I. bibliografie



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The project involved re-scanning the book to have good quality page images, then editing a set of existing XML files kindly provided by the Perseus Project. We added to that the newly digitized index, which was not in the Perseus XML. The purpose there was to make the book browsable via the index, which is important for user utility, and absent in all other online versions. On March 23, 2014, Kaylin Bednarz (Dickinson ’15) finished revision of XML files for Allen & Grenough, and the creation of html files based on the new XML. She was assisted and trained in the use of Oxygen software (which converts the XML into web-ready html) by Matthew Kochis, Postdoctoral Fellow in Digital Humanities, who also helped with day to day project management.
In late March, Dickinson web developer Ryan Burke uploaded the html and XML files to Dickinson servers, and created the web interface for A&G in html. This revealed issues of formatting: indentations were often not preserved, resulting in lack of clarity. Some character formatting was not right, and footnotes from the original print resource were not clearly displayed. Forward and back buttons had to be put in for each of the 638 sections.
On May 20, 2014, Meagan Ayer (PhD in classics and ancient history, University of Buffalo, 2013) began work hand-editing Allen & Greenough html files, removing errors and fixing formatting, adding navigational infrastructure using Adobe Dreamweaver. A few missing XML files had to be added and converted to html, and those finishing touches were put on last week.
The differences between our version of A&G and others available on the internet are:

  • Page images attached to every section

  • Analytical index makes finding what you need easier

  • Functioning word search for the entire work

  • Attractive presentation with readable fonts and formatting

  • Fully edited to remove spelling errors and OCR misreads (further error notifications appreciated!)

And of course the whole is freely available under a Creative Commons CC-BY-SA license. We plan to systematically link to this version of A&G in our Latin commentaries, and we are planning to have a similar work on the Greek side up soon:
Thomas Dwight Goodell, A School Grammar of Attic Greek (New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1902). This excellent work was scanned by the Internet Archive. Last year Bruce Robertson of Mont Allison University kindly performed the OCR using Rigaudon, the output of which is available on Lace. At Dickinson the OCR output was edited and the XML and html pages created by Christina Errico. Ryan Burke has created the web interface. Meagan Ayer is in the process of editing and correcting the html pages. So look for that in the next few months!


Loebolus: Open Access to all the public domain Loebs Classical Library volumes


Posted: 04 Sep 2014 02:50 AM PDT

[First posted in AWOL  2 June 2012, updated 4 Septeber 2014]



Loebolus

Loebolus is based on Edwin Donnelly's “Downloebables” , aiming to make all the public domain Loebs more easily downloadable by re-hosting the PDF's directly, without the need to enter CAPTCHA's. 



You can also download a .zip containing all 251 PDF's (3.2GB). Or view the code used for generating this site on GitHub.

  • L001 - Apollonius Rhodius -- Apollonius Rhodius. Argonautica

  • L002 - Appian -- Roman History I: Books 1-8.1

  • L003 - Appian -- Roman History II: Books 8.2-12

  • L004 - Appian -- Roman History III: The Civil Wars, Books 1-3.26

  • L005 - Appian -- Roman History IV: The Civil Wars, Books 3.27-5

  • L007N - Cicero -- Letters to Atticus I

  • L008N - Cicero -- Letters to Atticus II

  • L009 - Euripides -- Euripides I: Iphigenia at Aulis. Rhesus. Hecuba. The Daughters of Troy. Helen

  • L010N - Euripides -- Euripides II: Electra. Orestes. Iphigeneia in Taurica. Andromache. Cyclops

  • L011N - Euripides -- Euripides III: Bacchanals. Madness of Hercules. Children of Hercules. Phoenician Maidens. Suppliants

  • L012 - Euripides -- Euripides IV: Ion. Hippolytus. Medea. Alcestis

  • L013 - Julian -- Julian I: Orations 1-5

  • L014 - Lucian -- Lucian I: Phalaris. Hippias or The Bath. Dionysus. Heracles. Amber or The Swans. The Fly. Nigrinus. Demonax. The Hall. My Native Land. Octogenarians. A True Story. Slander. The Consonants at Law. The Carousal (Symposium) or The Lapiths

  • L015 - Petronius -- Satyricon. Apocolocyntosis

  • L016N - Philostratus -- Life of Apollonius of Tyana I

  • L017N - Philostratus -- Life of Apollonius of Tyana II

  • L018N - Propertius -- Propertius

  • L019 - Quintus Smyrnaeus -- Fall of Troy

  • L020 - Sophocles -- Sophocles I: Oedipus the King. Oedipus at Colonus. Antigone

  • L021 - Sophocles -- Sophocles II: Ajax. Electra. Trachiniae. Philoctetes.

