British Society for Eighteenth Century Studies
Links to other sites
This page is a gateway to other sites of relevance and interest to
scholars and others with an interest in the eighteenth century. Please email BSECS if there is any link you would like to see added to the list.
1. General Eighteenth-century Links
The Voltaire Foundation.
Jack Lynch's Eighteenth-Century Resources Page
Mrs. Spectator's Coffee House:A list of weblogs and personal
websites of scholars, writers, and researchers working on the
long 18th Century
2. Academic Institutions
Queen’s University Belfast, Centre for Eighteenth-Century Studies
University of Bristol, Centre for Romantic Studies
University of Kent at Canterbury, Centre for Studies in the Long Eighteenth Century
University of Liverpool, Eighteenth-Century Worlds Research Centre
The North East Postgraduate Forum for the Long Eighteenth Century
University of Warwick, Eighteenth-Century Centre
The University of York Centre for Eighteenth-Century Studies
3. Societies
American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
Bulgarian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (mail contact)
Finnish Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
German Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (mail contact)
Swedish Eighteenth-Century Society
The British Association for Romantic Studies (BARS)
C18-L Resources for 18th-century studies across the disciplines
Eighteenth-Century Ireland Society
Eighteenth-Century Scottish Studies Society
Society for Eighteenth-Century Music
Société Française d'Etude du
Dix-Huitième Siècle
Société
d'études anglo-américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles
4. Specialist Links
a. Literature and drama
Ann
Griffiths, Dolwar Fach
Barry Russell's site on French Fair
Theatre, Foires Net
Samuel Johnson
Tercentenary 2009
The Centre for the Study of Early English Women's
Writing at Chawton House Library
The Hockliffe Project: early
British children's books on-line
b. Visual Art
Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun pages
c. Other
The Foundling Museum tells the story of the Foundling Hospital, London’s first home for abandoned children which was establishedin 1739, and of three pioneering figures involved in its work: its campaigning founder Thomas Coram, Hogarth and Handel.