Base d'objets du Deutsches Archäologisches Institut et de l'institut d'archéologie de l'Université de Cologne. Numérisation de nombreuses collections photographiques sur l'archéologie et l'histoire de l'Antiquité méditerranéenne. Le site héberge en outre quelques collections extérieures. Accès au site du DAI Rom (numérisation de la collection de photographies). Livres numérisés (dont 300+ des 16e-18e s.), avec projets de liens entre texte et documentation iconographique (iDAI.bookbrowser). Intégration prévue avec les collections numérisées du Perseus Project (projet Hellespont)
Selection of nearly 400 literary compositions recorded on sources which come from ancient Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) and date to the late third and early second millennia BCE
to make the results of current research undertaken by members of Princeton and Stanford Universities in the field of classics available in advance of final publication
The four biographies of Pythagoras that have survived from antiquity ..... a complete collection of the surviving fragments from the Pythagoreans [trad. en anglais]
Manuscript of the Christian Bible written in the middle of the fourth century ..... earliest complete copy of the Christian New Testament ..... text is in Greek
[accès réservé] « A new edition of the 856 fragmentary historians that comprise F. Jacoby's monumental Die Fragmente der griechischen Historiker Parts I-III, but with significant additions. Each author has a Greek text (updated from that of Jacoby where relevant); facing English translation; new, critical commentary (for the first time for authors 608-856, on which Jacoby did not write commentaries); a brief encyclopaedia-style entry about his life, works, importance, etc.; and a select bibliography. BNJ will also include several new authors and many fragments of existing authors that were either unknown to Jacoby or excluded by him ». Liens vers l'éd. orig. des Fragmente der Griechischen Historiker (1923-1959)
The aim of the Telamon project, which is hosted by St. Kliment Ohridski Sofia University, Department of Classics, is to create a digital library of the ancient Greek inscriptions found in Bulgaria. Their total number counts more than 3500 written in a period of about 1000 years (6th century BC — 4th century AD)