I. bibliografie


Rassegna degli Strumenti Informatici per lo Studio dell'Antichità Classica



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Rassegna degli Strumenti Informatici per lo Studio dell'Antichità Classica


http://www.rassegna.unibo.it/

Dall'aprile 2005 la Rassegna è aggiornata grazie al sostegno finanziario del progetto Ex- MURST 60% su "Strumenti digitali per la ricerca e la didattica in Storia Antica, tra applicazioni pratiche e riflessioni metodologiche", stanziato dalla nuova sede del curatore, l'Università degli Studi della Calabria, con il supporto delle attrezzature del Laboratorio Multimediale per le Fonti Storiche attivo presso il Dipartimento di Storia di UniCal.





  1. FUNDACJA NA RZECZ BADAŃ I PROMOCJI KULTURY ANTYCZNEJ Traditio Europae ma służyć szeroko pojętej działalności badawczej, popularno-naukowej i wychowawczej w zakresie antyku grecko-rzymskiego. Już w 1936 r. Prof. Stefan Srebrny pisał, że nie ma kultury bez tradycji i że postęp, z którego dobrodziejstw wszyscy korzystamy, nie może skazywać na zagładę i zapomnienie przeszłości będącej fundamentem całej tradycji europejskiej. Ta przeszłość nie umarła, lecz żyje w każdym niemal zjawisku otaczającej nas kultury. Tę ciągłość należy jednak umiejętnie odczytywać. Nasza Fundacja ma temu służyć poprzez propagowanie nauki języków klasycznych, naukowego badania starożytności grecko-rzymskiej oraz postanowieniu patronowania przekładom dzieł autorów starożytnych, by mogły poznać ich treść szersze kręgi odbiorców. Zamierzamy też organizować wykłady publiczne poświęcone tej tematyce nawiązując do dobrej, a zaniechanej toruńskiej tradycji. Pomagać nam w tym będzie redagowany przez nas portal internetowy: http://www.traditio-europae.org




  1. http://www.aristarchus.unige.it/lgga/index_inglese.php


Aristarchus

Aristarchus (from the name of the learned scholar Aristarchus of Samothracia, not to get confused with the astronomer Aristarchus of Samos) is a web site which includes a set of working tools for research and teaching in the subject area of Greek and Latin ancient world:




  • The Lessico dei Grammatici Greci Antichi (LGGA) i.e. Lexicon of Ancient Greek Grammarians, provides an online reference database designed particularly for studies on the history of ancient philology, grammar and scholarship. The project is developed at the Dipartimento di Archeologia e Filologia Classica (D.AR.FI.CL.ET.) of the University of Genova. The lexicon consists of files on the personalities who variously contributed to erudite and philological-grammatical research in ancient world. Many files are yet available for download in pdf format, some others can be requested via e-mail.




  • The database Poorly Attested Words in Ancient Greek (PAWAG) is a supplement in progress of the main printed dictionaries of Ancient Greek. It is kept constantly increased and updated by an international team of scholars, in order to provide an archive of Ancient Greek words that are either only scantily attested (i.e. in a small number of occurrences), inadequately (i.e. characterized by some sort of uncertainty) or in any case problematically, both from a formal and semantic point of view. Corrections and improvements concerning the entries of the GI and LSJ dictionaries are taken in too. This project is coordinated by a research group of the Dipartimento di Archeologia e Filologia Classica (D.AR.FI.CL.ET.) of the University of Genova in partnership with Loescher Editore.




  • The Catalogus Philologorum Classicorum (CPhCl) is an encyclopaedic lexicon that collects the biographies and the bibliographies of modern classical scholars. It involves an international network of local units; they are coordinated by the central unit, hosted by the Dipartimento di Archeologia e Filologia Classica (D.AR.FI.CL.ET.) of the University of Genova.




  • The Centro Italiano dell'Année Philologique (CIAPh) is the Italian editorial office of the Année Philologique, the well known reference bibliography for scholars of Greek and Latin antiquity. Founded in Paris in 1928, the Année Philologique counts on an international organization, networking the main office of Paris, the Italian Centre of Genova, Cincinnati for the USA and UK, Heidelberg for Germany and Austria, Granada for Spain, producing every year a printed volume and an on-line database.

  • The aim of the site Scholia Minora in Homerum is to provide up-to-date listing, descriptions, editions and digital images of the so-called Scholia Minora to the Iliad and Odyssey on papyrus. We project to keep the list of papyri up-to-date and to offer editions with apparatus of parallel passages of all the papyri.

