Byzantine & Medieval Studies Sites
BYZANTINE & MEDIEVAL LINKS INDEX
[ARCHIVED PAGE]
This list is now quite out dated. Many links are dead, and
there are hundreds of of additional resources around. Over 90% of the links/websites no longer work. The whole approach of a curated list of links no longer works well with the current Internet. To find web resources now it is best to use one of the standard web search engines.
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This page attempted to track ALL Byzantine material on the Internet,
and ALL significant entry points for Medieval studies. Ancient and Classical links, except
insofar as they impinge directly on Byzantine and Western Medieval matters, should be
sought out via the direct links provided to ARGOS associates which track and
maintain sites devoted to the Ancient world. Since this page was begun, the Medieval and Byzantine Internet has
exploded in size. As a result, although I will take suggestions, I will no longer add the
following materials:
- Syllabi for courses, unless the page contains additional material - texts, graphics,
lecture notes.
- History Department sites, unless the page contains additional material - texts, graphics
(etc.)
- Sites at geocities, or any other free web site which forcibly opens pop up windows.
- AOL sites, which seem to last just a few weeks on average.
- Sites which do not look to be stable: e.g. temporary exhbition pages.
- Sites for individual Orthodox or Easter Catholic churches, unless the page contains
additional material (see above).
- Gopher sites. Gopher is dead.
If you thought you once saw a website here, but its not
here now, check the Dead Links Page!
The structure of this set of World Wide Web Links is as follows. You can browse
through the entire list, or jump directly to the part that interests you by selecting the
underlined links.
WIDE AREA SEARCHES Here are links to the best "wide area" search engines on the Web. The Web is
so vast now that it contains more, and more diverse information, than any single printed
source. This availability of information will only increase. To use the Web efficiently, the various search engines are essential. Yahoo is
best, I think, if you are looking for specialized websites. Lycos, Excite, and Hotbot all
index many more documents. These engines will always turn up more references, but far more
will be dross than with Yahoo. It is useful to start with Yahoo since it has a nice
feature - once it tells you everything that it has found, it will automatically plug you
in to the other search engines. It is important to form your query words as clearly as possible. For instance, if you
are interested in finding information on a particular musician, do not search for
"music", but for a style [eg "jazz" or "gregorian chant"] or
even a name ["abba", "charlie parker", "hildegard"]. As the WWW has grown these wide area engines have become more difficult to use.
Searching for "Plato" for instance, will return more "hits" than one
could possibly read in a lifetime. For this reason it is best to start searches for
Byzantine and Medieval subjects with the "limited area" ARGOS search engine.
Dedicated Byzantine Sites
Byzantine Studies - Top Sites
GENERAL BYZANTINE
- MAJOR SITES
- MINOR SITES [based on amount or quality of content]
- WEB GUIDES
- BIBLIOGRAPHY SITES
- HISTORY SITES
- HISTORICAL POINTS
- BYZANTINE STUDIES CENTERS
- Christian Hagiography - a
site dedicated to hagiography run by the Bollandists.
- Calculation of the Ecclesiastical
Calendar - both Catholic, and Old and New Calendar Orthodox, by Marcos J. MONTES
- Gouden
Hoorn An online Periodical of Byzantine studies. Roughly half in Dutch, half in
English.
BYZANTIUM: CITY SPECIFIC SITES
- CONSTANTINOPLE
- Constantinople
-- Home Page Excellent page by Bob Ousterhout concentrating on Architecture.
- Byzantium1200
A wonderful site which provided CAD drawings of 50 buildings in Constantinople as they
would have been in 1200.
