Eighteenth Century Journals Portal
“Adam Matthew Digital's selection of journals…provides a rich addition, supplementing the journals that are available elsewhere with some very significant materials. They are significant because they answer specific research questions most pressing to scholars at our moment….”
Professor Laura Mandell
Miami University, OH
Quick Links:
Eighteenth Century Journals I
Eighteenth Century Journals II
Eighteenth Century Journals III
Eighteenth Century Journals IV
Eighteenth Century Journals V (NEW 2012)
Eighteenth Century Journals I
Newspapers and Periodicals, 1693-1793, from the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
Consultant Editor:
Professor Jeremy Black, Professor of History, University of Exeter
Source Libraries:
The Hope Collection, Bodleian Library, Oxford University
Nature of the Material:
Rare printed journals, periodicals and newspapers of the long eighteenth century not covered in EEBO, ECCO or Early English Newspapers. All items are full text searchable.
Portal:
Institutions that have also purchased other sections of the Eighteenth Century Journals Portal can enjoy integrated access via a single user interface, allowing streamlined browsing and searching across material from all collections simultaneously.
Scope of the Collection:
This project brings together rare journals printed between 1693 and 1799 illuminating all aspects of eighteenth-century social, political and literary life. Many are ephemeral, lasting only for a handful of issues, others run for several years. They offer effective coverage of the important issues of the period, and are invaluable to the study of all aspects of the eighteenth century, including crime, sport, advertising, the theatre; fashion; politics, revolution; agriculture; social issues and society life.
The collection provides a wide-ranging view of the topical issues concerning readers of the period, including:
- Law and policing
- Female dress
- British colonial possessions
- Marriage
- Morality
- South Sea Bubble
- Theatre and opera
- Alexander Pope
- Religion
- Reverend George Whitefield's preaching of the Gospel in America
- ‘45 Rebellion and Culloden
- American Revolution
- Irish Rebellion
- Trial of Lord Gordon
- French Revolution
- Radicalism
- Natural Liberty
- Blue Stockings
- Education
- Act of Union
Editors and authors include Joseph Addison, Thomas Brereton, Gilbert Burnet, Thomas Chatterton, the Earl of Chesterfield, Samuel Coleridge, George Colman, Thomas Cooke, Henry Fielding, Thomas Gordon, Jeremy Hellfire, Tom Paine, Ambrose Phillips, Henry James Pye, Humphrey Repton, Thomas Sheridan, John Slade, Richard Steele, George Steevens, Henry Stephens, Gilbert Stuart, John Thelwall, Philip Thickness, William Thompson, Horace Walpole, Richard West, William Whitehead and John Wilkes, but there are also a whole host of unidentified authors whose contributions are equally valuable for the scholar.
There are polemics, poetry, letters to the press, reviews of drama and novels, contemporary adverts and essays on almost every conceivable topic.
Contents:
The Actor, 1789
The Adventurer, 1753
The American Crisis, 1775-80
The Anti-Theatre, 1720
The Anti-Union, 1798-99
The Attic Miscellany, 1789
The Bee Reviv'd, 1750
The Budget, 1764
The Busy Body, 1787
Cato's Letters, 1720-23
The Centinel, 1757
The Christian's Amusement, 1740-41
The Comedian, 1732
The Controller, 1714
The Country Gentleman, 1726
The Covent Garden Chronicle, 1768
The Covent Garden Journal, 1752
The Crisis, 1775-76
The Crisis, 1792-93
Critick, 1718
Daily Benefactor, 1715
The Devil, 1755
The Devil, 1786-87
Director, 1720-21
The Doctor, 1718
The Eaton Chronicle, 1788
The English Freeholder, 1791
The Entertainer, 1718
The Entertainer, 1754
The Fall of Britain, 1776-1777
The Female Guardian, 1787
The Female Mentor: or, select conversations, 1793
The Female Spectator. By Eliza Haywood, 1744-1746
The Female Tatler, 1709-1710
The Fish Pool, 1718
The Flapper, 1796-97
The Fool, 1746-47
The Free Briton, 1729-35
The Free Thinker, 1718-21
The Genius, 1762
Genius of Kent, 1792-93
The Gentleman, 1775
Hog's Wash, 1793-95
The Humourist, 1720
The Kapelion, 1750-51
The Ladies Journal, 1727
The Ladies Mercury, 1693
The Lady’s Weekly Magazine, 1747
A Legacy for the Ladies. Or, Characters of the Women of the Age, 1705
A Letter from J-n W-s, 1764
The London Mercury, 1780
Old Whig, 1719
Meddler, 1760
The Microcosm, 1786-87
The Mirrour, 1719
The National Journal, 1746
The New Spectator, 1784-86
The North Briton, 1764
The Parrot, 1728.
