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Databases
Electronic
resources available to Louisville Seminary users. These databases are available
via the Internet except for Calvini Opera, the Catholic Periodical Literature Index and Thesaurus Linguae Graecae which must be accessed in the Library's computer lab.
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Metalib
is a research tool that allows simultaneous searching of databases.
Select "Login to Metalib" then input the requested user
i.d. and password, and change the institution to "LPTS"
to begin searching.
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ATLA
Religion Database
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Web based access to the
main Index of the literature of religion and theology.
Includes a full range of index citations to journal articles, essays
in multi-author works, and book reviews from three ATLA print indexes:
Religion Index One (RIO), Religion Index Two (RIT), and Index to
Book Reviews in Religion (IBRR)
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Calvini Opera |
The complete works of John Calvin in the edition of the Corpus Reformatorum. Access in the Library's Computer Lab. Computers # 1, 3, 6, 9, 12.
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Catholic
Periodical Literature Index
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Major periodical index
for Catholic materials. ( Available in the computer lab only)
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Web-based
access to an extensive range of seminal works from the Reformation
and post-Reformation eras. |
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EBSCOhost
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Web based access to a
large group of varied databases
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Family
and Society
Studies Worldwide
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Web based access to an
index of the research literature in the family social sciences.
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Web-based access to entries in volumes
29-38, 1993-2002, of this index.
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KYVL
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Web based access to a
large group of databases available through the Kentucky Virtual
Library.
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New
Testament Abstracts
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Web based access to abstracts
of periodical articles on the NewTestament and related areas.
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Old Testament Abstracts
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Web based access to abstracts
of periodical articles on the Old Testament and related areas.
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TLG
- Thesaurus Linguae Graecae
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On-line access to the
Thesaurus Linguae Graecae a research center at the University of
California, Irvine. A digital library of Greek literature from antiquity
to the present era. Currently includes texts dating from the time
of Homer up to the fall of Byzantium, AD 1453. On campus access
only. |
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