- The Constantinople Project Over the past several years, Professor Ahmet Cakmak, of Princeton University's Department
of Civil Engineering and Operations Research has undertaken the structural analysis, under
earthquake loads, of the Hagia Sophia, the major church built by the Emperor Justinian
during the 6th century AD. Professor Cakmak sought to determine the susceptibility of the
structure, specifically its large dome and arches, to collapse due to the earthquakes that
often strike that part of the world. As an extension of that work into the architectural
realm, he recently offered a class which studied Byzantine structures from a structural
and art-historical perspective. One of the goals set forth in the class was for students
to construct three-dimensional models of specific Byzantine structures utilizing the
computer drafting software AutoCAD. This was the first step towards a long term goal of
creating a full model of the topography of ancient Constantinople, with models of many
Byzantine buildings in place.
- "ISTANBUL"
- ANATOLIA
- GREECE AND AEGEAN
- BALKANS
- BYZANTINE ITALY
- SYRIA/PALESTINE
BYZANTINE: TECHNICAL SITES
- MANUSCRIPTS/PALEOGRAPHY
- Catalogi Codicum Montis
Athonis
- Philtheou Project [link
updated 11/23/96]
- Archive of Watermarks and Papers in
Greek Manuscripts This developing site consists of the guide (html texts) and 3 major
components: an archive images & prints of watermarks (from Greek manuscripts), a
database of paper descriptions, and a bibliographical database. It is both a research tool
and a mode of publishing information on papers in a centrally accessible way, and much
more. The database interface is not yet functional, but the rest is, and there's a lot to
think about there relevant to the methodological issues about use of evidence from paper
to identify scribes and centers of book production. Part of it (the bibliographical
database) is mostly just a shell at the moment, but you can see how it will work once our
database interface is done.
- Byzantine
Paleography
With illustrated guides to Byzantine writing through the centuries, along with decoding
tools.
- THE Infimae Aetatis PAGE /ICE-ICK INFORMATION A
Textual Data Bank of Late Antique and Medieval Inscriptions.
- Cambridge University
Library:The Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit The Genizah was the document
house of a Cairo Jewish community. Its resources pertain to a massive array of aspects of
Eastern Mediterranean life in the Middle Ages.
- TLG Information on the Theasaurus Linguae
Greaca.
- NUMISMATICS
- WARFARE
- LAW
- PROSPOGRAPHY
- SCIENCE/TECH/MEDICINE
BYZANTINE MUSIC
BYZANTIUM - RELATED REGIONS AND CULTURES
BYZANTINE RELATED MISCELLANY
BYZANTINE STUDIES DEPARTMENTS
BYZANTINE COURSE MATERIALS/PAGES
Byzantine Art and Architecture
See also the Gallery ,
a series of illustrated exhibitions of Byzantine art and antiquities, at this site.
- The
Glory of Byzantium. A very professional guide to Byzantium at the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, mounted in connection with its "Glory of Byzantium Exhibition". It
includes many images from the MMA's collection [but not from the Exhibition's borrowed
works.]
- Royal
Ontario Museum - Gallery of Byzantine Art
- BYZANTIUM
- Exhibition at University of Michigan
- Images of Ravenna Large
collection of photographs of the main sites in Ravenna.
- Images of from
Early Byzantine History, at Images from World History Site.
- Art and Architecture of the
Byzantine Empire, part of a course at Wisconsion.
- Byzantine Art Page in
Mexico
- Byzantine museum of
"Antivouniotissa" on Corfu.
- Ashkelon - Byzantine Church archeological site
- Franciscan Archeological
Institute - Jordan
- Eliadis Archeological Photography - Greece
- The Monastery of
Deccani near the town of Pech. Its frescoes were painted between 1335 and 1350.
- Orthodox
Christian Fellowship Icon Archive
- Dakota State
University Art History Site - Greek, Roman, Early Christian, Byzantine and Medieval Images
- Life In Byzantine Jerusalem,
part of a wonderfully illustrated Internet exhibit by Israel Information Services on
Jerusalem in early Christian times. This is a MUST SEE.
- Roman and Byzantine Sites in
Israel Part of a much larger illustrated guide to historic sites in Israel called The New Jerusalem Mosaic
- Historical Museum of Crete minor site for
Byzantine items.
