Welcome to LSJ!
The Liddell, Scott, Jones Ancient Greek Lexicon (LSJ) is perhaps the best known Ancient Greek-English dictionary. Here you can find a wiki implementation.
The wikification of LSJ was no mean task but we hope that the extra features provided by the wiki set-up will enhance the user experience. Some of these features (like the indexes) were made possible through the use of Semantic Mediawiki extensions.
Different types of transliterations and word forms were used, so that everyone is happy: Ancient Greek scholars, speakers of Modern Greek, people who prefer transliterated Greek or Beta Code.
For example, you will get results on the search box no matter whether you type in polytonic Greek, monotonic Greek, Greek without any accents at all, or transliterated Greek. You can even add a search form on your web site or a quick search link on your browser.
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And see also the LSJ at TLG and at Perseus
Corpus Grammaticorum Latinorum:
Accès aux sources grammaticales de la Latinité tardive: recherche, parcours textuels et bibliographie
Le corpus des textes attribués de manière conventionnelle aux grammatici Latini est constitué par l’ensemble des manuels de grammaire latine écrits entre le IIIe et le VIIIe siècle apr. J.-C. et édités par Heinrich Keil à Leipzig entre 1855 et 1880. Ce corpus présente de nombreux centres d’intérêt :
Il permet la reconstitution de l’histoire des idées linguistiques en Occident, en rassemblant les sources principales. Toute la tradition postérieure, à partir du Moyen Âge, s’est appuyée sur ces textes (notamment les artes de Donat et de Priscien).
Il contient, sous forme d’exemples, plus de 14.000 citations : il s’agit soit de précieux fragments d’ouvrages (littéraires, philosophiques, techniques) perdus soit de passages que l’on peut comparer avec la tradition directe des textes conservés.
Il met en évidence certaines tendances du latin tardif, notamment les formes expressives étrangères à l’usage classique.
Par exemple, le grammairien Clédonius insiste sur la nécessité de ne pas grouper en un seul syntagme prépositions et adverbes : de intus et de foris uenio non possumus dicere, quia praepositio aduerbis numquam iungitur (GL 5,64,22-23). Il s’agit d’une réaction archaïsante par rapport à l’usage du Ve siècle, où commençait à s’affirmer la tendance au renforcement des adverbes, tendance qui est à l’origine, entre autres, des locutions françaises ‘dans’ (< ‘denz’ < de intus) et ‘dehors’ (< ‘defors’ < de foris).
Il évoque les discussions philosophiques au sujet de la nature et du fonctionnement du langage, en montrant l’adaptation des catégories logiques à l’enseignement scolaire. Au Moyen Âge, de nombreux débats portant aussi bien sur la logique que sur la théologie deviendront possibles grâce à la médiation des grammatici Latini, notamment de Priscien.
Par exemple, dans un excursus philosophique des Institutiones grammaticae apparaît pour la première fois dans l’histoire de la pensée occidentale le mot ‘syncatégorème’ ainsi que la question plus générale de la co-signification : partes igitur orationis sunt secundum dialecticos duae, nomen et uerbum, quia hae solae etiam per se coniunctae plenam faciunt orationem, alias autem partes syncategoremata, hoc est consignificantia, appellabant (inst. GL 2,54,5-7).
A list of websites associated with the attendees at the 2012 running of the Linked Ancient World Data Institute.
http://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/
http://ancientbibliographies.libs.uga.edu/ , http://ancientbiblio.wordpress.com/
http://arachne.uni-koeln.de/
http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/publications
http://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/
http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_database.aspx , http://collection.britishmuseum.org/Sparql
http://cdli.ucla.edu/
http://chs.harvard.edu/chs/homer_multitext , http://homermultitext.blogspot.com/
http://classics.uc.edu/nestor/
http://digitalhumanities.umass.edu/pbmp/ , http://pompeiana.org
http://www.nml.cuny.edu/documentingcappadocia/
http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/
http://finds.org.uk/
http://googleancientplaces.wordpress.com/gapvis/
http://geodia.laits.utexas.edu/
http://isawnyu.github.com/awld-js , http://github.com/isawnyu/awld-js
http://nomisma.org
http://numismatics.org/search, http://numismatics.org/collection/
http://isaw.nyu.edu/publications/isaw-papers
http://opencontext.org
http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/
http://papyri.info
http://pelagios-project.blogspot.com/ , http://pelagios.dme.ait.ac.at/api/datasets
http://penn.museum/blog/iraq/ur-digitization-project-item-of-the-month/
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/ , http://data.perseus.org/people/smith:alexander-3
http://phd.mr56k.info/project.html#canonical-citation
http://pleiades.stoa.org
http://www.nml.cuny.edu/documentingcappadocia/
http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/Inscriptions/
http://www.syriac.ua.edu/demo
http://trismegistos.org
http://usepigraphy.brown.edu/
http://web.library.emory.edu/disc/projects/tracking-samothrace
Athenian Onomasticon Online
Posted: 07 Jun 2013 08:10 AM PDT
Athenian Onomasticon
Sean G Byrne
Since the publication of the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names II (Attica) in 1994 and Foreign Residents of Athens in 1996, fresh epigraphic evidence has continued to emerge by the month in the form of newly published inscriptions and re-readings and reinterpretations of old material. This has entailed a steady enhancement in the state of the Attic onomsticon and prosopography, with new names added, evidence for known names and people supplemented, and misread or misinterpreted names abolished.
