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International Bibliography of Humanism and the Renaissance

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International Bibliography of Humanism and the Renaissance
ProducerBrepols Publishers (since 2013)
Librairie Droz (1965-2013)
History1965-present
LanguagesEnglish, French, German, Italian, Spanish
Access
ProvidersBrepols Publishers
CostSubscription
Coverage
DisciplinesReligious history, philosophy, science, art, military and political history, social and gender studies, and more[1]
Record depthIndex and abstract
Temporal coverage16th and 17th centuries
Geospatial coverageEurope and the wider world
No. of records355,000+ academic publications[1]
Print edition
Print titleBibliographie internationale de l’Humanisme et de la Renaissance
Print dates1965-present
Links
Websitewww.brepolis.net

The International Bibliography of Humanism and the Renaissance (IBHR) is a multidisciplinary bibliographic database covering European culture and history for the 16th and 17th centuries.[2] Its geographical scope extends outside Europe by including publications on European interactions with the wider world. Chronologically, it extends beyond the Renaissance through the inclusion of modern hermeneutics and reception studies.[1]

The database currently comprises over 355,000 records on every aspect of the Renaissance humanist period. Annually, about 20.000 records are added.[1] Publications in English, French, German, Greek, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Hungarian, Romanian, Dutch, Polish, Russian, Swedish and Japanese are eligible for inclusion.

Between 1965 and 2013, the Bibliographie internationale de l’Humanisme et de la Renaissance was coordinated and published by Librairie Droz in Geneva, Switzerland.[3] Brepols Publishers of Turnhout, Belgium, acquired the rights to the bibliography in 2013[4] and has since developed it into an online database.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "International Bibliography of Humanism and the Renaissance (IBHR)". About Brepolis. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  2. ^ "International Bibliography of Humanism and the Renaissance" (PDF). Brepolis. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  3. ^ Tilg, Stefan; Knight, Sarah (2015). "General References". The Oxford Handbook of Neo-Latin. Oxford-New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 575–580. ISBN 9780199948178.
  4. ^ "International Bibliography of Humanism and the Renaissance seeks contributors". On History. 21 February 2014. Retrieved 6 January 2019.