Women In Daily Life: An Online Bibliography
This selected bibliography of Center for Jewish History partner collections which highlight Women in Daily Life represents all of the areas in which Jewish women have played a major role including: domestic life, social life, and formal occupations. (Made possible by a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission.)
A web site offered by the University of Toronto Libraries with a wide selection of valuable links to scholarly resources on the internet and in print.
ADAJE: American Digital Archive of the Jewish Experience is an electronic repository of digitized American Jewish periodicals. The first content available is the Society's journal, American Jewish History, for the years 1893-1978. The journal is fully (and freely) searchable as a ProQuest database.
This Website is dedicated to Jewish theatre and performing arts. It aims to promote, cultivate, and distribute the study of Jewish theatre and performing arts, to provide an interactive network for its audiences, and to encourage original Jewish theater.
The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives is committed to preserving a documentary heritage of the religious, organizational, economic, cultural, personal, social and family life of American Jewry.
The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives is committed to preserving a documentary heritage of the religious, organizational, economic, cultural, personal, social and family life of American Jewry.
The site includes an interactive archival timeline: historic films and TV shows, and broadcasts from the golden age of American radio. The oral history collection includes conversations with and about legendary Jewish athletes, comedians, Nobel Prize winning writers, and political leaders. Also included are all volumes of the American Jewish Year Book from 1899 to the present.
American Memory provides free and open access through the Internet to written and spoken words, sound recordings, still and moving images, prints, maps, and sheet music that document the American experience. It is a digital record of American history and creativity.
The Austrian National Library offers historic newspaper-pages online. AustriaN Newspapers Online (ANNO) covers the period from 1716 until 1936. At the moment there are over 3.5 million pages of 70 different newspapers and journals available online.
The Felix Posen Bibliographic Project on Antisemitism includes works published throughout the world about anti-Semitism – books, dissertations, master's theses, and articles from periodicals and collections (presently about 40,000 items). In addition, there is a database on "The Jewish Question in German-Speaking Countries, 1848-1914" of ca. 4,500 references.
Arcade database includes more than 800,000 records that range from ancient Egypt to contemporary art, including exhibition and auction sale catalogs, monographs, periodicals, rare books, photographs, and archival materials.
The Association of Jewish Libraries promotes Jewish literacy through enhancement of libraries and library resources, and through leadership for the profession and practitioners of Judaica librarianship.
The Aufbau Indexing Project includes a database which contains about 47,600 names that appeared in Aufbau between 1941 and 2003. It also includes useful links to Aufbau Online (vital records) & the German National Library (Aufbau’s digitized issues).
Aufbau began publishing, in 1934, as a newsletter for the German-Jewish Club of New York. In its early years Aufbau’s pages were filled with articles regarding Jewish culture, club activities, and tips for new Jewish immigrants; however, with the coming of World War II the publication began focusing more on international affairs. Aufbau was an important anti-Nazi periodical, and it published such well known figures as Hannah Arendt and Albert Einstein. The entire run of the periodical is now available online.
Austria Genealogy Links, a web page on Genealogylinks.net, links to various Austrian resources including cemeteries, marriage records, military records, passenger lists, and telephone directories.
A comprehensive bibliography of Austrian historical research publications (published 1945 ff).
The database contains information concerning the fates of more than 62,000 Austrian Jews who were killed in the Holocaust.
The Consolidated Jewish Surname Index (CJSI) is a gateway to information on more than 500,000 different surnames, mostly Jewish, that appear in 34 different databases.
A quick and reliable reference from a wide variety of sources provided via the web.
Project Ben Yehuda aims to put on line works of Hebrew literature which are out of copyright, or which the living authors approved for posting. (In Hebrew.)
The Berlin Directory provides information about residents, businesses, associations, societies, places of interest, public authorities, business advertisements, and real estate offers in the city of Berlin – listed alphabetically by both name and street. (In German)
A captivating glossary of Biblical names and characters with descriptions and explanations.
A comprehensive bibliography of all books printed in the Hebrew Language between 1473 and 1960, with over 100,000 titles and 12,000 authors.
This online collection makes available a rich collection of photographs of Jews in Switzerland. These images capture the lives of Swiss Jews in a variety of scenarios, including: politics, economics, society, culture, religion, family, and other important areas. The collection consists primarily of images from the end of the 19th century through the 1950s. Please note that this resource is in German.