A gauge of this progress is provided only partially by the Bibliography, from which references are removed when subsumed by Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum items. A better indication is given by the Addenda / Corrigenda to LGPN, posted by us at regular intervals until 2008, recording the cumulative changes to be made to the printed LGPN II. And in addition to these there are the extensive updates to bibliographic references provided by the publication of such corpora as Agora XVI and XVIII, IEleusis, IRhamnous and SEMA, not to mention the sixteen volumes of SEG that have appeared in the intervening years.
This site makes available the complete up-to-date onomastic data for the population of ancient Athens, through a search facility, and through html files that present the latest version of the Onomasticon.
Onomasticon Files
Α (14 March 2013)
Β-Δ (14 March 2013)
Ε (14 March 2013)
Ζ-Κ (14 March 2013)
Λ-Ο (14 March 2013)
Π-Υ (14 March 2013)
Φ-Ω (14 March 2013)
Introduction
Search
Help
Bibliography
Godmy's Searchable Digitized Latin & Greek Lexica
Posted: 11 Jun 2013 06:43 AM PDT
Godmy's Searchable Digitized Latin & Greek Lexica
This is only a free hosting. More and more often happens that these sites are suspended due to the large database I create for the new dictionaries et cetera. If this project should continue, a serious paid hosting will be needed. Please send a whatever donation via Paypal (5$, 10$, 25$...) to help me to make it continue.
Lexica Latino-Graeca & Graeco-Latina:
1. Novum Lexicum Manuale Latino-Graecum & Graeco-Latinum (1767, ed. 1827, Benjamin Hedericus)
- Use the latin alphabet (the beta code, no diacritics) to input a Greek word: η = h; θ = q; χ = x; υ = u; ψ = y; ω = w; ξ = c
- There is always an option to go to the next/previous page on the bottom of the page
Gr-Lat: The cover, preface and other pages and Lat-Gr: The cover, preface and other pages
2. Schrevelius: Lexicum Manuale Latino-Greacum & Graeco-Latinum (1654, ed. 1832, Cornelius Schrevelius)
- Use the latin alphabet (the beta code, no diacritics) to input a Greek word: η = h; θ = q; χ = x; υ = u; ψ = y; ω = w; ξ = c
- There is always an option to go to the next/previous page on the bottom of the page
- Use the the arrow keys on your keyboard for easier navigation, if needed.
Gr-Lat: The cover, preface and other pages
Scan: Google Books; Web/search tech. realization: Godmy; Idea, indexing of the pages, former tech. realization: Quasus
Lexica Graeca:
1. Etymological Dictionary of Ancient Greek (1860, F.E.J. Valpy)
- Use the latin alphabet (the beta code, no diacritics) to input a Greek word: η = h; θ = q; χ = x; υ = u; ψ = y; ω = w; ξ = c
- There is always an option to go to the next/previous page on the bottom of the page
Appendix and alterations and The cover, preface and other pages
Scan: Google Books; Web/search tech. realization: Godmy
Lexica Latina:
1. Etymological Dictionary of Latin (1827, F.E.J. Valpy) + an appendix
- There is always an option to go to the next/previous page on the bottom of the page
- An appendix is always accessible in the bottom of the page in cases, when you are required "to see an appendix"
Additions and alterations and Preface
2. Forcellini: Lexicon Totius Latinitatis (Latino-Latinum) (1775, reprint 1940, Egidio Forcellini & Giuseppe Furlanetto)
- In the search you have to make a distinction between J and I and U and V or it searches incorrectly!
- Many thanks to Documenta Catholica Omnia which has supplied the PDF files and made them publicly available.
- The indexing of the pages by Quasus.
- There is always an option to go to the next/previous page on the bottom of the page
Cover pages
3. Saxo: Vademecum in opus Saxonis et alia opera Danica compendium ex indice verborum (La-La, MEDIAE Aetatis) (1998, Franz Blatt & Reimer Hemmingsen) N E W
- FULLY DIGITAL and more important: with a search engine (done by me)
- This version has been digitized before (without a search engine) by the author of this website, to whom I owe my gratitude!
- Iohannes Brunensis has let me know about its existence.
Preface and Ad Usum and Index abbreviationum
4. Wagner: Lexicon Latinum (Thesaurus, Latino-Latinum) (1878, P. Franc Wagner) N E W
- The distinction between J and I and U and V has to be made in the search to get correct results!
- Personal thanks to Iohannes Brunensis, without whose blog I would never know about this.
- Big thanks to Documenta Catholica Omnia which has supplied the PDF file and made it publicly available.