  • L022N - Terence -- Terence I: The Lady of Andeos. The Self-Tormentor. The Eunich

  • L023N - Terence -- Terence II: Phormio. The Mother-in-Law. The Brothers

  • L024N - Apostolic Fathers I: I Clement. II Clement. Ignatiius. Polycarp. Didache. Barnaba

  • L025N - Apostolic Fathers II: Shepherd of Hermas. Martyrdom of Polycarp. Epistle to Diognetus.

  • L026 - Augustine -- Confessions I: Books 1-8

  • L027 - Augustine -- Confessions II: Books 9-13

  • L028 - Greek Bucolic Poets

  • L029 - Julian -- Julian II: Orations 6-8. Letters to Themistius, To the Senate and People of Athens, To a Priest. The Caesars. Misopogon

  • L030 - Cicero -- De Officiis

  • L031 - Suetonius -- Suetonius I: Julius. Augustus. Tiberius. Gaius. Caligula

  • L032 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History I: Fragments of Books 1-11

  • L034 - John Damascene -- Barlaam and Ioasaph

  • L035 - Tacitus -- Dialogus, Agricola, Germania

  • L036 - Plato -- Euthyphro. Apology. Crito. Phaedo. Phaedrus

  • L037 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History II: Fragments of Books 12-35 and of Uncertain Reference

  • L038 - Suetonius -- Suetonius II: Claudius. Nero. Galba, Otho, and Vitellius. Vespasian. Titus, Domitian. Lives of Illustrious Men: Grammarians and Rhetoricians. Poets (Terence. Virgil. Horace. Tibullus. Persius. Lucan). Lives of Pliny the Elder and Passienus Crispus

  • L039 - Caesar -- The Civil Wars

  • L040 - Cicero -- De Finibus Bonorum et Malorum

  • L041 - Ovid -- Heroides. Amores

  • L042 - Ovid -- Metamorphoses I: Books 1-8

  • L043 - Ovid -- Metamorphoses II: Books 9-15

  • L044 - Apuleius -- The Golden Ass

  • L045 - Achilles Tatius -- Clitophon and Leucippe

  • L046 - Plutarch -- Lives I: Theseus and Romulus. Lycurgus and Numa. Solon and Publicola

  • L047 - Plutarch -- Lives II: Themistocles and Camillus. Aristides and Cato Major. Cimon and Lucullus

  • L048 - Procopius -- Procopius I: History of the Wars, Books 1-2. (Persian War)

  • L049 - Strabo -- Geography I: Books 1-2

  • L051 - Xenophon -- Cyropaedia I: Books 1-4

  • L052 - Xenophon -- Cyropaedia II: Books 5-8

  • L053 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History III: Books 36-40

  • L054 - Lucian -- Lucian II: The Downward Journey or The Tyrant. Zeus Catechized. Zeus Rants. The Dream or The Cock. Prometheus. Icaromenippus or The Sky-man. Timon or The Misanthrope. Charon or The Inspectors. Philosophies for Sale

  • L055 - Pliny the Younger -- Letters I: Books 1-7

  • L056 - Pindar -- Odes of Pindar Including the Principal Fragments

  • L057N - Hesiod -- Homeric Hymns and Homerica

  • L058 - Marcus Aurelius -- Communings with Himself of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, Emperor of Rome

  • L059 - Pliny the Younger -- Letters II: Books 7-10

  • L060 - Plautus -- Plautus I: Amphitryon. The Comedy of Asses. The Pot of Gold. The Two Bacchises. The Captives

  • L061 - Plautus -- Plautus II: Casina. The Casket Comedy. Curculio. Epidicus. The Two Menaechmuses

  • L062N - Seneca -- Tragedies I: Hercules Furens. Troades. Medea. Hippolytus. Oedipus

  • L063N - Virgil -- Eclogues. Georgics. Aeneid, Books 1-6

  • L064N - Virgil -- Aeneid Books 7-12, The Minor Poems

  • L065 - Plutarch -- Lives III: Pericles and Fabius Maximus. Nicias and Crassus

  • L066 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History IV: Books 41-45

  • L067 - Greek Anthology I: Book 1: Christian Epigrams. Book 2: Christodorus of Thebes in Egypt. Book 3: The Cyzicene Epigrams. Book 4: The Proems of the Different Anthologies. Book 5: The Amatory Epigrams. Book 6: The Dedicatory Epigrams

