I. bibliografie



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The mission of the Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL) is to build up the church by making classic Christian literature widely available and promoting its use for edification and study by interested Christians, seekers and scholars. The CCEL accomplishes this by selecting, collecting, distributing, and promoting valuable literature through the World Wide Web and other media.

  • Bibles and Commentaries

  • Classics

  • Creeds, Catechisms, Liturgies

  • Early Church

  • Fiction

  • History

  • Hymns and Hymnology

  • Mysticism

  • Reference

  • Sermons








CLASSICSINDEX: Links to Online Books (Google Books, Archive.org, etc.) FOR THE STUDY OF GREEK AND ROMAN CLASSICS, EARLY JUDAISM, AND CHRISTIANITY



General Classics ResourcesPalaeography and Manuscripts

Ancient Greece: Language and Literature


[Download older (non-wiki) page of Greek Literature links here]

Ancient Rome: Latin Language and Literature


[Download older (non-wiki) page of Latin Literature links here]
Mythology


Bible [Hebrew : LXX : NT : Latin]

Judaism [2nd Temple : Rabbinic]

Early Christianity


[Download older (non-wiki) page of Bible, Judaism, Early Christianity, Medieval, Renaissance, and Reformation links here]

  • General, Reference, and Periodicals on Bible, Judaism, and Christianity

  • Texte und Untersuchungen

  • Language: Hebrew and related languages : NT Greek / Koine : Coptic

  • Pseudepigrapha pertaining to Hebrew Bible / Old Testament : NT Apocrypha

  • Migne, PG

  • Migne, PL - links for vols. 1-126 now revised

Medieval and Byzantine


  • Corpus Scriptorum Historiae Byzantinae

Renaissance


Reformation


Classics of Scholarship




Parallel Resources and Abbreviations


Indices

  • Analytic Bibliography of On-line Neo-Latin Texts

  • edonnelly.com - highlights: Greek and Latin grammars and textbooks ; Loeb Classical Library

  • Free Books in Biblical Studies and Related Fields - Bob Buller and Danny Zacharias; focus: Hebrew Bible, Judaism, New Testament, Early Christianity

  • Harvard Library Catalogue (Hollis) - often has links to Google Books

  • Hathi Trust Digital Library

  • LATO - Library of Ancient Texts Online (Greek)

  • Loebolus - public domain / online-accessible scans of texts from the Loeb Classical Library

  • Luminarium: Anthology of English Literature - with Latin works where relevant

  • Numismatics Bibliography in Digital Historia Numorum - Ed Snible

  • Online Books Page (UPenn)

  • Online Scholarship at Kata ta biblia - Pat McCullough; focus: New Testament

  • The Open Library - using Google Books and other resources: Note "Scan-on-Demand" from Boston Public Library

  • Public Domain Books for Classicists - Tarik Wareh; important material on central texts: Homer, Hesiod, Greek Drama, Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, Xenophon, Attic Orators, Aristotle, New Testament

  • A Teubner a Day

  • Wikisource (German) - often the entries for a given author are indices to Google Books and the like; the English , Latin , and Greek sites, however, seem to be entirely html adaptations

Facsimiles of Editions and Manuscripts [See also Palaeography and Manuscripts ]



  • The Ancient Library - Bookshelf

  • archive.org

  • Biblical Manuscripts Project (at the Religion and Technology Center)

  • BSB = Bayerische StaatsBibliothek / Munich Digitisation Centre [English startpage]

  • CAMENA = Early Modern Latin Texts (Mannheim)

  • ETANA - Near Eastern studies and texts

  • Gallica - Bibliothèque Nationale de France project

  • Google Book Search

  • JALB = Johannes a Lasco Bibliothek - Emden / Hardenberg (incunabula and early printed books)

  • MATEO = Mannheimer Texte Online

  • MARABU = MAnnheimer Reihe Altes BUch (early editions; humanist women)

  • Medieval and Modern Thought Text Digitization Project (Stanford)

  • Microsoft Live Search Books

  • OLL = Online Library of Liberty - includes facsimile pdfs and html adaptations of translated works of antiquity

Texts (html or other formats) - Non-Facsimiles



  • Biblioteca Augustana

  • Biblioteca Italiana

  • CCEL = Christian Classics Etherial Library: especially, the ANF and NPNF collections

  • CSL = Corpus Scriptorum Latinorum

  • ForgottenBooks.org

  • HHTP = Hanover Historical Texts Project

  • Lacus Curtius - html, but usually with indications of original pagination and original textual and interpretive notes

  • The Latin Library

  • Oxford Text Archive - txt and html (orig. lang. and tr.)