The Parrot. By the authors of ‘The Female Spectator’, 1746
Pig's Meat, 1794
The Phoenix, 1797
The Physio-Magnetic Mirror, 1789
The Plebian, 1719
The Political Herald & Review, 1785
The Prompter, 1789
The Protestant Packet, 1780-81
The Quiz, 1796-97
The Rhapsodist, 1757
The Royal Female Magazine, 1760
The Scots Spy, 1776
The Speculator, 1790 Spinster, 1719
The Spy at Oxford/Cambridge, 1744
Terrae Filius, 1763
The Theatre, 1720
The Theatrical Monitor, 1767
The Tatler. By Isaac Bickerstaffe, 1709-1711
The Tory Tatler, 1709
Town Talk, 1715
The Tribune, 1729
The Tribune, 1795-96
The Trifler, 1795-96
Variety, 1788
The Watchman, 1796
The Wallet, 1764
The Weekly History, 1741-42
The Wife. By Mira, One of the Authors of ‘The Female Spectator’, and ‘Epistles for Ladies’, 1756
Wilkes & Liberty, 1764
The World, 1753-56
Eighteenth Century Journals II
Newspapers and Periodicals, 1699-1812, from the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin
Consultant Editor:
Professor Jeremy Black, Department of History, University of Exeter
Source Library:
The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas, Austin
Nature of the Material:
Rare printed journals of the 18th century not covered in EEBO, ECCO or Early English Newspapers
Portal:
Institutions that have also purchased other sections of the Eighteenth Century Journals Portal can enjoy integrated access via a single user interface, allowing streamlined browsing and searching across material from all collections simultaneously.
Scope of the Collection:
The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center holds one of the finest collections of 17th and 18th century newspapers and periodicals in the world. These holdings were documented in British Newspapers and Periodicals, 1632-1800, compiled by Powell Stewart in 1950. More recent acquisitions have further enhanced these collections. The titles chosen from HRC for this project have been screened carefully against EEBO, Early English Newspapers and ECCO so that there is no duplication whatsoever with these projects. The material reproduced in this digital project covers many rare items not held by the British Library. Topics covered are extremely wide-ranging and include:
- Acts by the Parliament de Paris in opposition to the French Court
- The writings of Sir Isaac Newton
- The writings of Corneille and Racine
- The advantages of eating in company
- Pagan deities
- The waters of Buxton and other spa towns and visits to the Lake District
- Poets of the Romantic Period
- Medicines
- The Foundling Hospital
- The French Revolution
- Serpents
- Theatrical Performances
- Reviews of literature and fashion throughout Europe
- Political debates
- Coffee house gossip and discussion
For any library supporting studies of the Eighteenth Century - including Literature, the Theatre, the origins and rise of Romanticism, Politics, Revolution and Revellion, Social issues, Gender, Society Life, Religion and the influence of the Press - these periodicals and newspapers will prove to be an important and multi-faceted resource. We feature many short run items and very rare materials which will be an excellent complement to other resources already available in this area.
This project provides easily accessible raw material for the study of politics, nationalism, education, the landscape, literature, drama, revolution, sensibility, exoticism, individualism, heroism and many other themes.
Material is drawn from London, Dublin and Edinburgh, as well as many local and provincial publications - enabling the study of events from both the centre and the periphery. There is also a wide range of journals ranging from specialist magazines and review journals to political papers and local newspapers.
