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February 27, 2026
*The Library now has access to these two resource. See Archives abound in Archives Unbound*
I’m pleased to let you know that we currently have trial access to two online primary source collections from Archives Unbound that may be of particular interest to those looking at the Second World War and related subjects. The two collections are The Jewish Question: Records from the Berlin Document Centre and Nazism in Poland: The diary of Governor-General Hans Fran.
You can access both of these collections via the E-resources trials page. Access is available on and off-campus.
Trial access ends 15th February 2017.

The Jewish Question: Records from the Berlin Document Centre Read More

Aleppo. Madrasa al Zahariyeh
The aim of our PhD thesis digitisation project is to make available the unique research of the University of Edinburgh. This research has a greater significance when, within the pages of the theses, we uncover photos of places and buildings that no longer exist; our collection becomes important for the future preservation of world cultural heritage.
In the past year a great deal of research has been undertaken on collecting images of Palmyra that date to a period before it was damaged (in 2015), as well as of other Syrian archaeological sites.[1] Much of this work depends upon using archival images of the areas in question, often from personal collections. Such images can aid with digital, and perhaps eventually physical, reconstructions. Some of the items that we have scanned as part of our thesis digitisation project, and that are now available on ERA (Edinburgh Research Archive, by ‘Abbū ,1973 and Al-Janābī 1975), also include images of buildings destroyed or damaged in past few years, not just in Syria but also in Iraq.
In the last year much media attention was given to those buildings and archaeological sites which date to the pre-Islamic era, such as Palmyra. However, many early Islamic structures and sites have also been subject to destruction, although these are often less well publicised. Furthermore due to the turbulent situation in the areas in question it can be rather difficult to ascertain if a building has been destroyed or when damage took place.
Although there may be little that can be done to prevent this destruction, we can ensure to properly look after and maintain documents relating to the artefacts in question and make them publicly available so that these can be used for digital reconstructions. This blog will focus, in particular, on those early-Islamic buildings destroyed in 2013/14 in Aleppo (Syria), Samarra (Iraq), and in Mosul (Iraq).

Mosul. Mausoleum of al-Imam Yayha ibn al-Qasim.
The two theses mentioned above and dating from the 1970’s, contain images of buildings in these areas: The Ayyubid domed buildings of Syria by ‘Ᾱdil N. ‘Abbū (1973) and Studies in Mediaeval Iraqi Architecture by Ṭāriq Jawād Al-Janābī (1975). Both theses present a catalogue of monuments. In the first the Ayyubid dynasty is examined over the period from AD 541-1260, focusing on the areas of Damascus and Aleppo. The second thesis covers the time period between the 6th and the 8th centuries AD and areas ranging from Baghdad, Wasit, Mosul, Al-Kifil, Kufa, Basra and Amadiya. The contents of the first chapter are wide ranging, reading: the Saljuq period, the Abbasid Caliphate during the 6th to 7th centuries A.H., the Atabikids of Iraq, the Mongol invasion and the Ilkhanid Period, the Jalairids.

Aleppo. Madrasa al Zahariyeh
The types of monuments discussed in both works include: madrasas (koranic schools; some of these built at the request of the Sunni madhab),[2] turbas, mosques, ribats, minarets, palaces and mausolea.

These works are so important for preserving the past because they include many good quality photographs, including of the type of minor decorative details that are difficult to reproduce accurately, such as wood and stucco windows and façades.[3]

Samarra. Mausoleum of Imam Dur.

Mosul. Mausoleum of Imam Bahir.

Mosul: mausoleum of Imam Bahir.

Mosul. Mausoleum of Imam Bahir.
To highlight the importance of these works a selection of photos from the theses are included, depicting buildings that are now damaged or destroyed. In Aleppo: the Al-Sultaniyeh mosque and the madrasa Al-Halawiyah. The Imam-al-Daur in Samarra. In Mosul: the masjid of al-Imam Ibrahim, the mausoleum of Imam Bahir, that of al-Immam Muhsin, the shrine of al-Imam Yahya ibn al-Qasim, and that of al-Imam ‛Awn al-Din (known as Ibn al-Hasan).
Aleppo: the Al-Sultaniyeh Mosque

Aleppo. Madrasa al Zahariyeh
Also known as the Al-Sultaniyah Madrasa, this 12th century building incorporates several rooms around the courtyard known as the Madrasaa al Zahariyeh. It was destroyed on December 7th 2014.[4]
Aleppo: the Madrasa Al-Halawiya

This Byzantine cathedral became a madrasa (Koranic school) in the 13th century. Attempts were made in 2013 to protect one of the wooden niches dating from this time. However this work had to be abandoned due to the conflict in the area.[5] The building was damaged recently in the same incident that destroyed the great mosque, with which it shared grounds.[6]
Samarra: the Mausoleum of Imam al-Daur