- There is always an option to go to the next/previous page on the bottom of the page
Abbreviations & Cover page
Scan: Google Books (mostly); Indexing of the pages, tech. realization: Godmy; Original idea by: Q.
Other languages dictionaries N E W
Corpus Scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium (CSCO): Scriptores Coptici Online
Posted: 13 Jun 2013 07:45 AM PDT
[First posted in AWOL 15 September 2011. Updated 13 June 2013]
Corpus Scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium (CSCO): Scriptores Coptici (From the Oriental Institute Research Archives)
vol. 1 = series secunda, tomus II, textus: Iohannes Leipoldt, W. Crum (eds.), Sinuthii archimandritae vita et opera omnia, I, Paris, 1906.
vol. 2 = series secunda, tomus IV, textus: Iohannes Leipoldt, W. Crum (eds.), Sinuthii archimandritae vita et opera omnia, III, Paris, 1908.
vol. 3 = series tertia, tomus I, textus: I. Balestri, H. Hyvernat (eds.), Acta martyrum, I, Paris, 1907.
vol. 4 = series tertia, tomus I, versio: I. Balestri, H. Hyvernat (eds.), Acta martyrum, I, Paris, 1908 (Reprint: Louvain, 1960).
vol. 5 = series secunda, tomus V, textus: Iohannes Leipoldt, W. Crum (eds.), Sinuthii archimandritae vita et opera omnia, IV, Paris, 1913.
vol. 6 = series tertia, tomus II, textus: I. Balestri, H. Hyvernat (eds.), Acta martyrum, II, Paris, 1924
vol. 7 = series tertia, tomus VII, textus: L. Th. Lefort (ed.), S. Pachomii vita bohairice scripta, Paris, 1925.
vols. 9-10 = series tertia, tomus VIII, textus: L. Th. Lefort (ed.), S. Pachomii vitae sahidice scriptae, Paris, 1933.
Alin Suciu author of Research on Patristics, Apocrypha, Coptic Literature and Manuscripts has added five additional volumes from the series:
G. Garitte, S. Antonii vitae. Versio sahidica (CSCO, 117. Scriptores coptici, 13; Paris: E typographeo reipublicae, 1949).
L. Th. Lefort, S. Athanase. Lettres festales et pastorales en copte (CSCO, 150, Scriptores coptici, 19; Louvain: L. Durbecq, 1955) – Coptic text.
L. Th. Lefort, S. Athanase. Lettres festales et pastorales en copte (CSCO, 151, Scriptores coptici, 20; Louvain: L. Durbecq, 1955) – French translation.
C. D. G. Müller, Die Bücher der Einsetzung der Erzengel Michael und Gabriel (CSCO, 225, Scriptores coptici, 31; Louvain: Secrétariat du CorpusSCO, 1962) – Coptic text.
C. D. G. Müller, Die Bücher der Einsetzung der Erzengel Michael und Gabriel (CSCO, 226, Scriptores coptici, 32; Louvain: Secrétariat du CorpusSCO, 1962) – German translation.
Francisco Arriaga posted a comment below, drawing our attention to this collection:
CSCO Collection (39)
by Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Guidi. Annales Johanni I, Iyasu I, Bakaffa. 1903. Textus.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Duval. Liber epistolarum. 1904. Versio.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Chabot. Documenta ad origines Monophysitarum illustrandos. 1907. Pt. 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Vaschalde. Tractatus tres de Trinitate et incarnatione. 1907. Volume 2.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Guidi. Annales regum Iysu II et Iyo'as. 1910. Volume 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Guidi. Annales regum Iysu II et Iyo'as. 1910. Volume 2.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Guidi. Chronica minora, pars prior. 1903 .