- The Alexander Project Technical description of a project to create a multimedia database of the artifacts of the
Byzantine Museum of Athens.
- World Art Treasures this is a major
resource, based on a 100,000 image archive. It organizes a series of web exhibitions. Of
special interest to Byzantinists is its
Roman
Portraits from Egypt Exhibition. This is a stunning collation of Roman-Egyptian
portraiture linked to images from museums all over the world.
- Art Serve Art history related images from
Australian National University. This is a vast resource - over 4000 images on Western Art
alone, plus much more.
- Mosaic Matters on the Web (Paul Bentley
& Andy Mitchell)
- Catholic Encyclopedia:
Byzantine Architecture
- Catholic Encyclopedia:
Byzantine Art
- Catholic Encyclopedia:
Byzantine Empire, The
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Byzantine Texts
- Internet Medieval
Sourcebook A sourcebook of Medieval and Byzantine sources directed at classroom use.
- Internet Medieval
Sourcebook: Hagiography Page
- The Christian Classics Ethereal Library This is
an effort to alphabetize and make links to all the Christian literature on the internet.
Of special, and recent, interest is that the entire 38 volumes of the Ante-Nicene and Nicene and Post-Nicene is now available on line. Some of it is not cleaned up
from initial scanning, but this is a great resource. There are also a variety of links to
Bible tools, including parallel texts in English/German and English/Latin.
- Early Church Fathers A
direct link to the 38 volumes of the Ante-Nicene and Nicene and Post-Nicene fathers.
- St. Pachomius Library
- St. Pachomius Library; Greek Sources to 1200
- St.
Pachomius Library; Byzantine Sources, 1200+
- St. Pachomius Library; Syriac Fathers
- St. Pachomius Library; Lives of Saints
- Cyril of Alexandria Page
- Gregory of Nyssa
HomePage This page contains English translations of Gregory's works by Brother Casimir
McCambley, OCSO of St. Joseph's Abbey, Spencer, Massachusetts. McCambley has published
numerous translations of Gregory's works including his Song of Songs Commentary.The
Web Page contains a growing number of translations, introductions and bibliographies. The
Page is written and maintained by David
A. Salomon of the University of Connecticut.
- Roman Law on the WWW Contains texts and commentaries on the Corpus
Iuris Civilis. Available in English, German, Italian and Latin.
- Indiana University Gopher
- Virginia Tech Gopher This
site contains the full text of a large number of books, including the works of Plato and
Aristotle.
- The Tech Classics Archives Full texts of many classical authors.
- American University file archives A
site which under the heading "Catholic" has not only full texts of many papal
documents, but also ascii texts of many of the Church fathers.
- Daniel Ridings on Chrysostom An entrance point
to an edition D. Ridings is working on of one of Chrysostom's works. It will be updated as
time goes by.
- The Poetry of Yeats
- Bibliography: ALEX: A
Catalogue of Electronic Texts on the Internet
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Byzantine Commercial Sites
BYZANTINE BOOKS
BYZANTINE ART, ICONS AND CRAFTS [Commercial]
Linked Subjects - Religion Orthodoxy
Orthodox Monasteries,Churches, Cathedrals
- St. Catherine's
Monastery, Mt. Sinai St. Catherine's Monastery located in Sinai at the foot of Mount
Moses (Mt. Sinai) is a true jewel of Christian heritage. Founded around 527, it is the
oldest fully functioning monastery in the world. Yet, because of its isolation,
fortification and specific protection granted by the Prophet Mohammed, it remains original
and pristine. Its powerful setting seems a natural home for the many rare Christian icons
which it houses, including a collection of original illuminated manuscripts second only to
the Vatican. Within, one will find the chapel of the Burning Bush, which is believed to be
built atop the famous burning bush of Moses, but most Christians have never even seen the
monastery s exterior, and interior views are almost non-existent. Egypt s Ministry of
Tourism has expanded these pages so that we can now have a first look into this
fascinating Christian setting. It is worth a visit. Go to antiquities and then monuments,
or to destinations and then Sinai to find the St. Catherine pages.