Contents:
The numbers in square brackets refer to the numbering in the descriptive catalogue of British Newspapers and Periodicals, 1632-1800 compiled by Powell Stewart in 1950.
| [9] |
B Berington’s Evening Post, 1733. 1 issue |
| [17] |
The British Merchant, 1713. Nos 1 & 25 |
| [21a] |
The Censor, 1715-17. 3 vols |
| [25] |
The Champion, 1739–40. 2 vols |
| [27] |
The Connoisseur, 1754. 5 issues |
| [28] |
The Con-Test, 1757. 1 issue |
| [51] |
The Dublin Chronicle, 1787-1792. 21 issues |
| [52] |
The Dublin Journal, 1732. 1 issue |
| [53] |
The Dublin Evening Post, 1736. Vols 4-5 |
| [56] |
The Edinburgh Gazette, 1703, 1707, 1710, 1711. 4 issues |
| [68] |
The Examiner, 1714. Nos 1, 4-12 |
| [69] |
The Examiner or Remarks upon Papers and Occurrences. 6 vols (bound in one vol) |
| [75] |
The Flying Post, 1712-23. 5 issues |
| [77] |
The Free-Holder, 1716 38 issues (in one bound volume); 1725. Reprint Nos 1-3; 1744. Reprint Nos 1-55 |
| [79] |
The Free-Thinker, 1711. 1 issue |
| [89] |
The Grumbler, 1715. 2 issues |
| [101] |
The History of the Works of the Learned, 1699-1702. 5 vols (two versions held) |
| [102] |
The Honest Gentleman, 1718-19. Nos 1-8, 11-25 |
| [114] |
The Lay-Monk, 1713-14. Nos 1-40 (Both first and second editions as these are different; the second edition is called The Lay-Monastery, covering same dates) |
| [115] |
The Leeds Mercury, 1784. 1 issue |
| [122] |
The London Journal, 1721-31. Nos 76, 79-141, 143-154, 156, 158, 161-168, 171, 177, 261, 522, 528, 577, 597-598, 613, 625, 630 |
| [125] |
The London Packet, or New Lloyd’s Evening Post, 1785. 1 issue |
| [139] |
The Medley, 1715. 2 issues |
| [152] |
Mercurius Politicus, 1716-20. 5 vols |
| [162] |
The Monitor, 1714. 4 issues |
| [168] |
Morning Advertiser, 1794-97. 11 issues |
| [172] |
The Morning Post and Fashionable World, 1797. 1 issue |
| [173] |
The Muses Mercury, 1707-8. 4 issues |
| [174] |
The Museum: Or, the Literary and Historical Register, 1746-47. 3 vols |
| [179] |
The New London Magazine, 1788, 1789, 1792. 3 vols |
| [183] |
The Northampton Mercury, 1746. 1 issue |
| [192] |
The Oeconomist, 1798-99. 2 vols |
| [193] |
Old Common Sense, 1738-1739. 100 issues |
| [199] |
The Original Weekly Journal, 1716-17. 9 issues |
| [201] |
A Pacquet from Parnassus, 1702. 1 issue |
| [203] |
Parker’s Penny Post, 1732-33. 58 issues in 1 volume |
| [209] |
Pax, Pax, Pax, or a Pacifick Post Boy, 1713-1720. 22 issues |
| [224] |
The Plain Dealer, 1712. 4 issues |
| [226] |
The Political Register, 1767-68. 3 vols |
| [229] |
The Post-Angel, 1701-1702. Vols II-IV contained in 2 bound vols |
| [232] |
The Present State of the Republick of Letters, 1728-36. 18 vols |
| [239] |
The Reader, 1714 (1715 reprint). Nos 1-9 |
| [245] |
The St James’s Evening Post, 1715-17. 3 issues |
| [247] |
The St James’s Post, 1715 & 1718. 2 issues |
| [263] |
The Tatler (Edinburgh), 1711. Nos 4-21, 23-24 |
| [280] |
The Universal Museum, 1762-64. 3 vols |
| [282] |
The Universal Spy or, the Royal Oak Journal Reviv’d, 1732. 9 issues |
| [283] |
The Visions of Sir Heister Ryley, 1710-11. Vol 1, Nos 3-80 |
| [284] |
The Vocal Magazine, 1778. Nos 1-9 |
| [298] |
The Weekly Remarks and Political Reflections, 1715. Vol 1, nos 1-11, 14 |
| [303] |
The Whisperer, 1770. Nos 1, 3-14 |
| [304] |
The Whitehall Evening Post, 1721-22. 6 issues and one supplement |
| [305] |
The Whitehall Evening Post, or London intelligencer, 1754-66. 31 issues |
| [308] |