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Labourt. Expositio liturgiae. 1903.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Connolly. Expositio officiorum ecclesiae Georgio Arbelensi vulgo adscripta. 1911. Volume 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Connolly. Expositio officiorum ecclesiae Georgio Arbelensi vulgo adscripta. 1911. Volume 2.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini, Guidi. Historia Regis Sarsa Dengel : (Malak Sagad). 1907.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Scher. Liber scholiorum; textus. 1910.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Chabot, Tonneau. S. Cyrilli Alexandrini Commentarii in Lucam. 1912. Vol. 1, pt. 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Littmann. Philosophi abessini, [sive, Vita et philosophia magistri Zar'a-Y'qb eiusque discipuli Walda-eywat philosophia]o. 1904.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Leipoldt, Crum, Wiesmann. Sinuthii archimandritae vita et opera omnia. 1906. Volume 3.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Leipoldt, Crum, Wiesmann. Sinuthii archimandritae vita et opera omnia. 1906. Volume 4.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Brooks. Vitae virorum apud Monophysitas celeberrimorum, I. 1907.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Chabot, Sedláek, Vaschalde. Dionysii bar alb Commentarii in Evangelia. 1906. Vol 1. Pt. 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Chabot, Sedláek, Vaschalde. Dionysii bar alb Commentarii in Evangelia. 1906. Vol 1. Pt. 2.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Chabot, Sedláek, Vaschalde. Dionysii bar alb Commentarii in Evangelia. 1906. Vol 2. Pt. 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Chabot, Sedláek, Vaschalde. Dionysii bar alb Commentarii in Evangelia. 1906. Vol 2. Pt. 2.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Chabot. Chronicon anonymi auctoris ad annum Christi 1234 pertinens. 1916. Volume 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Chabot. Chronicon anonymi auctoris ad annum Christi 1234 pertinens. 1916. Volume 2.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Vaschalde. Babai Magni Liber de unione. 1915.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Braun. Epistulae Timothei patriarchae I (1914)
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Sedlacek. Dionysius bar Salibi, In Apocalypsim, Actus et Epistulas Catholicas. 1909.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Seybold. Historia patriarcharum Alexandrinorum. 1904. Volume 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Acta martyrum [Balestri, Hyvernat, Eds.]. 1907. Volume 1.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Agapius. Historia universalis [Cheikho, Ed.]. 1912.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Acta martyrum [Balestri, Hyvernat, Eds.]. 1907. Volume 2.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini, Turajev. Vitae sanctorum indigenarum. 1904. Volume 1 - Versio.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini, Turajev. Vitae sanctorum indigenarum. 1904. Volume 1 - Textus.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini, Turajev. Vitae sanctorum indigenarum. 1904. Volume 2 - Versio.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini, Turajev. Vitae sanctorum indigenarum. 1904. Volume 3 - Versio.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini, Turajev. Vitae sanctorum indigenarum. 1904. Volume 4 - Versio.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini, Turajev. Vitae sanctorum indigenarum. 1904. Volume 5 - Textus.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini, Turajev. Vitae sanctorum indigenarum. 1904. Volume 6 - Textus.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini. Vitae sanctorum antiquiorum. 1904. Versio.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
Conti Rossini. Liber Axumae. 1910. Versio.
Patrologia Latina, Graeca et Orientalis
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Open Access Journal: Haluka
Posted: 13 Jun 2013 07:20 AM PDT
Haluka
hatti was officially born in november 1995 in Paris, France as the initiative of three students who shared a common interest in the ancient hittite civilization. As a cultural, non-profit association, hatti was created to promote the study of this brilliant culture and also to be a warm and welcome place for every one interested in the history and archaeology of ancient Anatolia.
Many activities were actually conducted in 1996, the two most important being a guided visit of the Oriental Antiquities collection of the Louvre museum and a very instructing journey in Turkey where we had the opportunity to follow the steps of the ancient Hittites.
But the year 1997 was still more important to us as it saw the first official publication of our newsletter HALUKA where everyone, students and specialists, were able to express themselves in articles about different aspects of the hittite culture. That year also inaugurated our appearance on the Internet.
The following years 1998 and 1999 were the occasion for our newsletter HALUKA to develop by getting an international dimension. Unfortunately, the year 1999 was also the year we had to stop our activities as an association, even though it was decided to leave our web site online and to keep it updated as much as possible.
We do hope our association helped, and will still help through this web site, in promoting the studies in hittitology and contribute to spread our interest to more and more people.
HALUKA, issue 0 (prototype) (02/1997)
La redécouverte de la civilisation hittite
by Clancier, Philippe - Gaulon, Alain (Paris).
Préservation et restauration des monuments historiques et oeuvres d'art
by Chauffriat, H. (Paris).
HALUKA, issue 1 (07/1997)
Avant-propos
by Lebrun, René (Louvain-la-Neuve).
A propos de la langue louvite
by Lebrun, René (Louvain-la-Neuve).
L'eau dans la religion hittite
by Mazoyer, Michel (Paris).
Le pays de Hatti et le pays de Sapinuwa
by Clancier, Philippe (Paris).
HALUKA, issue 2 (11/1997)
Les pratiques funéraires sur le plateau anatolien
by Deliyannis, Yannis (Paris).
L'architecture militaire à Hattuša
by Dargery, Vincent (Paris).
De Mazuwati à Til Barsip
by Clancier, Philippe (Paris).
HALUKA, issue 3 (02/1998)
Kaniš, un comptoir commercial assyrien en Anatolie
by Michel, Cécile (Paris).
Nuzi, une ville du monde hourrite
by Lion, Brigitte (Paris).
HALUKA, issue 4 (09/1998)
La mer dans la religion hittite
by Mazoyer, Michel (Paris).
A propos des enfers dans le monde hittite et le monde grec
by Colonna, Cécile - Saint-Pierre, Catherine (Paris).
La lettre aux hittites
by Devidal, Elise (Paris).
HALUKA, issue 5 (01/1999)
Quelques remarques concernant le mythe de Kumarbi et la théogonie d'Hésiode
by Blam, Jean-François (Paris).
La Syrie du nord, entre hittites et assyriens (1ère partie)
by Clancier, Philippe (Paris).
Cours de langue hittite, leçon 1 (paper issue only)
by Mazoyer, Michel (Paris).
