Publications
In this page we collect papers concerning topics related to Fragmentary Texts. Go to Documents for other contributions on quotations and text re-uses.
M. Berti, M. Romanello, A. Babeu, G. Crane. “Collecting Fragmentary Authors in a Digital Library.” In Proceedings of the 2009 Joint International Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL ’09). Austin, TX, 259-62. New York, NY: ACM Digital Library (download PDF)
M. Berti, M. Romanello, A. Babeu, G. Crane. “When Printed Hypertexts Go Digital: Information Extraction from the Parsing of Indices.” In Hypertext 2009: Proceedings of the 20th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia, Turin, Italy, 357-58. New York, NY: ACM Digital Library (download PDF)
M. Berti, M. Romanello, F. Boschetti, A. Babeu, G. Crane. “Rethinking Critical Editions of Fragmentary Texts by Ontologies.” In ELPUB 2009: 13th International Conference on Electronic Publishing: Rethinking Electronic Publishing: Innovation in Communication Paradigms and Technologies, Milan, Italy, 155-74 (download PDF)
G. Crane. “From Subjects to Citizens in a Global Republic of Letters”. In Going Digital. Evolutionary and Revolutionary Aspects of Digitization. Ed. K. Grandin. Nobel Symposium 147. The Nobel Foundation, 2011, pp. 251-254 (download PDF)
Documents
Fragmentary Texts and Digital Libraries (Monica Berti) (download PDF)
Representing Citations in Athenaeus’ Deipnosophists (Monica Berti & Virgilio Costa) (download PDF)
The Edition of Fragmentary Texts: Scattered Remarks (Virgilio Costa) (download PDF)
Attalus: Over 25,000 links to Greek & Latin authors on the web
This site contains detailed lists of events and sources for the history of the Hellenistic world and the Roman republic. It includes links to online translations of many of the sources, as well as new translations of some works which have not previously been easily available in English. To look at what's available, click on one of the links below.
This site contains detailed information about the written sources for Greek and Roman history in the period between the conquests of Alexander the Great and the start of the Roman Empire. Its geographical scope is Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East - essentially, the countries which were later part of the Roman Empire (see map). Its scope in time is currently from 322 to 42 B.C.
How to use this site
Overview of sources
A - Z
Attalus, the king
Background Info.
Inscriptions & Papyri
Latin Texts
Index of References
Related Sites
What's New?
Institute for the Study of the Ancient World flickr Photostream
ISAW is a center for advanced scholarly research and graduate education, intended to cultivate comparative and connective investigations of the ancient world. It is a discrete entity within New York University.
ISAW uses Flickr to distribute free digital photography related to the ancient world as part of its Ancient World Image Bank initiative. Read more about AWIB here. All AWIB imagery is published under open license, to facilitate scholarly and educational reuse.
AWIB imagery uploaded by ISAW can be viewed via our geographically-organized collections. You can see our latest uploads in our photostream.
Our collaborators on flickr are also contributing their own imagery to the Ancient World Image Bank group.
ISAW's joint historical geography project with the Ancient World Mapping Center at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill also uses Flickr to collect and organize images of ancient sites. You can view the imagery they are using via the Pleiades Places Group, or by visiting the Pleiades Project website and searching for the place you're interested in.
And see AWOL's list of Institutional flickr Photostreams
Welcome to the Open University's ‘Introducing Ancient Greek’ website.
If you are starting to learn Ancient Greek, this site is for you! This site will help you prepare for a Beginner's Ancient Greek course such as the Open University's Reading Classical Greek: language and literature (A275).
Use the menu on the left to:
review the letters of the Greek alphabet
listen to the sounds of Greek words
recognise the letters
memorise the sequence of letters
use letters to form words
understand how sentences are built from words
Welcome
Review
Sounds
Letters
Sequence
Words
Sentences
Reading Classical Greek
Welcome to the Open University Reading Classical Greek site. The interactive quizzes below are designed for students studying Ancient Greek using the Reading Greek series of textbooks (JACT/Cambridge University Press). The quizzes allow you to test yourself on the grammar you meet at different stages of the course.