The York Chronicle, 1772-73. Nos 1-55 |
Additions from the end of the Powell Stewart Catalogue:
| [Add 1] |
British Magazine, 1760-61. 2 vols |
| [Add 2] |
The Bee, or Literary Weekly Intelligence, 1791. 16 issues |
| [Add 3] |
The Royal Magazine; or, Quarterly Bee, Volume II, 1751 |
| [Add 4] |
The York Courant, 1742. 1 issue |
Additional:
The Political Magazine and Parliamentary, Naval, Military, and Literary Journal, v 4, 1783
Additional Items from the Queen Anne Serials List:
A Prognostication for this Present Year of Our Lord God by John Wood-House, nd
A New Almanack for the Year of our Lord God, 1712, by Thomas White, London 1712
A Prognostication for the Year of our Lord God, 1712, by John Wing, London 1711
Speculum Uranicum; or, an almanac and prognostications for the Year of our Lord God, 1712, by Thomas Fowles, Gent., London 1712
A New Almanack for the Year From the Nativity of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, 1712, by George Rose, Mathematician, London 1712
Merlinus redivivus: Being an Almanack for the Year of our Redemption, by John Partridge, Student in Physick and Astrology, London 1683-4
The Ladies Diary: or the Woman’s Almanack for the Year of our Lord. 2 vols, 1709 and 1711 (including Telescopium anglicanum or an ephemeris; exclude the volumes for 1708 and 1710 as these are in ECCO)
Culpepper revived. Being an Almanack for the Year of our Blessed Saviour’s incarnation 1712, by Nathaniel Culpepper, London 1712
Censura Temporum. The Good or Ill Tendencies of Books, Sermons, Pamphlets &c, vol 1, nos 1-12, London 1708
Nineteenth Report of the Commissioners of Military Enquiry, 1812
Eighteenth Century Journals III
Newspapers and Periodicals, 1680-1815, from British Library Newspapers, Colindale and Cambridge University Library
Consultant Editor:
Professor Jeremy Black, Professor of History, University of Exeter
Source Libraries:
British Library Newspapers, Colindale and Cambridge University Library
Nature of the Material:
Rare printed journals, periodicals and newspapers of the long eighteenth century not covered in EEBO, ECCO or Burney. All items are full text searchable.
Portal:
Institutions that have also purchased other sections of the Eighteenth Century Journals Portal can enjoy integrated access via a single user interface, allowing streamlined browsing and searching across material from all collections simultaneously.
Scope of the Collection:
Ever since the publication of Sections I and II scholars and librarians have encouraged us to make available further 18th century journals, with a particular emphasis on those published outside of London.
To commence this process we have selected a group of 25 titles from Canada, the Caribbean and India from British Library Newspapers at Colindale. None of these titles appear in the Burney Collection (Early English Newspapers) or in ECCO or EEBO.
These journals demonstrate how news spread throughout the Empire and show how different stories gain greater prominence in different territories. They are an invaluable source for local news, but they also show how culture, taste and political concerns are circulated.
To this has been added a further 42 journals from Cambridge University Library, which is dominated by a large number of extremely rare titles published in Belfast, Clare, Cork, Derry, Drogheda, Dublin, Limerick, Munster, Sligo and Westmeath. Many are from the 1790s and reflect the revolutionary fervour in Ireland.