  • L068 - Greek Anthology II: Book 7: Sepulchral Epigrams. Book 8: The Epigrams of St. Gregory the Theologian

  • L069 - Longus -- Daphnis and Chloe. Love Romances and Poetical Fragments. Fragments of the Ninus Romance

  • L070 - Theophrastus -- Enquiry into Plants I: Books 1-5

  • L071 - Galen -- On the Natural Faculties

  • L072 - Caesar -- The Gallic War

  • L074 - Boethius -- Theological Tractates and The Consolation of Philosophy

  • L075 - Seneca -- Ad Lucilium Epistulae Morales I: Letters 1-65

  • L076 - Seneca -- Ad Lucilium Epistulae Morales II: Letters 66-92

  • L078N - Seneca -- Tragedies II: Agamemnon. Thyestes. Hercules Oetaeus. Phoenissae. Octavia

  • L079 - Theophrastus -- Enquiry into Plants II: Books 6-9. Treatise on Odours. Concerning Weather Signs

  • L080 - Plutarch -- Lives IV: Alcibiades and Coriolanus. Lysander and Sulla

  • L081 - Procopius -- Procopius II: History of the Wars, Books 3-4. (Vandalic War)

  • L082 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History V: Books 46-50

  • L083 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History VI: Books 51-55

  • L084 - Greek Anthology III: The Declamatory Epigrams

  • L085 - Greek Anthology IV: Book 10: The Hortatory and Admonitory Epigrams. Book 11: The Convivial and Satirical Epigrams. Book 12: Strato's Musa Puerilis

  • L086 - Greek Anthology V: Book 13: Epigrams in Various Metres. Book 14: Arithmetical Problems, Riddles, Oracles. Book 15: Miscellanea. Book 16: Epigrams of the Planudean Anthology Not in the Palatine Manuscript

  • L087 - Plutarch -- Lives V: Agesilaus and Pompey. Pelopidas and Marcellus

  • L088 - Xenophon -- Hellenica, Books 1-5

  • L089 - Xenophon -- Hellenica, Books 6 and 7. Anabasis, Books 1-3

  • L090 - Xenophon -- Anabasis, Books 4-7. Symposium and Apology

  • L091N - Juvenal -- Juvenal and Persius

  • L092 - Clement of Alexandria -- The Exhortation to the Greeks. The Rich Man's Salvation. To the Newly Baptized (fragment)

  • L093 - Pausanias -- Description of Greece I: Books 1-2 (Attica and Corinth)

  • L094 - Martial -- Epigrams I: Spectacles. Books 1-7

  • L095 - Martial -- Epigrams II: Books 8-14

  • L096 - Ausonius -- Ausonius I: Books 1-17

  • L097N - Cicero -- Letters to Atticus III

  • L098 - Plutarch -- Lives VI: Dion and Brutus. Timoleon and Aemilius Paulus

  • L099 - Plutarch -- Lives VII: Demosthenes and Cicero. Alexander and Caesar

  • L100 - Plutarch -- Lives VIII: Sertorius and Eumenes. Phocion and Cato the Younger

  • L101 - Plutarch -- Lives IX: Demetrius and Antony. Pyrrhus and Gaius Marius

  • L102 - Plutarch -- Lives X: Agis and Cleomenes. Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus. Philopoemen and Flamininus

  • L103 - Plutarch -- Lives XI: Aratus. Artaxerxes. Galba. Otho. General Index

  • L104 - Homer -- Odyssey I: Books 1-12

  • L105 - Homer -- Odyssey II: Books 13-24

  • L106 - Aeschines -- Speeches

  • L107 - Procopius -- Procopius III: History of the Wars, Books 5-6.15

  • L108 - Thucydides -- History of the Peleponnesian War I: Books 1-2

  • L109 - Thucydides -- History of the Peleponnesian War II: Books 3-4

  • L110 - Thucydides -- History of the Peleponnesian War III: Books 5-6

  • L111 - Tacitus -- Histories I: Books 1-3

  • L112 - Marcus Cornelius Fronto -- Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto with Marcus Aurelius Antoninus I

  • L113 - Marcus Cornelius Fronto -- Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto with Marcus Aurelius Antoninus II

  • L114 - Livy -- Livy I: Books 1-2

  • L115 - Ausonius -- Ausonius II: Poems 18-20. Paulinus Pellaeus: Eucharisticus

  • L116 - Sallust -- War with Catiline. War with Jugurtha. Selections from the Histories. Doubtful Works

