Latin 201

Electronic Texts
and Useful WWW-Links

I'll put a few links here for various things, but please let me (and thereby your classmates) know if you find a link that's helpful or interesting or both.

Archaeological Fieldwork Opportunities--The title says it all: look here for opportunities to work on archaeological digs.

Classical Association of New England --the home page is located here at Wellesley.

Classics and Mediterranean Archaeology Home Page. One of the most complete listings of all WWW resources on the ancient world, including literature, history, and archaeology.

Diotima: Materials for the Study of Women and Gender in the Ancient World An outstanding (and actively growing) collection of www material.

Electronic Resources for Classicists Maria Pantelia's superb collection of www material.

The Latin Library at Ad Fontes Academy A large collection of ancient Roman literature in electronic form. Useful for all kinds of purposes, including (simple and handy) copying a text and printing it out double-spaced for class preparation.

Maecenas: Images of Ancient Greece and Rome Professor Leo Curran has digitized his wonderful slide collection and made it available for any non-commercial use.

Duke Papyrus Archive. Get an idea of what ancient texts looked like: they were NOT like modern texts.

Perseus. One of the richest of all Classics sites, including texts, images, searching tools--just about anything you can imagine.

RomArch--a central website for Roman art and archaeology.

Vergil's Home Page. A rich, wonderful site on Vergil and all things associated with him.

 

 

 

Ray Starr rstarr@wellesley.edu
Created: 1/24/01
Last modified: 1/24/01
Expires: 7/1/01