  • MEDIACLASSICA is a web site for didactics of the ancient Greek and Latin languages, carried out by a group of scholars and teachers working in the Dipartimento di Archeologia e Filologia Classica (D.AR.FI.CL.ET.) of the University of Genova in partnership with Loescher Editore.

  • GGA [A]

  • PAWAG [B]

  • CPhCl [C]

  • CIAPh [D]

  • Scholia [E]

  • Mediaclassica [F]

  • Scrivici [S]

  • Sito accessibile [F]

  • English version [Z]

The LGGA (Lessico dei Grammatici Greci Antichi) means to provide an online reference tool for scholars of Greek-Latin Antiquity, especially for studies on the history of ancient philology, grammar and scholarship.


The contents consist of files on the personalities who variously contributed to erudite and philological-grammatical research in ancient world, alphabetically ordered by Latin name.
 
The catalogue includes now a total of 565 grammarians. Files are made available progressively, as soon as work on a file is completed and can be downloaded in pdf format. To access this free service you have just to sign in with your e-mail address when the relevant window appears.
The preparation of the pdf files entails a polishing and completion work on the entries of the lexicon. The files concerning some particularly important grammarians, that call for a more extended and complex encyclopedic entry, are made available for download as they are filled in just with the updated bibliography, while the general discussion and possible texts will be added on in a second time.

This handling has been chosen for Aelius [2] Herodianus, Apollonius [09] Dyscolus, Aristarchus, Aristophanes, Didymus, Eratosthenes, Galenus, Iulius [2] Pollux, Zenodotus.


 
From July 2007 the Lessico dei Grammatici Greci Antichi has adopted a peer review policy, which consists in submitting each entry to at least two external reviewers before publication.

II. E-TEXTS

Posted: 12 Jul 2014 05:14 AM PDT



Classical Works Knowledge Base: A Service of the American Philological Association

  • The CWKB knowledge base assembles data about Classical works (1,550 authors and 5,200 texts, with variants forms in the main modern languages of Classical studies and common abbreviations). The knowledge base also contains the linking heuristics to the passage level for 6,732 manifestations of Classical works. The full-text services linked to are:

  • the Classical Latin Texts of the Packard Humanities Institute (PHI Latin Texts);

  • the Greek and Roman Texts from the Perseus Digital Library;

  • the Library of Latin Texts - Series A (LLT-A) from Brepols Publishers [licensed];

  • the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae (TLG) [licensed] and the Abridged Online TLG.

  • Search

  • Resolution Service

  • Credits

  • Publications

  • Software

  • The Thesaurus Linguae Graecae (TLG: http://www.tlg.uci.edu) is a research center at the University of California, Irvine. Founded in 1972 the TLG has already collected and digitized most literary texts written in Greek from Homer to the fall of Byzantium in AD 1453. Its goal is to create a comprehensive digital library of Greek literature from antiquity to the present era.

The TLG Digital Library became available to the scholarly community in CD ROM format in 1985. Three updates of the TLG disk were subsequently issued. The last TLG CD ROM (TLG E) was released in February 2000 with 76 million words of text. In April 2001, the TLG became available online to subscribing institutions and individuals. The web version currently provides access to 3,800
authors and 12,000 works, approximately 99 million words. It is updated quarterly with new authors and works.

Information about the authors and works included in the TLG Library is stored in a database, known as the Canon of Greek Authors and Works (tu: Fonts). The full Canon is open to the public and can be searched on this site.


  • Papyri.info (http://papyri.info/) is dedicated to the study of ancient papyrological documents.  It offers links to papyrological resources, a customized search engine (called the Papyrological Navigator) capable of retrieving information from multiple related collections, and an editing application, the Papyrological Editor, which contributors can use to suggest emendations to PN texts.

The Papyrological Navigator aggregates and displays information from the Advanced Papyrological Information System (APIS), the Duke Databank of Documentary Papyri (DDbDP) and the Heidelberger Gesamtverzeichnis der griechischen Papyrusurkunden Ägyptens (HGV), as well as links to Trismegistos.

  • The Internet Classics Archive

  • The Oxford Text Archive

  • Perseus Project Home Page

  • The Perseus Classics collection began as an integrated collection of materials, textual and visual, on the Archaic and Classical Greek world. Named for the Hellenic hero who explored the world to its most distant reaches, Perseus made it possible for specialists and non-specialists alike to move between traditionally distinct types of information, such as images and texts, and across traditionally distinct disciplines, such as classical archaeology and philology. Building on the success of the tools and resources developed for Ancient Greek source materials, the project expanded into the Roman world, with additional art and archaeology materials as well as new collections of Latin texts and tools.