- Mount Athos Website
- Athos Page
- Meteora
- Meteora Monasteries Website
- Nea Moni Museum - Karyes,
Chios
- Taxiarchs' Monastery on Lesbos.
- Patmos
- Archbishopric of Cyprus Has a
"Pillaged Churches" page.
- Northern Epirus Churches
- Monasteries
in Yugoslavia Sites and pictures for: Graccanica Monastery (near Pristina), Studenica
Monastery (near Kraljevo), ZZicca Monastery (near Kraljevo), Lazarica Monastery (
Krushevac ), Sopochani Monastery ( in the vicinity of Novi Pazar ), Deccani Monastery
(near the town of Pech), Ravanica Monastery (in the vicinity of Chuprija), LJubostinja
Monastery (near the town Trstenik), Patriarshia Of Pech (Pech), Kalenich Monastery (in the
vicinity of Jagodina), Ostrog Monastery (between the towns of Danilovgrad and Nikshich),
Moracca Monastery (near the town of Kolashin)
- Valamo Monastery Home Page
- Monastery of St. Isaac of Syria Skete
- Kiev-Petcherskaya Lavra in
Ukraine
- Holy Trinity Cathedral
- St.John the Baptist in Washington DC. Built in the
traditional Russian cathedral style, page includes a guided tour of the cathedral with
almost anything usually included inside one.
- Melkite (Byzantine) Catholic - St. George
Church Milwaukee
- St. Michael Ukrainian Catholic
Church [Divine Liturgies] The site has some interesting graphics on the celebration of
the liturgy.
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Catholicism
- Guide to Catholic Sources Don't get caught without proper references. This is a guide to the best and most
authoritative source for Catholic teaching. This version of the document contains
hypertext links to reference documents if they exist on the Internet.
- Vatican Home Page The Holy See's own home page, with
collections of documents [In English and Italian at the moment, other languages promised
soon.]
- Catholic Files This site has full
text files of many conciliar documents, papal and magisterial documents, and texts of
writings of the fathers.
- CatholicMobile Despite its odd name, this is one of the best guides to Catholicism on the Internet, with
links to sites presenting many perspectives.
- Christus Rex A general Catholic site
with wonderful guided tours of the various Vatican museums.
- Catholic Resources
on the Net One of the earliest Catholic sites, it keeps up a pretty good set of links
to other Catholic sites.
- Benedictine Run Liturgy
website
- Glen Gunhouse' Page
Contains a parallel Vulgate/King James Psalter, a parallel Latin/English Hours of the
Virgin, an on-line calendar of saints' days
- Guide to Liturgy
Resources online.
- Hours of the Virgin
in Latin and English
- Online Calendar of Saints
Days, refers to saints days in Latin/Western usage. By Glen Gunhouse at the University
of Alberta
- The Catholic Encyclopeadia
1907- 1913 An effort by the New Advent Catholic Web site to put the entire multivolume
CE on the web. Many articles are already loaded, and the site is growing. While not as
useful as the great French ecclesiastical encylopeadias, this is a very useful project for
Byzantinists.
- Douai-Rheims Bible Home Page - etext of the old "official" Catholic translation of the Vulgate.
- The Complete
List of Popes
- The Monk Page
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Judaism and Judaic Studies
Linked Subjects - Ancient Studies
Ancient World - General
ARGOS ASSOCIATE SITES
- Abzu: Guide to Resources
for the Study of the Ancient Near East Available on the Internet
Edited by Charles E. Jones (Oriental Institute), Abzu is an extensive index of
resources on the pre-Islamic civilizations of Western Asia and Egypt.