A genealogy guide for finding vital records.
BHO is a database in English on the history of the printed book and libraries. It contains over 31,000 titles of books and articles on the history of the printed book worldwide.
The British Library’s 19th Century British Library Newspaper website. The site contains millions of articles from 49 London, national and regional newspaper titles (1800 - 1900), and thousands of illustrations, maps, tables, and photographs.
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle newspaper is being digitized by the Brooklyn Public Library. The first part is available online and covers the period from October 26, 1841 to December 31, 1902, representing half of the Eagle's years of publication.
CastleGarden.org offers free access to a database of information on 10 million immigrants from 1830 through 1892, the year Ellis Island opened.
The database includes headstone inscriptions from Jewish cemeteries throughout the UK. Also included are records from various sources such as census returns, wills, birth and marriage registers, and many more.
The Center for Jewish Art at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem is dedicated to the preservation of the Jewish artistic heritage. Its activities include documentation, research, education, and publishing.
The Center for Research Libraries (CRL) is a consortium of North American universities, colleges, and independent research libraries. The consortium acquires and preserves newspapers, journals, documents, archives, and other traditional and digital resources for research and teaching and makes them available to member institutions through interlibrary loan and electronic delivery.
Established formally in 1969, the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People (CAHJP) was founded in 1938 as the Jewish Historical General Archives. Its aim is the reconstruction of an unbroken chain of historical documentation, reflecting the collective past of the Jewish people.
The Central Zionist Archives in Israel has an online catalog of their holdings, which includes various materials: files, maps, photographs, books, newspapers and periodicals, audios, and microfilms. CZA Website includes Family Research information which will be in the interest of any genealogist.
Centropa.org is a Vienna and Budapest-based non-profit organization, which aims to preserve Jewish memory in Central and Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, the Balkans and the Baltics. Centropa includes an interactive database of Jewish memory: Jewish Witness to a European Century which will be of interest of any family researcher.
The Library of Agudas Chassidei Chabad Ohel Yosef Yitzchak Lubavitch is one of the most distinguished Judaic libraries, and contains approximately 250,000 books, mostly aged and rare. There are around 200,000 books in Hebrew and Yiddish, with the remaining 50,000 books in a variety of other languages.
Children in the Ghetto portrays life during the Holocaust from the viewpoint of children who lived in the ghetto, while attempting to make the complex experience of life in the ghetto as accessible as possible to today’s children.
This site allows you to search and view newspaper pages from 1880-1922 and find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present.
Online archives of digitized and fully searchable German Jewish periodicals from 1806 to 1938. There are well over 100 journals, yearbooks, reports, etc. from Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia.
The purpose of the site is to provide a collection point for materials (stories, histories, photographs, lists, maps, links, etc.) that are of interest to list members and other researchers concerned with genealogy and the history of the Jewish community in the Czernowitz - Sadagora area.
This database brings together for the first time in searchable illustrated form the remaining registration cards and photographs produced by the ERR covering more than 20,000 art objects taken from Jews in German-occupied France and in Belgium.
The David Rumsey Map Collection includes over 37,000 historical maps and images, particularly rare maps and similar cartographic materials from the 18th and 19th century. The holdings of the collection are particularly strong in North and South American maps.
This website is a directory of online death indexes listed by state and county. Included are death records, death certificate indexes, death notices & registers, obituaries, probate indexes, and cemetery & burial records. Also included is information about searching the Social Security Death Index online.
The Digital Monument to the Jewish Community in the Netherlands is an Internet monument dedicated to preserving the memory of all the men, women, and children who were persecuted as Jews during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands and did not survive the Shoah.
DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals) is a database for free, web-based, peer-reviewed journals in a wide array of subjects. Journals include among others: "Women in Judaism: A multidisciplinary journal", the "Journal of Hebrew Scriptures", and "Jewish Studies, an Internet Journal."
European History Primary Sources (EHPS) is an index of scholarly websites that offer online access to primary sources on the history of Europe.
The Early New York Synagogue Archives presents materials relating to three significant Manhattan synagogues: Shearith Israel, B’nai Jeshrun, and Ansche Chesed. This project is a collaboration between the library of the Jewish Theological Seminary, The American Jewish Historical Society, and The Center for Jewish History.
The database includes Passenger Lists and Naturalization Records.