  • L117 - Herodotus -- Herodotus I: Books 1-2

  • L118 - Herodotus -- Herodotus II: Books 3-4

  • L119 - Herodotus -- Herodotus III: Books 5-7

  • L120 - Herodotus -- Herodotus IV: Books 8-9

  • L121 - Apollodorus -- The Library I: Books 1-3.9

  • L122 - Apollodorus -- The Library II: Book 3.10-end. Epitome

  • L123 - Plato -- Theaetetus. Sophist

  • L124N - Quintilian -- Quintilian I: Institutio Oratoria Books 1-3

  • L125N - Quintilian -- Quintilian II: Institutio Oratoria Books 4-6

  • L126N - Quintilian -- Quintilian III: Institutio Oratoria Books 7-9

  • L127N - Quintilian -- Quintilian IV: Institutio Oratoria Books 10-12

  • L128 - Polybius -- Histories I: Books 1-2

  • L129 - Callimachus -- Callimachus and Lycophron. Aratus

  • L130 - Lucian -- Lucian III: The Dead Come to Life or The Fisherman. The Double Indictment or Trials by Jury. On Sacrifices. The Ignorant Book Collector. The Dream or Lucian's Career. The Parasite. The Lover of Lies. The Judgement of the Goddesses…

  • L132 - Menander -- Principal Fragments: Arbitrants. Girl from Samos. Girl Who Gets Her Hair Cut Short. Hero. Fragments. Unidentified Comedy

  • L133 - Livy -- Livy II: Books 3-4

  • L134 - Philostratus -- Lives of the Sophists. Eunapius: Lives of the Philosophers and Sophists

  • L135 - Claudian -- Panegyric on Probinus and Olybrius. Against Rufinus 1 and 2. War Against Gildo. Against Eutropius 1 and 2. Fescennine Verses on the Marriage of Honorius. Epithalamium of Honorius and Maria. Panegyrics on the Third and Fourth Consulships of Honorius. Paneg

  • L136 - Claudian -- On Stilicho's Consulship 2-3. Panegyric on the Sixth Consulship of Honorius. The Gothic War. Shorter Poems. Rape of Proserpina

  • L137 - Polybius -- Histories II: Books 3-4

  • L138 - Polybius -- Histories III: Books 5-8

  • L139 - Scriptores Historiae Augustae I: Hadrian. Aelius. Antoninus Pius. Marcus Aurelius. L. Verus. Avidius Cassius. Commodus. Pertinax. Didius Julianus. Septimius Severus. Pescennius Niger. Clodius Albinus

  • L140 - Scriptores Historiae Augustae II: Caracalla. Geta. Opellius Macrinus. Diadumenianus. Elagabalus. Severus Alexander. The Two Maximini. The Three Gordians. Maximus and Balbinus

  • L142 - Lyra Graeca I: Terpander. Alcman. Sappho. Alcaeus

  • L143 - Lyra Graeca II: Stesichorus. Ibycus. Anacreon. Simonides

  • L144 - Lyra Graeca III: Corinna. Bacchylides. Timotheus. The Anonymous Fragments. The Folk Songs. Scolia. An Account of Greek Lyric Poetry

  • L145 - Aeschylus -- Suppliant Maidens. Persians. Prometheus. Seven Against Thebes

  • L146 - Aeschylus -- Agamemnon. Libation-Bearers. Eumenides. Fragments

  • L147 - Hippocrates -- Hippocrates I: Ancient Medicine. Airs, Waters, Places. Epidemics 1 & 3. The Oath. Precepts. Nutriment

  • L148 - Hippocrates -- Hippocrates II: Prognostic. Regimen in Acute Diseases. The Sacred Disease. The Art. Breaths. Law. Decorum. Physician (Ch. 1). Dentition

  • L149 - Hippocrates -- Hippocrates III: On Wounds in the Head. In the Surgery. On Fractures. On Joints. Mochlicon

  • L150 - Hippocrates -- Hippocrates IV: Nature of Man. Regimen in Health. Humours. Aphorisms. Regimen 1-3. Dreams. Heracleitus: On the Universe

  • L151 - Ovid -- Tristia. Ex Ponto

  • L152 - Velleius Paterculus --

  • L153 - Eusebius -- Ecclesiastical History I: Books 1-5

  • L157 - Julian -- Julian III: Letters. Epigrams. Against the Galilaeans. Fragments