Samarra: the mausoleum of Imam al-Daur
Dating from 1085, this Shia shrine was destroyed in October 2014.[7]
Mosul: Masjid of al-Imam Ibrahim

Mosul. Masjid of al-Imam Ibrahim.
This building now appears to be destroyed in satellite photography.[8]
Mosul: the Mosque and Shrine of al-Imam al-Bahir

Mosul. Mosque of Imam Bahir.
This shrine was likely destroyed in September 2014.[9]

Mosul. Mausoleum of al-Imam al-Bahir
Mosul: the Mosque and Tomb of al-Imam Muhsin

Mosul. Mosque and tomb of al-Imam Muhsin (al-Madrasa al-Nuriya)
Also known as the madrasa al-Nuriya, this 11th century site was likely destroyed between December 2014 and December 2015.[10]
Mosul: the Shrine of al-Imam Yahya ibn al-Qasim

Mosul. Mausoleum of al-Imam Yahya ibn al-Qasim
This 13th century Shia shrine located on the Tigris riverbank and was destroyed as of July 2014.[11]
Mosul: Shrine of al-Imam ‛Awn al-Din (known as Ibn al-Hasan)

Mosul. Mausoleum of Imam ‘Awn al-Din.
One of the few structures to survive the Mongol invasion of Iraq, this 13th century shrine was reportedly destroyed on the 25th of July 2014.[12]
While it is impossible to undo the damage wreaked in some of the most archaeologically rich parts of this world, and there is frustratingly little that can be done to reverse the far greater loss of human lives, it is perhaps a small comfort to know that in some way we may contribute to the future preservation and potential reconstruction (digital or otherwise) of important monuments that are now lost.
Bibliography and further information
‘Ᾱdil N. ‘Abbū (1973) The Ayyubid domed buildings of Syria, PhD thesis, University of Edinburgh.
UNESCO on the ancient city of Aleppo: http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/21
UNESCO on Iraq: http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/21 and http://whc.unesco.org/en/news/1239/
Monuments of Mosul in danger: http://monumentsofmosul.com/
Blue Shield Press on monuments in Syria and Iraq: http://www.ancbs.org/cms/en/press-room
References
[1] Some recent examples of this work: http://futurism.com/3d-imaging-is-helping-us-save-history-for-the-future/ and http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/next/ancient/digital-preservation-syria/
[2] see Abbu (1993), p. ii.
[3] Al-Janabi, (1975) chapter VI; and Abbu (1973) sections 4, 5 and 8.
[4] http://hyperallergic.com/168740/syrian-military-bombs-significant-13th-century-complex/ and http://www.syriaphotoguide.com/home/aleppo-al-sultaniyeh-mosque-%D8%AD%D9%84%D8%A8-%D8%AC%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%B9-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B3%D9%84%D8%B7%D8%A7%D9%86%D9%8A%D8%A9/ and http://apsa2011.com/apsanew/aleppo-partial-destruction-of-the-al-sultaniah-mosque-following-an-explosion-07-12-2014/#jp-carousel-4714
[5] http://apsa2011.com/apsanew/4074/
[6] http://www.syriaphotoguide.com/home/aleppo-great-mosque-%D8%AD%D9%84%D8%A8-%D8%AC%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%B9-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%83%D8%A8%D9%8A%D8%B1/ and http://eamena.arch.ox.ac.uk/impact-risks/explosives/
[7] https://www.cemml.colostate.edu/cultural/09476/iraq05-057.html
[8] http://monumentsofmosul.com/list2/18-i16
[9] Current satellite image: http://monumentsofmosul.com/list2/26-i35
[10] Current satellite image http://monumentsofmosul.com/list2/27-i37 and https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=017b3a45d45f439bb5e595491b9dc826
[11] http://monumentsofmosul.com/list2/8-i4 and http://archnet.org/sites/4356 and http://www.iraqinews.com/features/urgent-isil-destroys-1400-year-old-mosque-located-west-mosul/
[12] http://monumentsofmosul.com/list2/9-i5 and https://conflictantiquities.wordpress.com/2014/07/28/syria-iraq-islamic-state-destruction-shrine-mashhad-al-imam-awn-al-din/ and http://archnet.org/sites/3841

We have expanded our Digimap holdings to include Aerial Digimap. Aerial Digimap provides detailed aerial imagery data from Getmapping at various fixed scales. Most data is post-2011 with updates due each year. Users will be able to view maps through their web browser, save maps for printing and download the map data for use in GIS or CAD software.
A twenty minute presentation on Aerial Digimap is available at https://youtu.be/rAiO4XXRD5Q
Aerial Digmap is available via DiscoverEd or our Databases AZ list.