HALUKA, issue 6 (05/1999)
L'Anatolie avant les hittites : le paléolithique et le mésolithique
by Gaulon, Alain (Paris).
La Syrie du nord, entre hittites et assyriens (2ème partie)
by Clancier, Philippe (Paris).
Cours de langue hittite, leçon 2 (paper issue only)
by Mazoyer, Michel (Paris).
HALUKA, issue 7 (11/1999)
La présence mycénienne en Asie Mineure
by Deliyannis, Yannis (Paris).
L'Anatolie avant les hittites : le néolithique acéramique
by Gaulon, Alain (Paris).
Cours de langue hittite, leçon 3 (paper issue only)
by Mazoyer, Michel (Paris).
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
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Poorly Attested Words in Ancient Greek Online
Posted: 13 Jun 2013 06:33 AM PDT
Poorly Attested Words in Ancient Greek
The project Poorly Attested Words in Ancient Greek (PAWAG) has the aim of setting up a database in the form of an electronic dictionary that gathers together words of Ancient Greek that are either only scantily attested (i.e. with one or few occurrences), inadequately (i.e.characterized by some sort of uncertainty) or in any case problematically, both from a formal and semantic point of view.
The project is open to international collaboration and the archive will be drawn up through progressive expansion both in the number of entries and their contents, with gradual correction and updating and elimination of any ghost-word.
The database is available free and offers a scientific tool for scholars in the research on classical world as well as a supplement to the existing dictionaries of ancient Greek (in which satisfactory attention can hardly be paid to the complex field of Poorly Attested Words), in order to make a contribution to future improvement of Greek lexicography.
Click here to display an entry example. In order to visualize correctly the Greek parts install the SPIonic font.
Home Page [A]
Database [B]
Fonts [C]
Help [D]
Staff [E]
Partners [F]
Admin area [G]
E-Mail [S]
Aristarchus [T]
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Inscriptiones Graecae: Elektronische Edition
Inschriften sind die Fußnoten im Buch der Geschichte der alten Welt; nur daß über weite Strecken der Haupttext fehlt.
Inschriften sind Primärquellen zur Geschichte, Religionsgeschichte, Sprachwissenschaft, Onomastik usw., die die antiken Autoren ergänzen, illustrieren, korrigieren. Jede Inschrift ist ein Original. Meist verstümmelt gefunden, sind sie in hohem Maße der Ergänzung und Interpretation bedürftig. Mitunter gelingt es, verstreute Fragmente ein- und derselben Inschrift zusammenzusetzen. Der Zustrom an neuen Inschriften hält unvermindert an: jährlich werden ca. 1000 neu publiziert.
Inschriften sind in der Regel auf Metall eingeritzt oder punziert, auf Stein eingemeißelt und mit Farbe (rot, blau) ausgelegt. Qualität und Menge der Inschriften ist abhängig von den zur Verfügung stehenden Gesteinen. Metallplatten sind besonders auf der Peloponnes verbreitet. Bleiplättchen werden, zusammengerollt, für Verwünschungen bevorzugt. Silber und Gold sind äußerst selten. Die ältesten Inschriften stammen aus dem 8. Jh. v.Chr. Es gibt keinen Zwischenraum zwischen den Worten (scriptio continua); Interpunktionen finden sich in frühester Zeit willkürlich, in der Kaiserzeit nach röm. Vorbild gelegentlich; dann auch Abkürzungen.
Der Inhalt der Inschriften äußerst mannigfach. Am häufigsten sind Grabinschriften auf Grabstelen (mit Relief), -säulen, -altären: Namen der Toten und Gruß. Eine besondere Form bilden Grabgedichte - Weih-Inschriften an die Götter, oft auf dem geweihten Gegenstand selbst angebracht; häufig nach einem Sieg bei sportlichen oder musischen Agonen gestiftet [16]. - Ehren-Inschriften, vor allem Unterschriften von Statuen, erst seit dem 4.Jh. v.Chr. häufiger, in röm. Zeit massenhaft. - Bildhauer-Inschriften, in denen sich der ausführende Künstler nennt. - Dekrete mit den Beschlüssen der Gesamtgemeinde oder ihrer Abteilungen und Vereine, im Formular in den einzelnen Poleis verschieden. Es überwiegen Ehrendekrete für Bürger anderer Poleis, Könige, römische Magistrate, denen das Ehrenbürgerrecht (Proxenie) verliehen wird. - Freilassungsurkunden von Sklaven, oft als (fiktiver) Verkauf an eine Gottheit vollzogen und in deren Tempel dokumentiert. - Grenz- und Hypothekensteine (horoi). - Gesetze und Regelungen privatrechtlicher sowie öffentlicher und sakraler Angelegenheiten bis hin zur Kodifizierung geltenden Rechts. - Religiöse Texte, Hymnen (mit Noten). - Briefe von hellenistischen Königen und römischen Kaisern. - Bauinschriften, Abrechnungs-Urkunden, Inventarlisten von sakralem Gerät. - Listen und Kataloge von Gegenständen (z.B. auf den Schiffen der athenischen Flotte) und Personen (z.B. von eponymen Beamten, Priestern). - Zwischenstaatliche Urkunden (Asylieurkunden, Staatsverträge, Akten der Rechtssprechung).
