The Digital Scriptorium is a growing image database of medieval and renaissance manuscripts that unites scattered resources from many institutions into an international tool for teaching and scholarly research. See the Highlights.
Gallica is the name of the digital library of the Bibliothèque Nationale de France (BnF). Launched in 1997, it can be accessed from anywhere in the world over the Internet.
A single volume that contains illustrated manuscripts of Middle High German Minnesang poetry. (Includes all 137 miniatures of the poets from the Codex Manesse (1300-1340) at the Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg)
An interactive, web-based workspace designed to support use and study of the manuscripts in the historic Parker Library at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.
More than 2,000 manuscript pages and associated illuminations dating from the 9th through the 16th centuries from the collections of the New York Public Library.
Excellent site from Fordham University. The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted texts related to medieval and Byzantine history.
This collection holds digitised images of some of the world's oldest surviving volumes of printed music. More than 300 volumes of 16th-century music from the British Library were digitised from microfilm.
In 2004, the Museo Galileo Digital Library was instituted for the purpose of publishing digital collections on themes of interest to the history of science.