  • Perseus project - Tufts | Berlin mirror | Chicago mirror

  • Project Gutenberg

  • Tertullian.org - "Additional Fathers"

Hale and Buck: A Latin Grammar

Posted: 23 Jul 2016 11:04 AM PDT



Hale and Buck: A Latin Grammar

Introduction


Hale and Buck's A Latin Grammar was first published by Ginn and Company in 1903. This edition is a collation of the two different versions of the original that I am aware of, hereafter referred to as versions A and B.

The Scans


  • Version A:
    Scan of a copy in the Library of the University of Michigan, originally downloaded from Google Books (http://books.google.com/books?id=g49fAAAAMAAJ) on June 25, 2008. However, Google has since replaced that scan by a copy of version~B.

  • Version B:
    Originally downloaded from http://www.archive.org/download/alatingrammar02buckgoog/alatingrammar02buckgoog.pdfon August 12, 2011.

Corrections and bug reports


If you notice any errors, please enter them in the issue trackeror via email to haleandbuck@gmail.com.

Editorial practices


Throughout I have tried to emulate the typographical conventions of the original fairly closely, but I have not hesitated to depart from them where convenient. Most such changes can pass without comment, but one perhaps requires some justification. In the original, there are many instances of paragraphs that are set in a smaller type than the main text, for example, 269 a and 270 a, b. An examination of the changes made in version B reveals that many of them are similarly reduced in size, which makes me think that most if not all such passages represent changes made in galleys. In other words, I believe the smaller typeface was used solely (or at least primarily) in order to make room for late additions to the page rather than to indicate that this material is somehow of less importance. Especially in view of the absence of any indication by the authors that they attach any such meaning to variation in type size, I have not tried to preserve such variations. (It's possible, of course, that the smaller type size does carry meaning in some cases, and there is sufficient variation in style to foster doubt. But if so, I'm unable to distinguish the cases.)








A Bibliography Of Ancient Greek Linguistics
This bibliography, maintained by Michel Buijs, focuses on publications of interest to those working from a functional perspective
Last update: August 11, 2016



  • Clause Types

  • Particles

  • Pragmatics and Word Order

  • Tense and Aspect

  • Miscellaneous

  • Reference Works

Greek Linguistics: Links on the World Wide Web
The Ancient Graffiti Project: Developing a search engine for studying the graffiti of Herculaneum and Pompeii

Posted: 07 Oct 2016 01:05 PM PDT



 [First posted in AWOL 22 November 2013, updated 2 September 2015]

The Ancient Graffiti Project: Developing a search engine for studying the graffiti of Herculaneum and Pompeii

Welcome to The Ancient Graffiti Project, a website that provides a search engine for locating and studying graffiti of the early Roman empire from the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum.

Ancient graffiti, inscriptions that have been incised or scratched into wall-plaster, comprise a special branch of epigraphy. They differ from inscriptions on stone in several respects. An inscription on stone may be commemorative, dedicatory, sacred (to name just a few classes of inscription), but in almost all cases forethought has gone into the preparation of the text and the inscribed monument. Graffiti, by contrast, are more often the result of spontaneous composition and are the handwritten creation of the “man on the street.” Since graffiti are scratched into friable wall-plaster, they are more easily perishable, but when they do survive they are almost always found in-situ, unlike many stone inscriptions that have survived to the present day through re-use.

Our search engine allows three different types of searches.



  • You can search for graffiti by location, selecting either the pull-down menu, or by clicking on the map, or

  • You can search specifically for graffiti drawings by choosing the class of drawing that interests you, or

  • You can search for a specific word or phrase and find where it occurs within the ancient city.

At present, the search engine and database are under construction, so searches are limited to Regio I, Insula 8 in the city of Pompeii. More will be available as the project progresses.


  • Home

  • Prototype of I.8 (Pompeii)

  • The Herculaneum Graffiti Project

  • Updates

  • About Us



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