The CRRS web site comprises more than 130 individual pages divided into seven categories (About, People, Events, Library, Publications, Academic Programs, and Fellowships). The home page receives 1400 visitors and nearly 2700 individual page-loads each month. Including our archives, the site's total size is nearly a gigabyte (one billion bytes).
This site has been maintained by since January 2006. It was designed in early 2003 by Michael Ullyot.
This site reorganizes material from our
previous site (at left) into the categories listed across the top
and bottom
of every
page. If you are looking for specific information, consult
the site map. Wayward browsers will find that most of the information
on this site is cross-linked.
This site has been adapted from its predecessors. The
first CRRS web site (at left) was
designed
in 1995 by William Barek, with a bookmarks
page designed by David Galbraith. Chris Nighman managed the site from
1996 to 1997, Laura E. Hunt from 1997 to 1999, and Richard Raiswell from
1999 to 2002.
A site search engine is also
available, courtesy of Atomz.![]()
The
new CRRS site uses style
sheets, rather than tables, for much of its layout. (Exceptions abound:
the wheels of CSS-conversion turn slowly.) If you want to know why this
matters, read
this article. You can also view
the CRRS style sheet, if you like.
Components added in 2003 include the Vaults pages (our online book exhibitions), descriptions of Events categories (DVS, Friday Workshops, &c.), and downloadable PDFs (throughout the site). There are also plans to add material related to the history of the CRRS.
Irene Dumitrescu designed the Early Modern Resources site, from a pamphlet prepared in 2002 by Prof. Nick Terpstra (Associate Director) and Mark Crane (Graduate Fellow, 2002-04).
Any questions, comments, or bug reports regarding the web pages themselves should be sent to the .
If you have questions about any aspect of the CRRS, please contact our Assistant to the Director, Dr. Stephanie Treloar.
The
CRRS site was designed and is maintained on Macromedia Dreamweaver.
Dan Benjamin's address encoder helped prepare spam-proof e-mail address links.