An interdisciplinary portal of papyrological and epigraphical resources formerly Egypt and the Nile valley (800 BC to AD 800), now expanding to the Ancient World in general.
Works of select Latin authors in the original text and translation with hypertext links to global lists and concordances, including Caesar, Cicero, Horace, Vergil, Ovid, Statius, and others.
A online reference work to persons and places in the Metamorphoses of Ovid, including indexes of persons, nominals, attributes, and verbs, all with digital concordance to the Latin text and a narrative index.
Provides lists of resources and links related to instructional software (Latin, Greek, Classical Civilization and Etymology), fonts, and reference materials.
Provides tools to support learning Ancient Greek, and resources to encourage the study of various forms of Linguistics and their application to Ancient Greek, in order to foster the application of research methods from the field of Linguistics to the study of Hellenic and Hellenistic Greek.
A hub for scholars and students interested in the application of humanities computing to research in the ancient and Byzantine worlds that collects guidelines and suggestions of major technical issues, and catalogues digital projects and tools of relevance to classicists.
The only comprehensive research facility for the study of Greek and Latin inscriptions and manuscripts in the United States. Fosters the study of inscriptions and manuscripts and promotes research opportunities for those interested in these primary sources of information for the ancient and...
Collects and publishes all ancient Greek personal names, drawing on the full range of written sources from the 8th century B.C. down to the late Roman Empire.
An online catalogue of images and transcriptions of curse tablets, as well as indices of Latin words, lists of epigraphic conventions, and bibliography.
Images of several hundred inscriptions available for viewing and downloading, listed according to geographical region (except for Attic inscriptions, which have been further divided between IG I and IG II texts).