  • L161 - Polybius -- Histories VI: Books 28-39

  • L162 - Lucian -- Lucian IV: Anacharsis or Athletics. Menippus or The Descent into Hades. On Funerals. A Professor of Public Speaking. Alexander the False Prophet. Essays in Portraiture. Essays in Portraiture Defended. The Goddesse of Surrye

  • L163 - Plautus -- Plautus III: The Merchant. The Braggart Warrior. The Haunted House. The Persian

  • L165 - Plato -- Laches. Protagoras. Meno. Euthydemus

  • L169 - Thucydides -- http://www.archive.org/details/historyofpelopon04thucuoft

  • L170N - Homer -- Iliad I: Books 1-12

  • L174 - Frontinus -- Stratagems. Aqueducts of Rome

  • L175 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History VII: Books 56-60

  • L176 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History VIII: Books 61-70

  • L177 - Dio Cassius -- Dio's Roman History IX: Books 71-80

  • L178 - Aristophanes -- Aristophanes I: Acharnians. Knights. Clouds. Wasps

  • L183 - Xenophon -- Scripta Minora: Hiero. Agesilaus. Constitution of the Lacedaemonians. Ways and Means. Cavalry Commander. Art of Horsemanship. On Hunting. Constitution of the Athenians

  • L185 - Diogenes Laertius -- Lives of Eminent Philosophers II: Books 6-10

  • L186 - Josephus -- Josephus I: The Life. Against Apion

  • L187 - Plato -- Laws I: Books 1-6

  • L188 - Pausanias -- Description of Greece II: Books 3-5 (Laconia, Messenia, Elis 1)

  • L189 - Cicero -- Philippics

  • L190 - Basil -- Basil I: Letters 1-58

  • L191 - Livy -- Livy IV: Books 8-10

  • L192 - Plato -- Laws II: Books 7-12

  • L193 - Aristotle -- The "Art" of Rhetoric

  • L194 - Horace -- Satires. Epistles. Ars Poetica

  • L201 - Plato -- Charmides. Alcibiades 1 & 2. Hipparchus. The Lovers. Theages. Minos. Epinomis

  • L203 - Josephus -- Josephus II: The Jewish War Books 1-3

  • L205N - Cicero -- Letters to His Friends I: Books 1-6

  • L206N - Statius -- Statius I: Silvae. Thebaid, Books 1-4

  • L207N - Statius -- Statius II: Thebaid, Books 5-12. Achilleid

  • L210 - Josephus -- Josephus III: The Jewish War Books 4-7

  • L211 - Strabo -- Geography V: Books 10-12

  • L214 - Seneca -- Moral Essays I: De Providentia. De Constantia. De Ira. De Clementia

  • L215 - Basil -- Basil II: Letters 59-185

  • L216N - Cicero -- Letters to His Friends II: Books 7-12

  • L219 - Oppian -- Oppian. Colluthus. Tryphiodorus

  • L220 - Lucan -- The Civil War (Pharsalia)

  • L223 - Strabo -- Geography VI: Books 13-14

  • L225N - Theophrastus -- Characters of Theophrastus

  • L229 - Isocrates -- Isocrates II: On the Peace. Areopagiticus. Against the Sophists. Antidosis. Panathenaicus

  • L230N - Cicero -- Letters to His Friends III: Books 13-16. To His Brother Quintus. To Brutus

  • L236 - Arrian -- Anabasis Alexandri, Books 1-4

  • L237 - Plato -- Republic I: Books 1-5

  • L239 - Augustine -- Select Letters

  • L241 - Strabo -- Geography VII: Books 15-16

  • L242 - Josephus -- Josephus IV: Jewish Antiquities Books 1-4

  • L244 - Lysias -- Lysias

  • L246 - Bede -- Opera Historica I: Books 1-3

  • L248 - Bede -- Opera Historica II: Books 4-5. Lives of the Abbots. Letter to Egbert

  • L249 - Tacitus -- Histories II: 4-5. Annals 1-3

  • L250 - Tertullian -- Apology and De Spectaculis. Octavius

  • L253 - Ovid -- Fasti

  • L256 - Philostratus the Elder -- Imagines. Callistatus: Descriptions

  • L260 - Plautus -- Plautus IV: The Little Carthaginian. Pseudolus. The Rope

  • L262 - Jerome -- Select Letters

  • L263 - Scriptores Historiae Augustae III: The Two Valerians. The Two Gallieni. The Thirty Pretenders. The Deified Claudius. The Deified Aurelian. Tacitus. Probus. Firmus, Saturninus, Proculus and Bonosus. Carus, Carinus and Numerian