- The Cambridge Classics
External Gateway to Humanities Resources
Edited by Bruce Fraser (University of Cambridge), Cambridge Classics provides
access to internet resources of general interest to classical scholars, including links to
materials on philosophy, ancient science, linguistics, drama and art.
- Diotima: Materials for
the Study of Women and Gender in the Ancient World
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 and gender in the ancient world.
- Exploring Ancient World Cultures
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.
- Kirke:
Katalog der Internet-Ressourcen für die Klassische Philologie aus Erlangen
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.
- Rassegna
degli Strumenti Informatici per lo Studio dell'Antichità Classica
Edited by Alessandro Cristofori (University of Bologna), the Rassegna (in Italian)
is a gateway to resources for the classical periods of Greece and Rome.
- Romarch: Roman Art and
Archeology
Edited by Pedar Foss (University of Cincinnati) and supported by the University of
Michigan, Romarch is a wide-ranging index of resources on ancient Italy and the
Roman world.
SEE ALSO
Archeology
Ancient Near East
Egypt
Persia
Ancient Greece
Greek Language [See also Biblical Studies links]
- Perseus Project Home Page
- Hellenistic Greek Linguistics
- Greek Fonts and Computing Site Also has Armenian, Coptic resources. In German. etc.
- Greek Fonts site in Greece.
- How to Read, Write, Print and Email in Greek [At
Hellenic Resources]
Covers Apple, UNIX, Windows 3.1 / 3.11, Windows 95, and Windows NT Systems
- Using WinGreek in Windows 95
A graduate student at Oxford has macros to allow the use of the Wingreek fonts in various
programs under Windows 95. The package together is available from the Oxford Classics web
site. [Note that, unless changes have been made, you will have fiddle a bit to make this
work with US keyboard settings]
- Thesaurus Linguae Graecae
- Interpreting Ancient
Manuscripts Web A Site at Brown University which examines Greek paleography, textual
transmission, etc., with special reference to the New Testament.
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Ancient Rome
Reports from Roman Sites
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Ancient Israel
Bible Resources
New Testament Period
Patristics
Late Antiquity
- ORB:
Late Antiquity Pages, contains a guide to Late Antique studies on the net.
- Society for Late Antiquity, contains the Late
Antiquity Newsletter, programs for the two Shifting Frontiers in Late Antiquity
Conferences, and cross references to other WEB sites dealing with Late Antiquity.
- Worlds of Late
Antiquity A course by Professor James O'Donnell at the University of Pennsylvania
- The Worlds of Late
Antiquity Readings for Students
- James O'Donnell: Cassidorus (Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1979) - full text available
online.
- Augustine on the
Internet Another coup by Professor O'Donnell. Includes full Latin and English
texts of the Confessions, many papers, links to other Augustine material [including
the City of God, the Rule], the Ennead of Plotinus, and a song by
Sting!
- Boethius
Course By James O'Donnell. Includes full Latin text of the Consolation of
Philosophy, English translation and commentary, along with other course materials.
- Christian Catacombs of Rome
- Manicheanism Web Page
- Traditions of Magic in
Late Antiquity
- Warfare in the Roman World
- Historical
Atlas of Late Antiquity. At the moment the site has the maps for the Occident at the
time of Justinian. It is in French, but the maps are in Latin, Old English, Arabic, etc.,
so I guess it could be useful to anyone.
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Syriac Studies
Linked Subjects - Medieval Studies
Slavic World and Balkans
Medieval West
General
WEB GUIDES
ASSOCIATIONS
TECHNICAL
INTERESTS - Christianity
- Christian Hagiography - a site run by the
Bollandists.
- Hagiography Site, by
Thomas Head, one of the leading experts on Western Hagiography.