EIRI has more than 100,000 records and around 20,000 different surnames of individuals. The IGS has continued to search for documents to enlarge this database that will cover the period of the resettlement of Eretz Israel. The indexes that are included cover the Ottoman Empire Period, World War I, the British Mandate Period, and the State of Israel.
European History Primary Sources (EHPS) is an index of scholarly websites that offer online access to primary sources on the history of Europe. It is a joint initiative of the Library and the Department of History and Civilisation of the European University Institute. It is also part of the World Wide Web Virtual Library - History that is hosted at the EUI. You can search for primary resources by the following categories: country, language, period, subject, type of source, combined category, and free text.
By presenting information on cemeteries – from around the world – Find a Grave acts as a valuable search tool for those looking for information on the deceased. Find a Grave contains information pertaining to more than 400,000 cemeteries in over 200 different countries.
Genealogy Indexer was created in August 2008 by the genealogist Logan Kleinwaks. It includes historical directories, Yizkor Books, military collections, and geographic dictionaries.
Genealogy Indexer was created in August 2008 by the genealogist Logan Kleinwaks. It includes historical directories, Yizkor Books, military collections, and geographic dictionaries.
Scanned “Seforim” (Rabbinic books in Hebrew) and selected issues of Hebrew journals published in America throughout the 20th century.
Hessen Regional History Information System (LAGIS) Website links to various sources and topics pertaining to Hesse (Hessen), Germany, such as maps, historical gazetteers, and Jewish cemeteries.
The bibliography is a compilation of materials drawn from the partner organizations of the Center for Jewish History (CJH): the American Jewish Historical Society (AJHS), the American Sephardi Federation (ASF), the Leo Baeck Institute (LBI), the Yeshiva University Museum (YUM), and the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research (YIVO); the materials are accessible through the Lillian Goldman Reading Room (Reading Room). All archival collections containing any information on the Holocaust, catalogued as of May 2006, are included in the bibliography.
These recordings are personal accounts of the Holocaust from Jewish survivors living in Britain. The interviews were selected from a much larger oral history project, the Living Memory of the Jewish Community, which recorded testimony between 1988-2000.
A work in progress of the Mandel Institute of Jewish Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, the Index will eventually encompass the major Yiddish periodicals from the beginning of the modern Yiddish press up to the Holocaust. Here, the user can get a solid bibliographical picture of the journalistic and literary output of the major figures in Yiddish literature.
The International Children’s Digital Library (ICDL) is a collection of thousands of children’s books from around the world, all freely available to be read online. The goal of the ICDL is to provide children with a deeper understanding of the world by exposing them to the stories of different cultures. The ICDL collection consists of books from numerous different countries in dozens of different languages (including English, Hebrew, Yiddish, and many others).
Comprehensive bibliography of German historical research publications (published 1986ff ) compiled by the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften.
Hebcal Jewish Calendar contains links to an interactive Jewish calendar, Hebrew date converter, and other useful links.
A site with genealogical data and 60,000 photos of German-Jewish cemeteries. Please register with the site before accessing; registration is free of charge.
This resource provides a detailed database pertaining to more than 6,200 Jewish children arrested in Paris between 1942 and 1944. The Website is presented in the form of an interactive map of Paris showing the places where individual Jewish Children lived prior to their arrest. The content of this map is based upon Serge Klarsfeld's book Memorial of the Deportation of the Jews of France. Please note: this website is in French.
The JGS of New York, one of the largest Jewish genealogical societies, provides a database of Brooklyn naturalizations, a New York cemetery database, part of the New York City World War I Draft Board, and links to web pages of New York archival repositories.
The JGS of New York, one of the largest Jewish genealogical societies, provides a database of Brooklyn naturalizations, a New York cemetery database, part of the New York City World War I Draft Board, and links to web pages of New York archival repositories.
The site is geared toward people who have an interest in European History of the 30's and 40's. It provides a thorough outlook on exile, request for asylum, and the status of the Jewish refugees from the third Reich territory in France and Belgium.
A Web site containing the complete contents of the 12-volume Jewish Encyclopedia which was originally published between 1901-1906 by the Funk & Wagnalls Company.
This non-profit site is the central location for Jewish genealogy on the Internet. It consists of a great number of Research tools and databases, like the JewishGen Family Finder; the Holocaust Database, the Family Tree of the Jewish People, Town Finder, and various databases pertaining to several countries in Eastern and Central Europe, as well as Great Britain, Israel, South Africa, and the United States.