  • L264 - Aristotle -- Politics

  • L265 - Eusebius -- Ecclesiastical History II: Books 6-10

  • L267 - Strabo -- Geography VIII: Book 17 and General Index

  • L268 - Cicero -- De Natura Deorum. Academica

  • L270 - Basil -- Basil IV: Letters 249-368. Address to Young Men on Greek Literature

  • L276 - Plato -- Republic II: Books 6-10

  • L281 - Josephus -- Josephus V: Jewish Antiquities Books 5-8

  • L284 - Minor Latin Poets -- Minor Latin Poets

  • L285 - Aristotle -- Athenian Constitution. Eudemian Ethics. Virtues and Vices

  • L300 - Ammianus Marcellinus -- Roman History I: Books 14-19

  • L302 - Lucian -- Lucian V: The Passing of Peregrinus. The Runaways. Toxaris or Friendship. The Dance. Lexiphanes. The Eunuch. Astrology. The Mistaken Critic. The Parliament of the Gods. The Tyrannicide. Disowned

  • L303 - Diodorus Siculus -- Diodorus Siculus II: Books 2.35-4.58

  • L304 - Celsus -- De Medicina II: Books 5-6

  • L305 - Plutarch -- Moralia IV: Roman Questions. Greek Questions. Greek and Roman Parallel Stories. On the Fortune of the Romans. On the Fortune or the Virtue of Alexander. Were the Athenians More Famous in War or in Wisdom?

  • L307 - Aristotle -- Minor Works

  • L313 - Livy -- Livy XI: Books 38-39

  • L317 - Aristotle -- Problems II: Books 22-38

  • L321 - Plutarch -- Moralia X: Love Stories. That a Philosopher Ought to Converse Especially With Men in Power. To an Uneducated Ruler. Whether an Old Man Should Engage in Public Affairs. Precepts of Statecraft. On Monarchy, Democracy, and Oligarchy

  • L323 - Aristotle -- Parts of Animals. Movement of Animals. Progression of Animals

  • L326 - Josephus -- Josephus VI: Jewish Antiquities Books 9-11

  • L328 - Plautus -- Plautus V: Stichus. Trinummus (Three Bob Day). Truculentus. The Tale of a Travelling Bag. Fragments

  • L330 - Pliny -- Natural History I: Books 1-2

  • L333 - Varro -- On the Latin Language I: Books 5-7

  • L334 - Varro -- On the Latin Language II: Books 8-10. Fragments

  • L336 - Celsus -- De Medicina III: Books 7-8

  • L337 - Plutarch -- Moralia VI: Can Virtue Be Taught? On Moral Virtue. On the Control of Anger. On Tranquility of Mind. On Brotherly Love. On Affection for Offspring. Whether Vice Be Sufficient to Cause Unhappiness…

  • L350 - Manetho -- History of Egypt and Other Works

  • L352 - Pliny -- Natural History II: Books 3-7

  • L353 - Pliny -- Natural History III: Books 8-11

  • L355 - Livy -- Livy VI: Books 23-25

  • L358 - Dio Chrysostom -- Dio Chrysostom III: Discourses 31-36

  • L360 - Greek Literary Papyri I

  • L365 - Josephus -- Josephus VII: Jewish Antiquities Books 12-14

  • L367 - Livy -- Livy VII: Books 26-27

  • L370 - Pliny -- Natural History IV: Books 12-16

  • L371 - Pliny -- Natural History V: Books 17-19

  • L373 - Isocrates -- Isocrates III: Evagoras. Helen. Busiris. Plataicus. Concerning the Team of Horses. Trapeziticus. Against Callimachus. Aegineticus. Against Lochites. Against Euthynus. Letters

  • L374 - Demosthenes -- Demosthenes VII: Funeral Speech (60). Erotic Essay (61). Exordia. Letters

  • L376 - Dio Chrysostom -- Dio Chrysostom IV: Discourses 37-60

  • L381 - Livy -- Livy VIII: Books 28-30

  • L385 - Dio Chrysostom -- Dio Chrysostom V: Discourses 61-80. Fragments. Letters

  • L387 - Prudentius -- Prudentius I: Liber Cathemerinon. Apotheosis. Hamartingenia. Psychomachia. Contra Orationem Symmachi, Liber I

  • L392 - Pliny -- Natural History VI: Books 20-23

  • L393 - Pliny -- Natural History VII: Books 24-27. Index of Plants

  • L394 - Pliny -- Natural History IX: Books 33-35

  • L396 - Livy -- Livy XIII: Books 43-45

  • L400 - Aristotle -- On Sophistical Refutations. On Coming-to-be and Passing Away. On the Cosmos

