The
Library also has significant collections of American imprints – from
early colonial printing in Mexico and Peru to works of
British and German presses in North America. Printed guides
to the Library’s Peruvian and Luso-Brazilian books
are in advanced stages of preparation. Some of the early
domestic printing contains text in the indigenous languages
of North and South America, exemplified by the Tercero
cathecismo of Lima in 1585, presenting on each page catechetical
lessons in Spanish, Quechua, and Aymará. A guide
to Indian language materials in the Library is being prepared
for publication. Other key collections include about 400
related manuscript codices and an unrelated collection
of 300 Classical Venetian imprints by Aldo Manuzio.
Cataloguing records for ninety percent of the JCB printed
collections can be accessed through Brown University’s
online catalogue, Josiah: josiah.brown.edu/search/
Online records for the Library are also available through
the OCLC database. A card catalogue is available for maps,
manuscripts, and about ten percent of the Library’s
printed books. Printed catalogues of the collection were
published between 1875 and 1973 and are widely distributed
in university libraries. The Library’s collection of
European narratives published between 1493 and 1750, are
reflected in the Library’s six-volume series, European
Americana: A Chronological Guide to Works printed in Europe
Relating to the Americas, a guide to the literature itself.
Browse the Archive of Early American Images, a database
of 4400 visual images from three centuries, drawn from JCB
collections:
www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/pages/ea_hmpg.html