Cambridge also holds a number of important journals produced in Edinburgh (such as The Lounger and The Farmer’s Magazine), Canterbury (The Kentish Chronicle) and we also include the Cambridge University Magazine for 1795.
Sample Titles Include:
Nova-Scotia Gazette, 1767-1769
Nova Scotia Gazette and Weekly Chronicle, 1776
Royal American Gazette, 1786 - Nova Scotia, Canada
Nova Scotia Packet and General Advertiser, 1786
Jamaica Mercury and Kingston Weekly Advertiser (then the Royal Gazette), 1779-1781, 1793, 1794, 1809
Bermuda Gazette and Weekly Advertiser, 1785
Kingston Journal, 1789
Daily Advertiser, 1790 – Kingston, Jamaica
Jamaica Mercury and Kingston Weekly Advertiser, 1797
Hicky’s Bengal Gazette, or Calcutta General Advertiser, 1780-1782 – Calcutta, India
India Gazette, or Calcutta Public Advertiser, 1781-1782, 1785, 1793 – Calcutta, India
India Gazette, or Calcutta Advertiser, 1782-1788
Calcutta Gazette; or Oriental Advertiser, 1784-1791
Calcutta Chronicle: and General Advertiser, 1787-1790
Madras Courier, 1790-1792
Bombay Gazette, 1792, 1813-1814
Asiatic Mirror and Commercial Advertiser, 1793, 1798 – Calcutta, India
Bengal Lottery, 1793 – Calcutta, India
Calcutta Friday Morning Post and General Advertiser, 1793
Calcutta Morning Post Extraordinary, 1793
Bombay Courier, 1793-1800
Calcutta Gazette, or Oriental Advertiser, 1793-1794
Hircarrah, 1794 – Madras, India
World, 1794 – Calcutta, India
Madras Gazette, 1795, 1799, 1809
Weekly amusement; or, Universal magazine (Dublin), 1735
Dublin Evening post, 1735, 1797, 1799
Limerick Journal, Ireland, 1744
Munster Journal, Ireland, 1744
Patriot (Dublin), 1748
Whigg-monitor (Dublin), 1749
Ferrar’s Limerick Chronicle (Limerick), Ireland, 1769
Cork Journal (Cork, Ireland), 1778
Mirror (Dublin), 1784
Clare Journal (Ireland), 1795
London-derry journal. And, Donegal and Tyrone advertiser (Ireland), 1795
Freemason’s journal: or, Pasley’s universal intelligencer (Ireland), 1795
Strabane journal. Or the general advertiser (Ireland), 1795
Westmeath Journal (Ireland), 1795
Cork Courier (Cork, Ireland), 1795
Drogheda Journal; or, Meath and Louth Advertiser (Ireland), 1796
Belfast news-letter, 1797
Press (Dublin), 1797-1798
Dublin Evening Post, 1797, 1799
Cork herald: or, Munster advertiser (Cork, Ireland), 1798
Hibernian Journal: or, Chronicle of liberty (Ireland), 1798, 1799
Sligo Journal and Weekly Advertiser (Ireland), 1799
Weekly pacquet of advice from Rome restored: or, The history of Popery continued (London), 1680-1682
Rehearsal rehears’d, in a dialogue between Bayes and Johnson (London), 1706
Heraclitus ridens (London), 1713
Weekly Journal with fresh advices foreign and domestick (London), 1715
Scourge in vindication of the Church of England (London), 1717, 1720
Monthly London Journal: containing, the most material occurences… (London), 1722
Ipswitch journal, or the weekly-mercury, 1730
Herald, or patriot proclaimer (London), 1758
Lounger (Edinburgh), 1788
Oriental repertory…in four numbers (London), 1791-1797
Britannic magazine; or Entertaining repository of heroic adventures (London), 1793-1807
University magazine (Cambridge), 1795
Tribune (London), 1795-1796
Kentish chronicle (Canterbury), 1797
British Military Library; or, Journal (London), 1798-1801
Farmer’s magazine (Edinburgh), 1800-1825
Billinge’s Liverpool advertiser (Liverpool), 1809
Eighteenth Century Journals IV
Newspapers and Periodicals, 1709-1820, from Chetham's Library, Manchester and the Brotherton Library, University of Leeds
Consultant Editor:
Professor Brian Cowan, Department of History, McGill University
Professor Laura Mandell, Department of English, Miami University of Ohio
Professor Kevin O'Neill, Irish Studies, Boston College
Source Libraries:
Chetham's Library, Manchester
Brotherton Library, University of Leeds
Nature of the Material:
Rare printed journals, periodicals and newspapers of the long eighteenth century not covered in EEBO, ECCO, Gale’s Making of the Modern World or 17th & 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers. All items are full text searchable.