  • L406 - Plutarch -- Moralia XII: Concerning the Face Which Appears in the Orb of the Moon. On the Principle of Cold. Whether Fire or Water Is More Useful. Whether Land or Sea Animals Are Cleverer. Beasts Are Rational. On the Eating of Flesh

  • L430 - Lucian -- Lucian VI: How to Write History. The Dipsads. Saturnalia. Herodotus or Aetion. Zeuxis or Antiochus. A Slip of the Tongue in Greeting. Apology for the "Salaried Posts in Great Houses." Harmonides. A Conversation with Hesiod…

  • L431 - Lucian -- Lucian VII: Dialogues of the Dead. Dialogues of the Sea-Gods. Dialogues of the Gods. Dialogues of the Courtesans

  • L496 - Hesiod, the Homeric Hymns, and Homerica

DownLOEBables -- Loeb Books Available Free Online on AWOL



Searchable Greek Inscriptions: A Scholarly Tool in Progress. The Packard Humanities Institute


Posted: 17 Sep 2014 03:39 AM PDT

 First posted in AWOL 3 January 2012, updated 17 September 2014]



Searchable Greek Inscriptions: A Scholarly Tool in Progress. The Packard Humanities Institute

The Packard Humanities Institute, in conjunction with Cornell University and The Ohio State University are making available online an extensive corpus of Greek inscriptions, intended to supersede the CD-ROMs PHI originally distributed. Access is free to all who accept their terms of use.


[From the digitalclassicist wiki]

Content currently includes:


Inscriptions by Region


Attica (IG I-III)

Peloponnesos (IG IV-[VI])

Central Greece (IG VII-IX)

Northern Greece (IG X)

Thrace and the Lower Danube (IG X)

North Shore of the Black Sea

Aegean Islands, incl. Crete (IG XI-[XIII])

Asia Minor

Cyprus ([IG XV])

Greater Syria and the East

Egypt, Nubia and Cyrenaïca

North Africa

Sicily, Italy, and the West (IG XIV)

Upper Danube

Unknown Provenances




2011-2014 Updates
Updated Monday, September 1st, 2014
Updated Saturday, March 1st, 2014 — New inscriptions added

1

Attica (IG I-III) : Attica

Updated Saturday, February 1st, 2014 — New inscriptions added

10

Aegean Islands, incl. Crete (IG XI-[XIII]) : Euboia (IG XII,9)

1

Aegean Islands, incl. Crete (IG XI-[XIII]) : Crete

Updated Wednesday, January 1st, 2014
Updated Sunday, December 1st, 2013
Updated Friday, November 1st, 2013 — New inscriptions added

523

Asia Minor : Pisidia

Updated Tuesday, October 1st, 2013 — New inscriptions added

1

Attica (IG I-III) : Attica

Updated Sunday, September 1st, 2013
Updated Thursday, August 1st, 2013
Updated Monday, July 1st, 2013 — New inscriptions added

447

Attica (IG I-III) : Attica

Updated Saturday, June 1st, 2013 — New inscriptions added

181

Asia Minor : Pisidia

Updated Wednesday, May 1st, 2013 — New inscriptions added

1293

Aegean Islands, incl. Crete (IG XI-[XIII]) : Samos (IG XII,6)

241

Asia Minor : Caria

Updated Monday, April 1st, 2013
Updated Friday, March 1st, 2013
Updated Friday, February 1st, 2013 — New inscriptions added

80

Peloponnesos (IG IV-[VI]) : Elis

Updated Tuesday, January 1st, 2013
Updated Saturday, December 1st, 2012
Updated Thursday, November 1st, 2012
Updated Monday, October 1st, 2012
Updated Saturday, September 1st, 2012
Updated Wednesday, August 1st, 2012
Updated Sunday, July 1st, 2012 — New inscriptions added

85

Egypt, Nubia and Cyrenaïca : Egypt and Nubia

Updated Friday, June 1st, 2012 — New inscriptions added

218

Peloponnesos (IG IV-[VI]) : Achaia

Updated Tuesday, May 1st, 2012 — New inscriptions added

274

Asia Minor : Galatia

333

Asia Minor : Lycia

403

Greater Syria and the East : Arabia

85

Egypt, Nubia and Cyrenaïca : Egypt and Nubia

Updated Thursday, March 1st, 2012 — New inscriptions added

450

Asia Minor : Lycia

747

Greater Syria and the East : Arabia

Updated Wednesday, February 1st, 2012
Updated Sunday, January 1st, 2012
And see also Classical Latin Texts: A Resource Prepared by The Packard Humanities Institute



Ancient World Open Bibliographies


Scholarly Bibliographies Available Online An annotated list, organized by subject.