  • The collection contains extensive and diverse resources including primary and secondary texts, site plans, digital images, and maps. Art and archaeology catalogs document a wide range of objects: over 1,500 vases, over 1,800 sculptures and sculptural groups, over 1,200 coins, hundreds of buildings from nearly 100 sites and over 100 gems. Catalog entries are linked to tens of thousands of images, many in high resolution, and have been produced in collaboration with many museums, institutions and scholars. Catalog information and keywords have been taken from standard sources, which are cited in the entries for each object.

  • Numerous secondary sources supplement Perseus catalog entries. Prominent art and archaeology works include the Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites, Attic vase paintings in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, by L. D. Caskey and J. D. Beazley, selections from Attic Document Reliefs: Art and Politics in Ancient Athens, by Carol L. Lawton, One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works, by Andrew Stewart, and more. All art and archaeology materials are extensively linked to the Perseus atlas, which contains over 5,000 classical sites.

  • In addition to art and archaeology sources, essays, and tools, the classics collection features several hundred works of classical Greek and Roman authors, both in the original language and in translation. Moreover, Perseus has created a suite of powerful linguistic tools, all extensively linked to lexica, which permit the careful study of Greek and Latin. All word study tools are documented; please visit the help and information center for the latest information on the scope and functions of these tools. Text based secondary sources include Greek and Latin grammars, commentaries, and Thomas R. Martin's popular An Overview of Classical Greek History from Homer to Alexander, which acts both as an introduction to Greek History and an tool for accessing clasics resources in Perseus; it's a great place to begin exploring the classics collection.

  • Nearly all the classics materials are interlinked and accessible from any given resource. For example, a user reading Julius Caesar's Gallic War in English, may wish to check the particular Latin word Caesar employs to describe a military formation. Simply by switching the version of the text, users may see the original Latin (De Bello Gallico) and select a word of interest. This word is linked to the word study tool for Latin, which presents information on the form of the word, gives a brief definition, and provides links to other tools, such as the dictionary and word frequency chart. Or, a student may wish to plot all of the sites Caesar mentions on the Perseus atlas. A link on every text page makes this available. Additionally, users can access art and archaeology information such as numerous coins which depict Julius Caesar.

  • The Stoa – A Consortium for Electronic Publication in the Humanities.

  • Biblioteca Augustana – a new Latin text archive.

  • Project Libellus – from the University of Washington.

  • A Collection of Dutch Neolatin Poetry (Constantijn Huygens Project at Leiden).

  • Catullus translations – poems translated into English by J.A.B. Harrisson

  • Corpus Scriptorum Latinorum – a digital library of Latin literature (a collaborative project aiming to create a digital library of all Latin literature. Currently it is mainly a catalogue of available Latin texts on the internet.

  • The Latin Librarya collection of Classical and Neo-Latin texts from George Mason University.

  • Peitho's Web – Includes some Sappho, Cicero, Longinus, Empedocles with more to come.

Authors and Topics

    • Bibliography of the Ancient Novel

    • Catullus Links

    • Cicero Home Page

    • Greek and Roman Drama

    • Hellenistic Bibliography

    • Homer Home Page

    • Kirke: Antiquite Autoren und Texte

    • Lucretius

    • M. Van Der Poel's Bibliography of Latin Language and Literature Look in the Index Generalis.

    • Philostratus' Heroikos

    • Recent Ovidian Bibliography

    • Vergil Home Page




  • PROJECT GUTENBERG – inicjatywa polegająca na umieszczeniu w Internecie elektronicznych wersji książek istniejących w wersji papierowej. Projekt Gutenberg został rozpoczęty w roku 1971 przez Michaela Harta. Nazwa projektu jest hołdem dla XV-wiecznego drukarza, twórcy pierwszej przemysłowej metody druku – Jana Gutenberga. Teksty umieszczone w sieci w ramach projektu nie są chronione prawami autorskimi, ponieważ nigdy nie były tymi prawami obłożone (najstarsze teksty) lub prawa te wygasły. Mała część tekstów, która chroniona jest prawami autorskimi, została umieszczona w zasobach projektu za zgodą właścicieli tych praw. Według danych na rok 2010 (kwiecień) Projekt udostępnił czytelnikom ponad 33 tysiące darmowych książek elektronicznych.



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