Portal:
Institutions that have also purchased other sections of the Eighteenth Century Journals Portal can enjoy integrated access via a single user interface, allowing streamlined browsing and searching across material from all collections simultaneously.
Scope of the Collection:
Material from Chetham’s Library, Manchester, is the core collection for Eighteenth Century Journals IV. Established in 1653, Chetham’s is the oldest public reference library in the UK, and from its excellent 18th century holdings we focus on rare magazines, literary periodicals and political journals. Continuing our commitment to publishing periodicals from outside London, we have also selected a strong collection of Manchester newspapers for the period. The Chetham’s collection is supplemented by a selection of periodicals from the Brotherton Library, University of Leeds.
The wide-ranging titles in this collection offer an invaluable source of information for scholars and students concerned with any area of eighteenth century studies, including: the industrial revolution; radicalism; politics and government; literature (British and European); philosophy and religion. We have selected magazines and periodicals that express the diverse range of intellectual concerns that was characteristic of the Enlightenment reader.
The Manchester newspapers trace the transformation of the town into the world’s first industrialised city, covering the massive growth of the textile industry in the region; the population explosion and urbanisation of the area; and the radical politics, riots and unrest that grew to be synonymous with the city. They will be a key source for historians of British politics or the industrial revolution.
Sample Titles Include:
- Harrop's Manchester mercury/Harrop's Manchester mercury and general advertiser/Manchester mercury and Harrop's general advertiser (1752-1775)
- Manchester journal (1754)
- Manchester chronicle: or Anderton's Universal advertiser (1763)
- Prescott's Manchester Journal (1771;1774)
- Wheeler's Manchester chronicle (1791-2;1793;1803;1805-6;1811)
- Manchester herald (31 Mar 1792; 7 Apr 1792)
- Pr[oposed?] new Manc[hester weekly?] W. Co[wdroy] for eleven year[s publisher of] the Chester [chroni]cle and T. Boden, Bookseller, St. Mary's-Gate, Manchester, having been for some time engaged in preparing for publication, a weekly paper under the title of The Manchester Gazette, or weekly advertiser. (1795)
- Manchester telegraph (1803)
- British volunteer, and Manchester weekly express (March 30, August 3, September 7 1805; March 22, May 10, June 7, 1806; April 1 1809)
- Chester Chronicle (1812)
- Supplement to The Lancaster gazette, and general advertiser for Lancashire, Westmoreland, &c
- Cowdroy's Manchester gazette, and weekly advertiser
- Observer
- Whitehall, July 16. 1695. This day came in the mail from Holland of Friday last, and brings the following advices... (1695)
- Present state of Europe: or, The historical and political monthly mercury... (1709-1711)
- Memoirs of literature. Containing a large account of many valuable books, letters and dissertations upon several subjects (1722)
- New memoirs of literature, containing an account of new books printed both at home and abroad, with dissertations upon several subjects, miscellaneous observation &c (1725-1727)
- Phoenix Britannicus: being a miscellaneous collection of scarce and curious tracts, historical, political, biographical... (1732)
- The Bee: or, Universal weekly pamphlet [The Bee Reviv'd] (1733)
- Les spectacles de Paris, ou suite du calendrier historique et chronologique des théatres... (1757, 1771-1772, 1778)
- Lady's magazine; or, Entertaining companion for the fair sex, appropriated solely to their use and amusement (May 1777)
- Histoire de la république des lettres et arts en France (1779-1783)
- A New review; with literary curiosities, and literary intelligence, for the year... (1782-1786)
- Reports of the Humane Society (1786-88)
- A letter to every person in Great-Britain, who as the least regard for the foundation of all our liberties, the liberty of the press... (nd)
- Bell's Weekly messenger (1802-1805)
- Patriot: a periodical publication, intended to arrest the progress of seditious and blasphemous opinions, too prevalent in the year 1819 (1819-1820)
'The Lady Magazine' (1770-1832)
Consultant Editor:
Dr Jennie Batchelor, School of English, University of Kent
Source Libraries:
Birmingham Central Library, the British Library, Cambridge University Library, Liverpool John Moores University Library
Nature of the Material:
Rare printed magazines and periodicals of the long eighteenth century not covered in EEBO, ECCO, Gale’s 17th & 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers or Proquest’s British Periodicals. All items are full text searchable.