This non-profit site is the central location for Jewish genealogy on the Internet. It consists of a great number of Research tools and databases, like the JewishGen Family Finder; the Holocaust Database, the Family Tree of the Jewish People, Town Finder, and various databases pertaining to several countries in Eastern and Central Europe, as well as Great Britain, Israel, South Africa, and the United States.
The Portal to American Jewish History provides researchers with the opportunity to search through several collections containing important materials related to American Jewish history housed at a variety of institutions. Photographs, posters, archival materials, finding aids, and other materials can be searched for and viewed online.
Judaica Sounds Archives is available via Florida Atlantic University (FAU). It includes 78 rpm phongraph recordings, LP albums, cassette tapes, 8-track tapes, 45 rpm recordings, and CDs. The collection comprises cantorial and liturgical recordings, Yiddish-language, and Israeli and secular Hebrew music.
German language website to commemorate the vanished Jewish community of Halberstadt in Saxony-Anhalt (central Germany).
This website provides a wealth of biographical information related to Jewish physicians from Germany and the ways in which they contributed to the medical field in Israel. Please note: this resource is in German.
Kalliope is maintained at the Staatsbibliothek Berlin and continues Ludwig Denneke’s Die Nachlaesse in den Bibliotheken der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (archival collections in German libraries). The database contains more than 1 million autographs, more than 20,000 archival collections in more than 100 mainly libraries, archives, and museums in Germany.
Kodesh Snunit (from Snunit Project) is an inclusive database, which includes various resources such as the Bible, Mishnah, and Tosefta (supplement to the Mishnah). The database is exclusively in Hebrew.
The Library of Congress is the Unites States' oldest federal cultural institution, and the largest library in the world. It includes millions of books, maps and manuscripts, photographs, and recordings in its collections.
Lost Art Internet Database is a project of the Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste, Germany’s central office for the documentation of lost cultural property. It was set up jointly by the Government and the Länder of the Federal Republic of Germany, and registers cultural objects which as a result of persecution under the Nazi dictatorship and the Second World War were relocated, moved or seized, especially from Jewish owners.
The Louisiana Biography and Obituary Index references obituaries and death notices published in New Orleans newspapers from 1804-1972 and biographical information published in older Louisiana collective biographies.
The Israel Union List (ULI) contains MARC21 format cataloging records from all the university libraries of Israel as well as the national library and many college and special libraries.
A project of the University of Vienna to commemorate the Jewish affiliates of the University who were dismissed, exiled, and disenfranchised. The database includes more than 2,700 names of students, lecturers, and administration employees.
The Mémorial de la Shoah Musée, Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaine (Memorial to the Shoah Museum and Center of Contemporary Jewish Documentation) located in Paris is a website of interest to genealogists. It has a searchable database of Jews deported from France, Jews killed in France, persons executed or who died in the French internment camps, and Jewish resistance fighters who belonged to the network of the Jewish Combat Organization.
Mendele is a moderated mailing list dedicated to the lively exchange of views, information, and news related to the Yiddish language and Yiddish literature. In addition, it supports an ever-growing list of stories, poems, and essays that are available in Yiddish.
The Museum of Family History website is a virtual museum existing only in cyberspace. It offers many exhibitions as well as other resources of special interest to those who are interested in learning more about their own family history. The website includes Exhibitions, Holocaust Memorials, the Cemetery Project, Family History Theatre, the Yiddish World, Education and Research Center, and Postcards from Home.
The Virtual Shtetl is a museum without walls providing a social forum for all those interested in Polish Jewish Life. It depicts the history of Polish Jews, which in great part was created in towns (Yiddish: shtetl). On the website one can find information pertaining to the past and present little towns and large cities. The website presents both contemporary and also pre-war Poland.
MyHeritage.com boasts an integrated ancestor search that aggregates results across several genealogical databases. In addition the site provides free genealogy software including a Family Tree Builder as well as easy tools to create family websites.
The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration’s (NARA) online indexes to passenger arrivals during portions of the 19th century from Germany, Ireland, Italy, and Russia. Data about each immigrant includes name, age, and destination.
The National Library of Israel’s Web site. It includes an access to various catalogs, e-resources, Shapell Digitization Project, Ketubbot's Site Virtual Exhibition, the Early Hebrew Press Newspapers, and much more.