Die Sammlung der antiken Inschriften wurde im Jahre 1815 von der Preußischen Akademie der Wissenschaften auf Antrag von August Boeckh beschlossen. In den vier Bänden des "Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum" wurden 1828-1859 alle damals bekannten Inschriften gesammelt und kommentiert. Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff vereinte 1902 das Prinzip der Autopsie mit dem der Vollständigkeit, beschränkte zugleich die auf 15 Bände geplanten "Inscriptiones Graecae" (IG) auf Griechenland, Italien und die Inseln der Ägäis. Zur Aktualisierung der Sammlung sind Neuauflagen (editio altera) sowie Supplementbände vorgesehen.
Die digitale Edition enthält, beginnend mit dem im Jahre 2001 erschienenen Band IG IX 1², 4, Texte und deutsche Übersetzungen aller Inschriften; die Aufnahme von Übersetzungen in anderen Sprachen ist vorgesehen. In den Übersetzungen wurde auf diakritische Zeichen weitgehend verzichtet; Ergänzungen sind nicht eigens gekennzeichnet, sondern ergeben sich aus dem Vergleich mit der Edition. In bestimmten Fällen sind weitergehende Ergänzungen aus dem kritischen Apparat in eckigen Klammern [ ] wiedergegeben; für den Sinnzusammenhang notwendige sowie erklärende Zusätze sind durch runde Klammern ( ) kenntlich gemacht. Lücken gleich welchen Umfangs werden einheitlich durch "- - -" gekennzeichnet. Alle Zeitangaben sind v. Chr., sofern nicht anders angegeben. Die Abkürzungen "S. d." (= "Sohn des") und "T. d." (= Tochter des") umschreiben das griechische Patronymikon.
Startseite
Digitale Edition
Suche
Übersicht Attika, 5.Jh. v.Chr.
IG I3, 2, 500 - IG I3, 2, 1517
IG I3, 2
Inscriptiones Atticae Euclidis anno anteriores. Fasc. 2: Dedicationes, catalogi, termini, tituli sepulcrales, varia, tituli Attici extra Atticam reperti, addenda. Edid. David Lewis et Lilian Jeffery adiuvante Eberhard Erxleben. - XIII, S. 489-998. Berlin 1994
Attika, Spätantike Inschriften
IG II/III2 13248-13690
IG II/III2 5
Inscriptiones Atticae aetatis quae est inter Herulorum incursionem et Imp. Mauricii tempora. Edid. Ericus Sironen. - X, 218 S., LI Tab., Berlin 2008
Aigina
IG IV2 2, 746 - IG IV2 2, 1239
IG IV2 2
Inscriptiones Argolidis. Fasc. 2: Inscriptiones Aeginae insulae. Schedis usus quas condidit Hans R. Goette edid. Klaus Hallof. - XIII, 200 S., XXVIII Tab., Berlin 2007
Inseln des Ionischen Meeres
IG IX 12, 4, 786 - IG IX 12, 4, 1779
IG IX 12, 4
Inscriptiones Phocidis, Locridis, Aetoliae, Acarnaniae, insularum maris lonii. Fasc. 4: Inscriptiones insularum maris Ionii. Schedis usus quas condidit Guentherus Klaffenbach auxitque Daniel Strauch, adiuvante Mathias Lawo edid. Klaus Hallof. Titulos Ithacenses retractavit John M. Fossey. - XII, 402 S., XLIV Tab., Berlin 2001
Ostlokris
IG IX 12, 5, 1780 - IG IX 12, 5, 2047
IG IX 12, 5
Inscriptiones Phocidis, Locridis, Aetoliae, Acarnaniae, insularum maris lonii. Fasc. 5. Inscriptiones Locridis orientalis. Schedis usa quas condidit Guentherus Klaffenbach edid. Daniela Summa. - X, 148 S., 20 Tab., Berlin 2011.
Kos. Kalymna. Milesische Inseln
IG XII 4, 1, 1 - IG XII 4, 1, 423
IG XII 4, 1
Inscriptiones Coi, Calymnae, insularum Milesiarum. Curavit Klaus Hallof. Pars I: Inscriptionum Coi insulae: Decreta, epistulae, edicta, tituli sacri. Edid. Dimitris Bosnakis, Klaus Hallof, Kent Rigsby. - XI, 339 + vii S., Berlin 2010.
Samos. Ikaria. Korassische Inseln
IG XII 6, 1, 1 - IG XII 6, 2, 1290
IG XII 6, 1
Inscriptiones Chii et Sami cum Corassiis Icariaque. Pars 1: Inscriptiones Sami insulae: Decreta, epistulae, sententiae, edicta imperatoria, leges, catalogi, tituli Atheniensium, tituli honorarii, tituli operum publicorum, inscriptiones ararum. Edid. Klaus Hallof. - XII, 345 + viii S., Berlin 2000.