Portal:
Institutions that have also purchased other sections of the Eighteenth Century Journals Portal can enjoy integrated access via a single user interface, allowing streamlined browsing and searching across material from all collections simultaneously.
Scope of the Collection:
In this groundbreaking digital edition, we offer the complete run of one of the eighteenth century’s most important publications, The Lady’s Magazine (1770 to 1832). An entertaining and educational journal aimed at “the housewife as well as the peeress”, The Lady’s Magazine was launched in January 1770 and went on to become one of the longest running journals of the period. As no library has a complete set, we have pieced together the complete run from Birmingham Central Library, the British Library and Cambridge University Library.
The Lady’s Magazine was “the first objective and professional effort to create a magazine acceptable for women” (Cynthia White, ‘Women’s Magazines, 1693-1968’) and combined advice, short stories, readers’ letters, criticism, news, fashion reports, fashion plates and articles on leading women of the day. It is a major source for scholars of literary and gender studies and an invaluable source for any scholar of the eighteenth century. The Lady’s Magazine provides the perfect guide to the sensibilities of both genders in the age of Jane Austen.
There are excellent articles that cover a wide variety of topics from education, fashion, poetry, literature, art, music, the theatre, the body, disease, health, vaccination, religion, world events, gardening, poverty, hunting, gambling and food, to commentaries on other aspects of the social and domestic scenes.
In addition to The Lady’s Magazine, we also include a range of additional titles that are literary, political, social and cultural in nature. These continue to broaden the scope and coverage of the project, encompassing all aspects of eighteenth century culture and society.
All of the material is full text searchable and has been digitised in colour.
Sample Titles Include:
Artist's Repository and Drawing Magazine exhibiting the Principles of the Polite Arts in their Various Branches (1796)
The By-Stander; or Universal Weekly Expositor (1790)
Country Magazine, or, Gentleman and Lady's pocket companion (1736-1737)
Court Miscellany, or, Gentleman and Lady's new magazine (1766)
Fame's Palladium (1766-1767)
Juvenile Magazine (1798)
Ladies' Pocket Journal, or, Toilet assistant for the year 1799 (1799)
Lady's Gazette and Evening Advertiser (1789)
The Lady's Magazine (1770-1782)
Lady's Monthly Museum, or Polite repository of amusement and instruction (1798-1799)
Lady's Philosopher, or, Miss Billingsgate in a salivation for a black eye (1752)
Loiterer, or, Universal essayist (1796)
London Weekly Magazine, or, Universal intelligencer (1780)
Lover (1718)
Minerva Magazine of Knowledge, Instruction and Entertainment (1793)
New Musical and Universal Magazine (1794-1795)
The New Novelist's Magazine (1787)
Palladium of Fame (1749-1779)
Parlour window (1795)
Pocket Magazine, or, Elegant repository of useful and polite literature (1794-1795)
Poetical Entertainer (1712-1713)
Poetical magazine (1764)
Universal Review; or, a critical commentary on the literary productions of these kingdoms (1760)
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