We have added 110 new Oxford Scholarship Online e-books to DiscoverEd. A title list can be found here.
During the Festival of Creative Learning (20-24 February 2017), we will be hosting our first ever conservation crowdsourcing event!
Over a two-day period (20-21 February), with the help of 30 participants, we aim to rehouse section II of the Laing manuscripts – the University’s most important written collection.

Folder from section II of the Laing manuscripts
Laing’s collection of charters and other papers is of national importance and the most distinguished of its kind in any Scottish university. It is an essential resource for the 18th century, however, it is in poor condition due to its current housing in unsuitable upright boxes and folders. It is an extremely popular collection, but it is difficult to access and there is a risk of further damage every time it is handled.
Durham University is now home to three important archives containing materials relating to Iranian History, Culture and Politics. The archives originate in the work of three British scholars who worked extensively in Iran in the last century. The collection combines the work of the late Anne Lambton, the late David Brooks and Sue Wright. In future years the collection will mark Durham out as an important destination for researchers interested to know more about Iran in the 20th century.
Professor Sue Wright, Danish School of Education, Aarthus University, will give a personal reflection herself on the content and significance of these three collections on 31 January 2017, 17:00 in The Learning Centre, Palace Green Library. The public lecture is entitled: Iranian archives at Durham: A personal reflection on people, places and the public record.
Contact Professor Bob Simpson ( robert.simpson@durham.ac.uk ) for more information.
Welcome to the first blog post from the ‘Evergreen: Patrick Geddes and the Environment in Equilibrium’ project. The Project Archivist has now begun work on cataloguing the significant Patrick Geddes collections held by Edinburgh University’s Centre for Research Collections and Strathclyde University’s Archives and Special Collections. Over the coming months we will keep you updated about project progress and will share some of the fascinating collections discoveries and highlights that are sure to be uncovered during the course of the project.
You can read more about the project in the About Us part of this blog.

Professor Robert Wallace, from the glass slide collection partially amassed by him (Coll-1434/3200)
Robert Wallace (1853-1939) is not a widely-known name today, although in his time he was an important agriculturalist who travelled the world. He was Professor of Agriculture and Rural Economy at the University of Edinburgh between 1885 and 1922, and established the Edinburgh Incorporated School of Agriculture. Edinburgh University Library Special Collections holds some material relating to Wallace, namely, a collection of glass slides partly amassed by him and some written material. Among these papers is a collection of Wallace’s copies of a number of letters sent to President Woodrow Wilson during the First World War.

‘Letters to President Woodrow Wilson…’ (Gen.867F)
Over the course of 27 letters dating between 30 August 1914 and 3 April 1917, Wallace addresses the President on the perceived dangers to allied prisoners of war under the system of “frightfulness” (a term which was used to describe an assumed military policy of the German Army towards civilians in World War I, particularly during their invasion of Belgium in 1914). Wallace also expresses concern about the dangers of starvation to the Belgian people, and about what course of action America, who was then neutral, ought to take. In his first letter, Wallace sets out his aims:
My object is to inform you of the root-causes of the present war and of the nature of the German autocracy with which the civilised world is confronted, for it is to my mind certain that America is destined to play an important part in that compact among the leading nations which must make a gigantic war in the future an impossibility.
Wallace enclosed a number of press cuttings and pamplets, such as Morals and German Policy by Arthur Conan Doyle and an article on the Neutrality of the United States in relation to the British and German Empires by Joseph Shield Nicolson, then Professor of Political Economy at the University of Edinburgh.
These letters were by no means Wallace’s first brush with American political figures. He had visited the United States on a number of occasions as part of his work, and on a visit in 1898 he met James Wilson, Minister of Agriculture at Washington (who had emigrated from Scotland aged 18 and, it was discovered, happened to be related to Wallace). Wilson introduced him to President McKinley, the 25th President of the United States, who spoke warmly to Wallace of Britain’s support of America during the Cuban War. Wallace clearly hoped that his letters to the 28th President would encourage a return of this favour.
However, although the White House confirmed that his letters had been received, it appears that Wallace was never granted a response from the President himself. Undeterred, he continued to collect and send press cuttings and articles, and as the war progressed his tone became more urgent. In a letter dated 5 February 1917, Wallace expressed his “profound disappointment and my public, as well as private, regret” at the President’s address to Congress on 3 February that his country was “sincere friends of the German people and earnestly desire to remain at peace with the Government which speaks for them.” This statement was made following Germany’s proposal to form a military alliance with Mexico in the event of the US entering the war (the ‘Zimmerman telegram’), and many were critical of Wilson’s minimal reaction. After the sinking of several American ships, however, Wilson called a cabinet meeting on 20 March, in which America’s entry into the war received a unanimous vote.
Wallace himself did not necessarily believe that entering the war was the desired solution. In his final letter to the President (which he titled his “final supreme effort”) dated 3 April 1917, Wallace urged Wilson to commission all German and Austrian ships in USA harbours to carry food to Belgium, and suggested that America should unite with the Chinese Republic as a deterrent to Germany.