- Medieval Sourcebook: Saints' Lives
Page Full texts of many ancient and medieval saints' lives
- Eckhart Society
- The
Franciscan Archive, a WWW resource on St. Francis of Assisi and Franciscanism, is now
online. Included are original texts in Latin and English translation, plus links to
biographies, histories and related materials in liturgy and art.
- The Monk Page
- A New Relic in the Cathedral
- Medieval
Attitudes Towards Dismemberment of the Body
- Relic
Hierarchy - Mail Discussion
- Relic
Hierarchy
- SACRED RELICS
This is about Buddhist relics, but is good comparative material.
- Summa Theologica III, 25, 6: The
adoration of the relics of saints
- Catholic Encyclopedia: OIL OF
SAINTS
- Catholic Encyclopedia: RELICS
- Mary's Gardens - researches the hundreds of
flowers named in medieval times as symbols of the life, mysteries and privileges of the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
INTERESTS - War
INTERESTS - Gender
INTERESTS - Science
INTERESTS- Music
- Gregorian Chant
- Altramar Medieval Music Group
- The Indiana University Early Music
Institute. The important part for Latinists and Medievalists is the: TML: Thesaurus Musicarum Latinarum database for Latin music theory which gives the texts of hundreds of writers from ancient
times through the 18th century.
- Gregorian Chants - with audio. Currently has 8 different versions from Mass ordinaries
("kyriale" - kyrie, gloria, sanctus and agnus) and 3 alleluias, all sung by
monks from Sao Paulo Benedictine Abbey (Brazil). Live recordings during the masses. The
files are in wave format, stereo, and also in Sun Audio (au) mono, which are smaller in
size.
Visit this page in English , Spanish,or Portuguese. [Located in Brazil, so
downloads may be slow if you do not have fast connection.]
INTERESTS- Food and Drink
INTERESTS- Other
- The Center for Millennial Studies
- Cyprus Under Richard I and the
Templars
- Roman Law
on the WWW Contains texts and commentaries on the Corpus Iuris Civilis. Available in
English, German, Italian and Latin.
- Brendan McManus' List of Legal
Manuscripts and List 2 (commentaries on the Decretum, Decretals, and the Roman law) from the high and later
Middle Ages. I finally got around to encoding the thing in HTML and placing it on my
website.
- Marco Polo Expedition An
expedition from Italy to Hong Kong via the Internet. The expedition team will start in
Venice, Italy and travel through Austria, Eastern Europe, Turkey, Central Asia, China, and
Hong Kong. The team will end its trek in Hong Kong, having retraced Marco Polo's historic
passage to the East.
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Documents
- Medieval Sourcebook
- EuroDocs: Primary
Historical Documents from Western Europe A site is provided by a bibliographer at
Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University. The site includes pointers to documents
and full text works for Medieval and Renaissance Europe, Europe as a Supernational Region,
and over 20 Western European Countries. Materials are transcribed, translated, or
facsimiles of the originals. Some materials are in the language of the originating
country. Time frame is medieval to present.
- Online Medieval and
Classical Library At Berkeley. Contains public domain full texts of source
material.
- Monumenta Germaniae Historica (Institut für
Erforschung des Mittelalters, Munich) Page, with, among other things, complete listings of
their publications and info on their ongoing project to make the complete edition of
sources available on CD (eMGH):
- Migne: Patrologia Latina Database Now available also on the WWW. This Internet access has of course its price (annual
subscription: starting at L2500 for one concurrent user and going up to L6250 for an
unlimited site arrangement).
- Index
- Medieval Studies - WWW Virtual Library
- Latin Text
Archives at Wiretap [US]
- Latin
Text Archives at Libellus [US]
- Latin Medieval
Literature
- Aquinas' Summa
Theologiae - full text in English, with search engine "coming soon"
- Saint Patrick: Autobiography
- Baragona's Chaucer A home page for a class on Chaucer, this page contains links to major sites for Chaucer,
medieval literature, and general literature.