The digital library includes full text Yiddish titles that are available free on the National Yiddish Book Center’s Steven Spielberg Digital Library website.
A comprehensive biographical dictionary of persons who lived in Austria/ the Austro-Hungarian Empire or were associated with it and whose death dates are between 1815 and 1950. Access is limited to the name index only.
Old Maps Online gives users access to historical maps in numerous libraries around the world. By allowing users to search for maps by geographical location, Old Maps Online helps users find a variety of relevant items in multiple collections through a single search.
A variety of valuable genealogical resources, including the Ellis Island database, Castle Gardens database, census, and other vital records.
The Online Guide to the YIVO Archives provides users with access to information about the millions of items held in the archives of the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.
Memorial Book of Leipzig listing all deaths at the hands of the National Socialists 1933-1945, which includes Jews as well as non-Jews.
POBEDITELI lists names of over 1,000,000 surviving veterans of the Great Patriotic War.
Index of articles on Jewish Studies from the holdings of the Jewish National and University Library.
Named after the founder of Reconstructionist Judaism, the Mordecai M. Kaplan Library offers a collection of Judaica, Hebraica, and Reconstructionist movement publications.
reVILNA is an interactive digital mapping project that traces the history of the Vilna Ghetto from creation to destruction. Using maps, photographs, archival documents, and historical summaries, this resource provides an important insight into the history of the Vilna Ghetto.
This site includes a database of archival holdings of the archives in Belarus, Lithuania , Moldova, Poland, and Ukraine. Learn what archival sources are available for your ancestral town, and how to access them.
A special collection of published and unpublished documentation of the German-speaking emigration of 1933-45 at the German National Library, which contains the resources of the Sammlung Exil-Literatur 1933-1945 der Deutschen Nationalbibliotek in Leipzig, and the Deutsche Exilarchiv 1933-45, Frankfurt am Main.
SephardicGen is a comprehensive web site created by Jeff Malka. It includes many Sephardic genealogy resources, such as Sephardic names and a gazetteer of Sephardic communities. Also included are Sephardic family trees and Ladino resources.
The South African Jewish Database includes information about cemeteries, congregations, naturalizations, passenger arrival lists, vital records, and more.
Conducted by the American Sephardi Federation (ASF), the Survey of Sephardi/Mizrahi Archives in the Northeastern United States was a project undertaken to help locate archival collections, held across the Northeastern United States, that are relevant to the Sephardic experience. ASF plans on using this survey to help create a comprehensive research portal for Sephardi/Mizrahi studies.
Comprehensive list of the more than 3,000 synagogues in Germany and German-speaking countries until 1938 [information: address, number of Jews in the community, school, cemetery, mikveh, ritual slaughtering facilities, and the fate of the synagogue in 1938 (Kristallnacht).
The "Online Treasury of Talmudic Manuscripts" is a project of the Israeli National Library, which brings together images of major Talmudic manuscripts from libraries throughout the world. The manuscripts are indexed to enable access by standard citation (tractate, daf, and amud for the Talmud Bavli, and tractate, chapter and mishna for the Mishna). As the manuscripts are entirely in Hebrew and Aramaic, the navigation tools of this site are in Hebrew.
English Front-End for Tel Aviv Burial Database created by Stephen P. Morse. A transliteration tool for searching the deceased in Tel-Aviv cemeteries.
The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (The German National Library)Leipzig, Frankfurt am Main, Berlin provides access to "Juedische Zeitschriften in NS-Deutschland" (Jewish Periodicals in National Socialist Germany) in PDF format.
The Gershwind-Bennett Isaac Leeser Digitization Project—launched by the Penn Libraries—makes freely available online the collected papers of Isaac Leeser. Leeser was an important figure in 19th century American Jewish life: he was the editor of the first monthly Jewish publication in America, a founder of the nation’s first rabbinical college, an architect, and much more. This site makes available a wealth of material about Leeser that will also be of interest to those more broadly interested in the history of Jews in 19th century America.
The database, which presently is available only in Czech, seeks to inform and educate the public regarding the Jewish as well as the Sinti and Roma experience during the Holocaust. At this time the database contains primarily documents relating to Theresienstadt (Terezin) as well as to the history of the Jewish communities in the Czech Republic. An important feature is the option to search the “Database of Victims” (Databaze Obeti). Search prompts include the name of the victim, last address before deportation, name of the transport to Terezin or other ghetto, the place and date of death. If available a photograph of the victim is included. Other searchable options include “Sources” (Zdroje) and “History” (Dejiny) of anti-Semitism and the Holocaust.