IG XII 6, 2
Inscriptiones Chii et Sami cum Corassiis Icariaque. Pars 2: Inscriptiones Sami insulae: Dedicationes, tituli sepulcrales, tituli Christiani Byzantini Iudaei, varia, tituli graphio incisi, incerta, tituli alieni. Inscriptiones Corassiarum, edid. Klaus Hallof. Inscriptiones Icariae insulae, edid. Angelus P. Matthaiou. - VII, S. 346-756, LVIII Tab., Berlin 2003
OhioLINK ETD Center (Electronic Theses and Dissertations)
EDENDA: Database of editions of Latin patristic texts
Posted: 25 Jul 2013 08:27 AM PDT
EDENDA
EDENDA ist ein nicht-kommerzielles Projekt zur Förderung wissenschaftlicher Kommunikation. Private Angaben wie etwa E-mail-Adressen werden nur mit ausdrücklicher Einwilligung der Teilnehmer in die Database aufgenommen.
EDENDA is a non-commercial project which is aimed only to support communication between scholars. Private informations such as email addresses will be added to the database only with your consent.
Um den Informationsaustausch über aktuelle Editionsvorhaben aus der lateinischen Patristik zu erleichtern, wurde beim CSEL eine Internet-Dokumentation gestartet, die frei zugänglich ist. Bitte melden Sie uns Ihre entsprechenden Projekte, die in Arbeit sind, damit sie in EDENDAbekanntgegeben werden können.
In order to facilitate exchange of information on editions of Latin patristic texts which are underway, an internet documentation has been started by the CSEL. This service is free of charge. Please let us know of projects you are working on, so that they can be added to the EDENDA database.
Per facilitare lo scambio d'informazioni su edizioni attualmente progettate sul campo della patristica latina, una documentazione 'internet' è stata iniziata presso lo CSEL. L'accesso è libero a tutti. Si prega dunque di segnalarci i rispettivi progetti che sono in caso di lavoro, finchè possiamo renderli noti su EDENDA.
Pour rendre plus faciles les échanges d'informations concernant les projets d'édition de textes patristiques latins, le CSEL propose d'établir une base de données a laquelle on aura acces gratuit par l'Internet. Veuillez donc nous faire connaître tout projet du genre que nous voulons bien annoncer sous la rubrique EDENDA.
Auctor
Ambrosiaster
Ambrosius
Anonymus
Augustinus
Beda Venerabilis
Boethius
Cassiodorus
Claudius
Taurinensis
Collatio
Cyprianus
Damasus papa
Donatus
Vesuntinus
Eucherius
Fortunatianus
Hieronymus
Hilarius
Pictaviensis
Isidorus
Hispalensis
Iulius papa
Lactantius
Liberius papa
Pelagius
Prosper
Aquitanus
Rufinus
Tertullianus
Vetus Latina
Cyrus' Paradise: The World's First Online Collaborative Commentary to an Ancient Text
Posted: 07 Aug 2013 05:17 AM PDT
Cyrus' Paradise: The World's First Online Collaborative Commentary to an Ancient Text
Cyrus’ Paradise is the world’s first comprehensive, online, collaborative commentary for a Classical text: Xenophon’s Education of Cyrus (Cyropaedia). Cyrus’ Paradise incorporates contributions from all generations and communities, from high school and college students to advanced professors to amateur enthusiasts. Contributions take the form of multimedia (pictures, audio, video), grammatical and syntactical instruction, and discussion in the form of questions, comments, and blog posts. Because it is always growing, the collaborative commentary is designed to produce new readings of the text with every new participant. It may be used as a tool for scholarly research at any stage, from a prospectus to a polished article. It may also be used as an intermediate or upper-level Greek text. Sample syllabuses are provided here. Our approach has been to provide students with every conceivable resource for understanding and interpreting the text (e.g., grammatical/syntactical aid, parsing, tree-banking, vocabulary, video instruction, audio recordings), while at the same time developing every conceivable way to assess student mastery.
