Websites

=**[|The Spartacus Educational website] ** provides a series of free history encyclopaedias. Entries usually include a narrative, illustrations and primary sources. The text within each entry is linked to other relevant pages in the encyclopaedia. In this way it is possible to research individual people and events in great detail. The sources are also hyper-linked so the student is able to find out about the writer, artist, newspaper and organization that produced the material. =

==An online repository of primary sources from over 70 countries. From the Library of Congress and UNESCO. == =[|World Digital Library]= = =

The Internet History Sourcebooks Project is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts presented cleanly (without advertising or excessive layout) for educational use.
=[|Internet History Sourcebooks Project - Fordham University]=

=American Rhetoric:= =[|Speech bank of over 5000 speeches, plus movie speeches and information on rhetorical devices]=

=Letters of Note:= =[|Interesting letters of all kinds written by famous people in history and in the media]=

=[|Instructional Planning Websites]=

=Links to multiple websites that provide access to primary sources:= =[|Navigating Primary Source Materials on the Internet]=

=[|100 US Milestone Documents]=

Library of Congress primary source tools for teachers: =[|Teaching with Primary Sources Program]=

From the National Archives, contains reproducible copies of primary documents from the holdings of the National Archives of the United States, teaching activities correlated to the [|National History Standards]  and [|National Standards for Civics and Government] , and cross-curricular connections: =[|Teaching with Documents: Lesson Plans]=

Thousands of primary source documents to bring the past to life as classroom teaching tools from the billions preserved at the National Archives. Use the search field to find written documents, images, maps, charts, graphs, audio and video in our ever-expanding collection that spans the course of American history: =[|Thousands of Primary Source Documents for Classroom Use from the National Archives]=

Suggestions for films that depict various eras/ times in history. (Accuracy to history varies)
=[|Modern History in the Movies]=

Overview of a book that contains essays of historians on the accuracy (or inaccuracy) of history in the movies:
=[|Past Imperfect: History According to the Movies]=

[|eye witness to history]