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- Archaeological Fieldwork Opportunities.
- Archaeological Fieldwork and Opportunities Bulletin, sponsored by the Archaeological Institute of America each year. The print edition (its call number in Cole Library is 930.1 Ar22) contains additional resources such as contact information for archaeological institutions, organizations, and governmental offices, as well as tips on how to select a project.
- Archaeology On-line: Popular magazine of the AIA
- Archaeology on the Net, links and books on a wide range of materials from scientific to cultural.
- Corinth Computer Project features a 3D fly-through of Corinth, a Quicktime movie of the Roman forum, interactive stone for stone archaeological plans, digital maps, 3D models, site photographs, satellite images, interactive GIS data and literary texts.
- Office of the State Archaeologist (Iowa). Learn about Iowa's past! The site features information on archaeology in Iowa, public programs, local excavations, and more.
- Prehistoric Archaeology of the Aegean, a course offered at Dartmouth by Prof. Jeremy Rutter.
- Pylos Regional Archaeology Project.
- Web Resources for Aegean Archaeology, compiled by Prof. John Younger.
- see below for more Greek and Roman Archaeology
- Chronology of Ancient Greece, from Exploring Ancient World Cultures at the University of Evansville. Includes links to ancient maps, essays, and an anthology of readings on-line.
- The Ancient Greek World, an exhibition from the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Includes sections on land and time, daily life, economy, and religion and death.
- Ancient City of Athens, images and information about the monuments of Athens.
- Ancient Olympic Games Virtual Museum
- Cultural Map of Hellas, a site sponsored by the Greek Ministry of Culture that links to museums and sites in Greece.
- Dr. J's Illustrated Sites of Greece combines images with nice descriptions and explanations of their significance
- Images of Orality and Literacy in Greek Art of the 5th, 4th, and 3rd centuries BCE
- Metis, using QuickTime Virtual Reality, allows the visitor to view over sixty ancient Greek sites in 360 degree interactive VR photography
- Perseus Project, an evolving digital library on ancient Greece and Rome. Images, texts, maps, essays, on-line Greek-English lexicon, plus much more. Great site for students of Greek and Roman art, archaeology, history, literature, and language. Mirror sites: Chicago, Berlin
- Exploring Ancient World Cultures: Ancient Rome.
- Imperium Romanorum, includes a complete list of emperors, consuls, and censors.
- Lacus Curtius: Into the Roman World. Includes a Roman Gazeteer, list of 1700 RomanSites, texts, atlas, Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, and selections from Platner's Topography of Ancient Rome.
- Riley Collection of Roman Portraits features portraits of emperors and senators, as well as men, women and children during the height of the Roman empire: images, descriptions, family trees, additional links and more (Cedar Rapids Museum of Art).
- The Rome Project. A vast collection of resources about the Roman world, including archaeology, literature, military, politics, philosophy, religion, theater, and maps of Rome.
- Rome: Republic to Empire, essays and images on the Roman house, leisure and entertainment, gladiatorial games, the Roman army, and more (VRoma).
- VRoma MOO. Travel through virtual Rome on-line! Log-on as guest, leave password blank, and click Connect.
- Greek and Latin Texts and Translations at Perseus
- The Internet Classics Archive at MIT (downloadable translations of many classical authors)
- The Internet Ancient History Sourcebook (all in translation).
- The Latin Library at Ad Fontes Academy
- Cicero's Home Page
- Vergil's Home Page
- The Vulgate Bible (in Latin, of course)
- Latin poetry and scansion (Mary McHugh) features exercises to learn metrical scansion, captioned audio files of poems of Catullus, Ovid, and Vergil, plus Latin karaoke
- Classics of Latin Poetry and Prose by Caesar, Cicero, Catullus, Horace and Vergil read by Prof. Gareth Morgan (UT-Austin)
- Harvard Classics Department Prose and Poetry Recital Page (readings of Homer, Cicero, Catullus, Vergil, Propertius, Ovid, Statius, and Roman Declamation)
- Latin Poetry from Catullus to G. M. Hopkins, read aloud by Prof. Walt Stevenson, University of Richmond)
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