Book 1
Chapter 1.1: The Problem of Ruling Humans and the Solution of Cyrus
Chapter 1.2: The Persian Moral and Martial Education
Chapter 1.3: Cyrus Has His Persian Education Tested among the Medes
Chapter 1.4: Friendship with Medan youths, Hunting, and Distinguished Warfare
Chapter 1.5: Cyrus Prepares to Join the Medan Campaign against the Assyrians
Chapter 1.6: Cyrus Recalls the Lessons of Cambyses and Seeks Further Knowledge
Book 2
Chapter 2.1: Cyrus Implements Cambyses’ Principles of Generalship in the Persian Army
Chapter 2.2: Cyrus Conducts Dinner Parties with a Blend of Seriousness and Charm
Chapter 2.3: Cyrus Convinces the Army to Accept Rewards from Battle According to Merit
Chapter 2.4: Cyrus Hatches a Plan to Recover Tribute from the Armenians
Book 3
Chapter 3.1: Cyrus makes the Armenian king and his son Tigranes into better friends
Chapter 3.2: Cyrus Forges an Alliance between the Armenians and Chaldaeans
Open Access Journal: Museum Helveticum
[First posted in AWOL 6 August 2009. Updated 18 August 2013]
Museum Helveticum
Das Museum Helveticum ist die einzige Schweizer Zeitschrift, die Beiträge aus der gesamten klassischen Altertumswissenschaft veröffentlicht, einschliesslich der Papyrologie, Epigraphik und (mit Einschränkungen) Archäologie. Es will nicht nur die Schweizer Forschung fördern und repräsentativ darstellen, sondern auch die Kontakte mit der internationalen. Forschergemeinschaft pflegen und vertiefen. Entsprechend steht die Zeitschrift zum einen den in der Schweiz Lehrenden und Lernenden offen und versteht sich auch als Mittel der Nachwuchsförderung, zum anderen ist sie seit ihren Anfängen auch Publikationsorgan der internationalen Forschergemeinschaft; dementsprechend ist neben den drei Landessprachen Englisch häufige Publikationssprache. Entstanden ist das Museum Helveticum während des Zweiten Weltkrieges aus der Zusammenarbeit einiger damals führender altertumswissenschaftlicher Lehrstuhlinhaber, die, abgeschnitten von den bisherigen europäischen Publikationsorganen, der schweizerischen Altertumswissenschaft ein Diskussionsforum schaffen und gleichzeitig die Zusammengehörigkeit betonen wollten; die erste Nummer erschien 1944. Nach Kriegsende wurde die Zeitschrift zum Organ der schweizerischen altertumswissenschaftlichen Forschung.
All issues are published online 20 months after print publication.
demo.fragmentarytexts.org
Posted: 22 Aug 2013 04:35 AM PDT
demo.fragmentarytexts.org
demo.fragmentarytexts.org is a site complementary to Fragmentary Texts and its aim is to experiment tools and devise methods for representing quotations and text re-uses of lost authors and works (i.e., those pieces of information about lost authors that humanists call "fragments"). Print collections of fragmentary texts are collections of textual excerpts drawn from many different sources and arranged according to various criteria, such as chronological order or thematic disposition. The length of these excerpts can be significantly different from one edition to another and depends on the editor’s choice. The aim of a digital collection of fragmentary texts is to go beyond the limits of print collections and express fragmentary sources in a more dynamic and interconnected way.
We begin by presenting different examples from ancient Greek authors (Plutarch and Athenaeus), whose texts are rich of quotations and text re-uses of lost works. The Revolt of Samos is a section where we have chosen the tradition of the Athenian suppression of the revolt of Samos (441-439 BC) to provide a test case for designing a "synoptical representation" of primary sources. We are also working on a section about Istros the Callimachean, whose goal is to present differences between a traditional print edition and a new digital one of the same fragmentary author. The first aim of these experiments is to visualize quotations inside their contexts of transmission, which is the basic requirement to understand the origin of a text re-use and its meaning.
Home
Plutarch
Athenaeus
Istros
The revolt of Samos
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A Visual Explorer for the Language of Greek Tragedy
Posted: 21 Aug 2013 12:40 PM PDT
A Visual Explorer for the Language of Greek Tragedy
A visualization tool to allow for the exploration of linguistic data in Greek Tragedy using social networks overlaid with linguistic data.
Jeff Rydberg-Cox with assistance from Oliver Baker, University of Missouri-Kansas City
Available Plays:
Aeschylus Agamemnon
Aeschylus Libation Bearers
Aeschylus Eumenides
Aeschylus Prometheus Bound
Aeschylus Seven Against Thebes
Aeschylus Suppliants
You can view the presentation from Chicago Colloquium on Digital Humanities and Computer Science, November 2010 at http://daedalus.umkc.edu/Papers/ChicagoColloquiumPresentation.pdf.
You can read article that was published in the Proceedings of the 2010 Chicago Colloquium on Digital Humanities at https://letterpress.uchicago.edu/index.php/jdhcs/article/view/86.
Visual Explorer is one of the components of Daedalus: Projects in Digital Humanities
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Classical Latin Texts: A Resource Prepared by The Packard Humanities Institute
Posted: 21 Aug 2013 12:31 PM PDT
[First posted 21 September 2011, updated 21 August 2013]
Classical Latin Texts: A Resource Prepared by The Packard Humanities Institute
This website contains essentially all Latin literary texts written before A.D. 200, as well as some texts selected from later antiquity. These texts were previously available on The Packard Humanities Institute's CD ROM 5.3. You can find a complete listing in the Canon of Latin Authors.
We appreciate your comments, suggestions, and inquiries. You can send them to us at latin@packhum.org.
About the Latin Search
About the Concordance
I've been alerted to the PHI Latin Texts Canon which is curiously absent from the site directory.
Classical Latin Texts database records
Classical Latin Texts database (Packard Humanities Institute)--Click below for a MARC file of University of Florida original records for texts in the database, available for use under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication (a subset of the full file of University of Florida original records referenced above):
Classical-Latin-Texts-records.zip - 605 records, 140 KB
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