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Latin 201Electronic Texts
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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.
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Archaeological Fieldwork Opportunities--The title says it all: look here for opportunities to work on archaeological digs. |
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Classical Association of New England --the home page is located here at Wellesley. |
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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. |
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Diotima: Materials for the Study of Women and Gender in the Ancient World An outstanding (and actively growing) collection of www material. |
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Electronic Resources for Classicists Maria Pantelia's superb collection of www material. |
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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. |
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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. |
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Duke Papyrus Archive. Get an idea of what ancient texts looked like: they were NOT like modern texts. |
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Perseus. One of the richest of all Classics sites, including texts, images, searching tools--just about anything you can imagine. |
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RomArch--a central website for Roman art and archaeology. |
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Vergil's Home Page. A rich, wonderful site on Vergil and all things associated with him. |
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Ray Starr rstarr@wellesley.edu