‘President Wilson Leads Parade’ – a glass slide from the collection partially amassed by Wallace (Coll-1434/3261)
Yet on the following day, a declaration of war by the United States against Germany passed Congress by strong bipartisan majorities.
In 1919, Woodrow Wilson spent six months in Paris at the Peace Conference, where he was a staunch advocate of the creation of a League of Nations. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in the same year. Wallace published his letters to Woodrow Wilson in book form in 1931.
Although Woodrow Wilson’s reaction to Wallace’s letters remain unknown, they provide a fascinating insight into the subject of America’s entry in the First World War, as well as an unusual insight into Wallace’s personality against a backdrop of international conflict.
Clare Button
Project Archivist
The Library has organised three events for Academic Book Week this year. Places are limited, so be sure to sign up soon!
Academic Book Week celebrates the academic book, with events happening around the country looking at the influence and future of the form. For more information, take a look at the Academic Book Week website: Academic Book Week
23 January: Does the Academic Book have a Future? (Dr Tom Mole, UoE) – event for all staff, 1230-1330, G.05, 50 George Square http://edin.ac/future-academic-book
This year’s Academic Book Week coincides with the completion of the AHRC project on the Academic Book of the Future. In this talk, Tom Mole, Director of the Centre for the History of the Book at the University of Edinburgh, will bring a book-historical perspective to bear on debates about the future of academic books. Examining the academic book as a socially-embedded media artefact, he will ask how our current moment of media change produces challenges for the academic book and creates both threats and opportunities for the future.
24 January: – Close-up on collections: behind the scenes at the Centre for Research Collections (CRC) – event for postgraduates, 1200-1300, CRC, 6th floor Main Library http://edin.ac/collections-close-up
During this session, you will have a rare chance to go behind the scenes at the University of Edinburgh’s Centre for Research Collections (CRC), home to the University’s historic collections, spanning rare books, museum objects, musical instruments, fine art and archives. Alice Doyle, Access Officer at Lothian Health Services Archive (LHSA), will let you know how the CRC can help in your studies and lead a tour of the places researchers don’t normally get to see. You’ll have the opportunity to see some star collection items ‘up-close’ and visit an archive store and conservation studio, learning how staff preserve the treasures of the CRC. In a visit to the Digital Imaging Unit, you’ll see University collections reaching global audiences and technology helping evidence of the past be understood in new ways.
27 January: The Truth About Publishing? (Professor Alistair McCleery, Napier) – event for undergraduates, 1230-1330, LG.06 DHT http://edin.ac/truth-about-publishing
Alistair McCleery, Director of the Scottish Centre for the Book at Edinburgh Napier University, offers, as part of Academic Book Week, to uncover the Truth about Publishing. He begins with popular perceptions of publishing, as found in a number of media representations from The Substance of Fire (1996) through 13 Going On 30 (2004) to The Post Grad (2009) and others, before looking at the nature of contemporary publishing. He will examine the scope of the industry as well as looking to its future prospects.
Please direct any queries to sarah.ames@ed.ac.uk
This week, and just scraping in before the end of the year, we upgraded the LUNA imaging platform to version 7.2. This is important to us for two reasons: the first is aesthetic, as the front-end interface has been completely overhauled and is much cleaner, more responsive and (basically) more modern; the second is that its implementation means we are now a IIIF-compliant institution. As always, the site can be found at http://images.is.ed.ac.uk.

There have been a few blogposts about IIIF this year, but they’ve been prospective and theoretical; now, we can talk about it as something we can genuinely offer. IIIF- the International Imaging Interoperability Framework- is a toolkit which allows open exchange with images, meaning that an image need only be hosted once for it to be disseminated anywhere. Yes, since the birth of the internet, we’ve been able to pull images into webpages using http links, but IIIF takes this to another level: its parameter driven URIs allow formatting to take place on the image without downloading it, taking it into (e.g) Photoshop and working on it there. A range of image viewers are IIIF-compliant, and these allow high-resolution zooming directly onto a webpage, or the performance of comparisons with other institutions’ content.
Since the Image API, which addresses the above, was written, new layers of IIIF have appeared:

With LUNA as our IIIF server, we expect to be able to streamline a lot of our collections content. For example:

This is a bit technical, but it’s verging on fun once you get your head round it.
Pick an item in LUNA and copy the URL (obviously we do all of this programmatically!), for example:

…cut off the trailing text…
…replace ‘detail’ with ‘iiif’..
…then add the parameter “path”, to get a working vanilla IIIF URL:

Now you can start formatting. Some of the things you can do follow, but you can see the full spec here.



I hope this sheds a bit of light on what we’re now able to do. We will try to keep everyone informed as IIIF developments happen over the coming year.
Scott Renton, Digital Development
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