Just click on the links to begin. Each quiz will open in a new window. You can attempt each quiz as many times as you like, using the feedback to improve your score.
Quiz 1 (covering up to Section 1D of Reading Greek)
Quiz 2 (covering up to Section 2D of Reading Greek)
Quiz 3 (covering up to Section 3E of Reading Greek)
Quiz 4 (covering up to Section 6B of Reading Greek)
Quiz 5 (covering up to Section 6D of Reading Greek)
Quiz 6 (covering up to Section 7H of Reading Greek)
Quiz 7 (covering up to Section 9J of Reading Greek)
New to Ancient Greek?
If you are just starting out in Classical Greek, then try the Open University website, Introducing Ancient Greek. This allows you to familiarize yourself with the letters and sounds of Ancient Greek, gives you practice at forming Greek words, and introduces you to simple Greek sentences.
And see also AWOL's list of
Open Access Textbooks and Language Primers Relating to the Ancient World
Forum for Classics, Libraries, and Scholarly Communication
An Affiliated Group of the American Philological Association
The Forum for Classics, Libraries, and Scholarly Communication (FCLSC) – also known as the Classics Librarians’ Forum — brings together librarians and scholars interested in classics studies, in order to promote timely exchange of information and ideas. Members also collaborate on projects of mutual concern. The impetus for the forum grew out of meetings at Princeton University and the Center for Hellenic Studies in 2004. As an officially affiliated group of the American Philological Association since 2005, the Forum aims to support initiatives of the APA relating to libraries and scholarly communication.
The officers of the Forum are Lucie Stylianopoulos (University of Virginia), chair, and Camilla MacKay (Bryn Mawr College), secretary. Their term lasts two years from January 2013 to January 2015. Past chairs have been Gerald Heverly (New York University), Rebecka Lindau (American Academy at Rome), Catherine Mardikes (University of Chicago), and David Sullivan (University of Notre Dame).
Home
CLiF Blog
Meetings
Projects and Events
Digital Humanities http://www.classicslibrarians.org/digital-humanities/ !!
Research Help
Careers
Contact us
Ancient Greek Grammars Online
Chris Francese of Dickinson College Commentaries discusses the grammars that have been made available online and provides a list of what is now available:
Buttman, Alexander. Grammar of the New Testament Greek (Andover: Warren F. Draper, 1891) at archive.org
Babbit, Frank Cole. A Grammar of Attic and Ionic Greek (New York: American Book Co., 1902). Google Books. archive.org
Brugmann, Karl. Griechische Grammatik 3rd edition (Münich: Beck, 1900) at archive.org, and Google Books
Goodell, Thomas Dwight. A School Grammar of Attic Greek (New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1903) Google Books. Archive.org (better scan)
Goodwin, William W. Greek Grammar, revised and enlarged (Boston: Ginn & Co., 1896). Google Books.
Hadley, James. Greek Grammar for Schools and Colleges, revised and in part rewritten by Frederic De Forest Allen (New York: American Book Company, 1912) Google Books.
Meyer, Gustav. Griechische Grammatik, 2nd ed. (Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1886) at archive.org and at Google Books (and another).
Monroe, D.B. A Grammar of the Homeric Dialect (Oxford: Clarendon, 1891) at archive.org.
These items are already available at Perseus:
Goodwin,William Watson. Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb (London, Melbourne, Toronto 1889) Goodwin’s Moods and Tenses
Gildersleeve,Basil Lanneau. Syntax of Classical Greek from Homer to Demosthenes (New York 1900)
Smyth, Herbert Weir. A Greek Grammar for Colleges (1920) and (also at Philologic Chicago)
Kühner, Raphael, Friedrich Blass, and Bernhard Gerth. Ausführliche Grammatik der Griechischen Sprache (ed. Ildar Ibraguimov, Hannover und Leipzig, 1904).
Share with your friends: |