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- Edited by Charles E. Jones (Oriental Institute), Abzu is an extensive
index of resources on the pre-Islamic civilizations of Western Asia
and Egypt.
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- Edited by Suzanne Bonefas (Associated Colleges of the South/Miami
University) and Ross Scaife (University of Kentucky), Diotima features
a wide-range of resources for teaching and research on women in the
ancient world.
- Edited by Anthony F. Beavers (University of Evansville), Exploring
Ancient World Cultures is a general textbook project dedicated to the
ancient Near East, ancient India, ancient Egypt, ancient China, ancient
Greece, ancient Rome, early Rome and medieval Europe.
- Edited by Ulrich Schmitzer (Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Kirke
(in German) is an extensive index of internet sites relating to the
classical periods of Greece and Rome.
- Edited by Deborah Everhart and Martin Irvine (both of Georgetown University),
The Labyrinth has become the standard starting point for Medieval Studies
on the internet.
- Edited by Beau A.C. Harbin (The Catholic University of America), NetSERF
is a subject-oriented index of medieval resources available on the Internet
and includes an extensive hypertext glossary of general
medieval terms.
- Edited by Gregory Crane (Tufts University), The Perseus Project is
a growing database containing a vast array of information including
texts, lexicons, images and maps on ancient Greece.
- Edited by Alessandro Cristofori (University of Bologna), the Rassegna
(in Italian) is a gateway to resources for the classical periods of
Greece and Rome.
- Edited by Pedar Foss (DePauw University) and supported by the University
of Michigan, Romarch is a wide-ranging index of resources on ancient
Italy and the Roman world.
- The Bryn Mawr Reviews consist primarily of book reviews in their respective
areas. Each has its own search engine: you may search the Bryn Mawr Classical
Review or the Bryn Mawr Medieval
Review.
- The Duke Papyrus Archive allows users "electronic access to texts
about and images of 1,373 papyri from ancient Egypt." It uses Excite
for Web Servers to search the
archive.
- Gnomon is an on-line bibliography of resources relating to the classical
world. It provides several search tools, including a title and
author search and a search
of the "Thesaurusanzeige". Users in a hurry may find it easier to
begin with the Quick
Start Guide. Also on-line is an internet version of Inscriptiones Latinae
Eystettenses (last update 95,000 inscriptions).
- Hippias is Argos' younger sibling in using the limited area search
engine (LASE) technology developed at the Unviersity of Evansville.
It uses the same system of peer-review that Argos uses to limit the
range of responses to philosophy-related resources.
- The Labyrinth, an Argos Associate (see above), uses Excite for Web
Servers to search the entire site.
- This site "allows the search of the collected Nestor bibliographies
from 1957 until 1995. These include almost 23,000 entries in the bibliography,
with reviews to be added soon." The search mechanism allows for both
a simple search and
a detailed search.
- The ORB project, an initiative to create an on-line textbook with
both primary and secondary resources, includes its own search engine.
- The Perseus Project, an Argos Associate (see above), includes several
of its own search engines that provide access to information not covered
by Argos: English Index to the
Database, Greek Word Search of
Primary Texts, English Word Search of
the Liddell, Scott and Jones Greek Lexicon, Art and Archeology Indices,
Browser for Architecture,
Coins, Sculpture, Sites, and Vases, The
Encyclopedia Subject Index, and All Primary Texts (Greek and
English).
- The TOCS-IN project "archives the tables of contents of over 150 journals
of interest to classicists." The project provides a search engine so
that you may search the
TOCS-IN archives.
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