Provided by NOVELNY: New York Online Virtual Electronic Library. Contains the full text of the Twayne Literary Masters books.
The USHMM website. It includes the library catalog, ITS (International Tracing Service), the Holocaust Survivors and Victims Resource Center, and much more.
The Yearbook is the flagship reference publication of the UN, and details the work and achievements of the organization over the course of each year. All 59 volumes that have been published, 1946-2005, are available to browse or search.
After a long history of attempts at preserving the microfilms that were originally produced in 1942, with the originals destroyed, the registers of Jewish vital records for the province of Baden-Wuerttemberg have now been digitized for use on the internet. The records that date back to the 19th century represent the most important genealogical resource for that time period.
This selected bibliography of the Center for Jewish History’s partner collections which highlight Women in Daily Life, represents all of the areas in which Jewish women have played a major role including: domestic life, social life, and formal occupations.
WorldCat.org allows you to search the collections of libraries in your community and thousands more around the world.
Yad Vashem library aims to collect all material published about the Holocaust, making it available for the public. The collection contains materials in all languages.
Yad Vashem's central database of Shoah victims' names. The database can be searched in Hebrew, Russian, and English.
The Lawrence Marwick Collection of Copyrighted Yiddish Plays at the Library of Congress includes more than 1,200 scripts, which were deposited by their authors or theatrical producers at the U.S. Copyright Office between 1909 and roughly 1950. 77 of these play scripts are digitized and accessible via “American Memory,” a website of the Library of Congress.
Yiddish Literature is a project of the National Digital Library of Poland with the cooperation of Shalom Foundation. It includes selective Yiddish Literature written before World War II by poets, novelists, and playwrights, such as Mendele Mojcher Sforim, Salomon Ettinger, and others.
The Collection "Yiddish Prints" contains about 800 Yiddish books from the Frankfurt University Library, ranging from the middle of the 16th century to the beginning of the 20th century. The collection contains women's bibles in Yiddish translation, liturgy, practical guide books, works on religious customs, legends, chronicles and classical Jewish fiction of famous Eastern European Yiddish authors, comprising an impressive number of extremely rare books and several unique editions.
Yiddish Sources aims to be a comprehensive source of information for those who are interested in using Yiddish materials in their research. The information is arranged in three main sections: reference, research, and events. A new addition is the Yiddish Studies Bibliography, an online bibliography which lists relevant scholarly literature in the field of Yiddish Studies.
Yiddishland: Countries, Cities, Towns, Rivers is YIVO’s online gazetteer which aims to include all Yiddish place names of Central and Eastern Europe in one source.
YIVO Encyclopedia provides a complete picture of the history and culture of Jews in Eastern Europe from the beginnings of their settlement in the region to the present.
Part of HebrewBooks.org, this is a collection of scanned “Seforim” (Rabbinic books in Hebrew) and selected issues of Hebrew journals published in America throughout the 20th Century. This link is to the selection of these books that come from the YIVO library.
The New York Public Library's Digital Yizkor Book Viewer digital images of complete Holocaust memorial books, exactly as issued. 650 of the 700 postwar Yizkor books at The New York Public Library are accessible online in their entirety.
The New York Public Library's Digital Yizkor Book Viewer digital images of complete Holocaust memorial books, exactly as issued. 650 of the 700 postwar Yizkor books at The New York Public Library are accessible online in their entirety.
The Mendel Gottesman Library of Hebraica/Judaica of Yeshiva University houses one of the world's great Judaic research collections. Its holdings are particularly strong in the fields of Rabbinics, Bible, Jewish history, Jewish philosophy, and Hebrew language.
The Mendel Gottesman Library of Hebraica/Judaica of Yeshiva University houses one of the world's great Judaic research collections. Its holdings are particularly strong in the fields of Rabbinics, Bible, Jewish history, Jewish philosophy, and Hebrew language.
ZDN is maintained at the Deutsche Bundesarchiv. The Database contains about 25,000 archival collections in archives in Germany and other countries and is based on / continues Mommsen's work "Die Nachlaesse in den deutschen Archiven" (archival collections in German archives).