  • Scholarly Bibliographies Available Online: Classical Antiquity An annotated list, organized by subject.

    • Classical Literature by Genre

    • Greek Authors

    • Latin Authors

      • Cicero Bibliographies

      • Horace Bibliographies

      • Lucretius Bibliographies

      • Ovid Bibliographies

      • Virgil Bibliographies

  • Scholarly Bibliographies Available Online: Near East and Egypt An annotated list, organized by subject.

Zotero Group Library for Ancient World Open Bibliographies
This project is supervised by Phoebe Acheson of the blog (Becoming a) Classics Librarian and Chuck Jones, the Tombros Librarian for Classics and Humanities at Penn State University and the blog AWOL - The Ancient World Online

There is a companion blog at http://ancientbiblio.wordpress.com/


 
All materials hosted at this site should be considered covered by a Creative Commons Open license: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
 
Controlled Vocabulary and Subject Headings may become useful as the project grows. At the page linked I have begun to collect resources that may be useful in guiding the development of these.

You can support the AWOB Project by:


  • Creating content

  • Linking to content

  • Improving existing content

To Create a New Bibliography Page Hosted at the Wiki


  • Create a link to a new page using double square brackets - what's inside the brackets will be the title of the new page:

    • Sample New Page To see what that looks like, click on "edit" for this page and look at the wiki markup.

  • Go to that new page and start adding content!

Suggestions for New Bibliographies


  • Use annotations. They add scholarly value!

  • Include links to WorldCat records for books, and include links to reviews, especially open-access ones (BMCR, AJA, etc.).

  • Include DOI links for articles, if possible, or other stable urls.

  • Arrange the bibliography using sections, for ease of navigation.

Learn How to Edit a Wiki


  • Consult the User's Guide for information on using the wiki software.

  • MediaWiki FAQ

  • Consult the Wikipedia Cheatsheet for a quick resource.




Opening up Classics and the Humanities: Computation, the Homer Multitext Project and Citizen Science

Posted: 29 Sep 2014 06:44 AM PDT



Opening up Classics and the Humanities: Computation, the Homer Multitext Project and Citizen Science 
Gregory Crane
University of Leipzig, Department of Computer Science
Tufts University, Department of Classics September 2014  

Abstract: Increasingly powerful computational methods are important for humanists not simply because they make it possible to ask new research questions but especially because computation makes it both possible -- and arguably essential -- to transform the relationship between humanities research and society, opening up a range of possibilities for student contributions and citizen science. To illustrate this point, this paper looks at the transformative work conducted by the Homer Multitext Project (http://homermultitext.blogspot.de/; http://www.homermultitext.org/).


Bibliotheca Polyglotta



Arabic Texts
The library will contain Arabic texts that have been the basis of translations, and thus diffusion, of Arabic concepts throughout the areas of Islamic culture. The Qur’an is naturally most important.

Biblia
This library will contain the Old Testament in parallel versions in Hebrew, with the Greek Septuaginta, the Latin Vulgata, and the King James Bible versions. Further it will encompass the New Testament in its Greek version, the Latin Vulgata and the King James.

Bibliotheca Polyglotta Graeca et Latina
The library will contain multilingual texts where the original is written in Greek or Latin. Translations into Latin, Syriac, Arabic, German, English and other languages will be included.

Sanskrit-Persica
This library will contain literature translated from Sanskrit into Persian, and from Persian into other languages.

The Ashoka Library
With this library it is intended to make the inscriptions of Ashoka easily available on the internet, and further build a collection of other sources related to Ashoka.

Center for Hellenic Studies Online Publications

Open Access Publications of the Center for Hellenic Studies

Posted: 16 Oct 2014 06:00 AM PDT



[First posted in AWOL 10 January, 2011. Most recently updated 16 October 2014 (Added: Cameron, Averil, Dialoguing in Late Antiquity; Lord, Albert Bates, The Singer of Tales)]
If you have not done so already, we recommend that you review our Introduction to Online Publications.The CHS website has other scholarly publications not listed here. See especially the numbers of the journal Classics@, which features dynamic issues on the Posidippus Papyrus, the new Sappho poem on old age, Technology and the Classics, the Epic Cycle, and the Homerizon Conference, with more on the way.


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