Search Filters Keyword(s) Council or Program - Any -Buddhist Studies InitiativeCenter for Historical Enquiry & the Social SciencesCommittee on Canadian StudiesConflict & Identity LabConflict, Resilience, and Health ProgramCouncil on African StudiesCouncil on East Asian Studies Council on Latin American & Iberian StudiesCouncil on Middle East StudiesCouncil on Southeast Asia StudiesEuropean Studies CouncilFox International FellowshipGenocide Studies ProgramGilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and AbolitionHellenic Studies ProgramInclusion EconomicsInterAsia InitiativeLeitner Program in International and Comparative Political EconomyMacMillan CenterPolitical Violence and its Legacies WorkshopProgram in Agrarian StudiesSouth Asian Studies CouncilTranslation InitiativeYale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions Yale Research Initiative on Innovation & Scale (Y-RISE) Search Reset Council on Southeast Asia Studies ARCHIVE 2000-2001 European Studies Council Archival Research at Oxford May 19, 2022 Ellen Nye is a PhD Candidate in history researching early modern trade between England and the Ottoman Empire to offer a new interpretation of the inter-imperial origins of global finance. Council on Southeast Asia Studies ARCHIVE 2022-23 Council on Southeast Asia Studies ARCHIVE 2023-24 Council on Southeast Asia Studies ARCHIVE 2022-23 Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition Voices From the Archive Genocide Studies Program An Archive of Murders Past Publication Date 2007 Council on Southeast Asia Studies ARCHIVE 2011-2012 Council on Southeast Asia Studies ARCHIVE 2010-2011 Program in Agrarian Studies Agrarian Studies Archive File European Studies Council MA Thesis Archive Program in Agrarian Studies Agrarian Studies Archive Pagination Previous page Previous … Page 4 Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Current page 8 Page 9 Page 10 Page 11 Page 12 … Next page Next
European Studies Council Archival Research at Oxford May 19, 2022 Ellen Nye is a PhD Candidate in history researching early modern trade between England and the Ottoman Empire to offer a new interpretation of the inter-imperial origins of global finance.