Nashriyah (lit. 'Publication' in Persian) is the name of a freely-available digital collection of Iranian print media, created and maintained by the University of Manchester Library.[1] The project was launched in 2016 after two years of digitization works, and mainly includes newspapers and magazines published during the 1950s, as well as the late 1970s.[2] Though the archive misses a large number of important periodicals and some of its collections are incomplete, it has made rare publications available for the first time.
Type of site | Digital library |
---|---|
Available in | English |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Owner | University of Manchester Library |
Commercial | No |
Registration | No |
Launched | 1 February 2016 |
Current status | Active |
Access | |
Cost | Free |
Coverage | |
Record depth | Full-text |
Format coverage | Newspapers and magazines |
Temporal coverage | Mainly 1951–1953; 1975–1981 |
Geospatial coverage | Iran |
No. of records | +12,000 pages |
Links | |
Website | Nashriyah |
Archive
editThe archive currently covers two periods of the Mohammad Mosaddegh administration and the Iranian Revolution.
The 1950s collection
edit- Iran-e Bastan (101 issues, 1933–1935)
- Khak va Khun (139 issues, 1965–1966)
- Mardom-e Iran (50 issues, 1952–1953)
- Elm va Zendegi (9 issues, 1959–1961)
- Nabard-e Zendegi (15 issues, 1952–1953)
- Niru-ye Sevvom (129 issues, 1953)
- Shouresh (40 issues, 1951–1953)
- Tehran-e-Mosavvar (126 issues, 1952–1955)
The 1979 Revolution collection
edit- Rastakhiz (234 issues, 1975–1978)
- Rastakhiz-e Kargaran (26 issues, 1975–1976)
- Andisheha-ye Rastakhiz (6 issues, 1976–1978)
- Kayhan (723 issues, 1979–1981)
- Ayandegan (157 issues, 1979)
- Parkhash (full archive, 1979)
- Mojahed (195 issues, 1979–1984)
- Rah-e Mojahed (69 issues, 1981–1992)
- Peygham-e Emrouz (91 issues, 1979)
- Pirouzi (4 issues, 1980)
- Rah-e Kargar (5 issues, 1983–1987)
- Ommat (full archive, 1979–1981)
- Jonbesh (83 issues, 1977–1980)
- Parkhash (full archive, 1979)
- Tehran-e Mosavvar (34 issues, 1978–1979)
- Shora-ye Nevisandegan (6 issues, 1980–1982)
- Sepid va Siah (34 issues, 1978–1979)
- Ahangar (full archive, 1979)
- Javanan-e Emrouz (41 issues, 1979)
- Ettehad-e Javan (9 issues, 1979)
- Ettehad-e Mardom (117 issues, 1979–1982)
- Sogand (22 issues, 1979)
- Ferdowsi (30 issues, 1978–1979)
- Farda-ye Iran (10 issues, 1980–1982)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Hassaniyan, Allan (2021), Kurdish Politics in Iran, Cambridge University Press, p. 4, doi:10.1017/9781009029971, ISBN 9781009029971, S2CID 241171409
- ^ Dunn, Andrew (5 February 2016), "Nashriyah: digital Iranian historic newspapers", Social Sciences Librarians’ Blog