- Canterbury Tales [University of Virginia]
- Chaucer
Bibliography [University of Toronto]
- European Texts and
Images from before 1620
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Manuscript/Document Presentations
Art and Architecture
Exhibitions
Conferences
E-Journals
Courses
College Medieval History Departments
Area Sites
ITALY
SPAIN and PORTUGAL
FRANCE
ENGLAND
- Celts & Saxons homepage
- Old English Pages
- Hwæt! An Old English
Learning Site
- British History at Brittania Magazine
- Apollonius of Tyre Version in
Old English and translation into modern English
- 1066
ARCHIVE
- Secrets of the
Norman Invasion A site put together by Nick Austin arising from his obsession in
finding out exactly where the Normans landed in 1066. You may or may not agree with his
thesis [that the documents specifying Pevensey as the site simply do not fit the lie of
the land, but Wilting Manor does], but along the way he has provided over 7megabytes of
maps, pictures [including chunks of the Bayeux tapestery], arial photographs and argument.
A good example of the possibilities of web publishing.
- Bayeux Tapestry The whole tapestry in a
series of 250k images.
- Regia Anglorum The pages are
designed to be an interactive experience for anybody with an interest in Early Medieval
Europe in general and Anglo-Saxon and Viking Britain in particular. A popular focus, but
with many full text articles.
- Shropshire
- The Castles of Wales
- A Virtual Tour
of Durham Cathedral
- Web Site on
the city of Exeter with pictures of Cathedral and other medieval sites.
- Exploring Lavenham Audio Tour Lavenham is, reputedly, the finest small medieval town in England.
- Medieval Europe: All Hallows parish church,
Nottingham
- Anglo-Saxon
Church in Bradford-on-Avon in Wiltshire, England.
- The History and
Construction of Medieval Timber-Framed House by Steve Kirkby. This site describes, for
the lay reader, the development from about 1200 AD in England and Wales of the cruck and
box-frame house from the earlier hut made from earth-fast posts, and the invention of the
chimney, tiles and window glass. A Bibliography is included. The site has been designed
for the interested layperson who knows little or nothing about the subject and would
welcome a simplified jumping-off point.
- Richard
III Society--Bosworth Facts
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NORSEMEN/SCANDANAVIA/VIKINGS
GERMANY
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LOW COUNTRIES
- Narrative Sources,
is now available on the Internet. This a survey of all the medieval narrative sources
originating from the Southern Low Countries. 'Narrative Sources' includes all the primary
sources, in prose or verse, written in order to describe the past in a narrative way
(chronicles, diaries, saint's lives etc.). Each source is described in 21 fields:
identification number, type, language, author, status of the author, title, incipit,
explicit, size, century, redaction (place, date, patron, dedication), abstract,
manuscripts, editions, translations, sources, influence, literature, desiderata, name of
the contributor of the record and update code. Developed by the departments of medieval
history at the universities of Ghent and Leuven (Belgium).
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Misc. Medieval
Also included here are the following sites by businesses and re-enactment enthusiasts.
They vary enormously in quality.
Caveat emptor!
Islamic World
Islam
Middle East Studies in General
Arabic and Persian Language and Literature
Arabic and Persian Computing
Ottoman and Turkish Studies
Greece after 1453
General Resources
General History
- HN Source: History
Resources
- WWW services for historians
- History/Social Studies Web Site for
K-12 Teachers
- Needle in a CyberStack Simple, powerful, quick-loading (Table Format- no graphics), and useful - with links to
all the best Search and InfoTools in the world. People will have fun comparing searches on
the different engines and also using the meta-searchers like DogPile - strange name - but
Very Useful! Some links are very convenient such as OneLink to all of the online
dictionaries in the world. The people finders and map tools are quite helpful. The purpose
of the page is to enable you to find anything on the Internet fairly easily.
- Using the WWWin
Teaching History paper given at 1996 AHA convention
- Medieval Maps Index A
large series of maps of Europe, all keyed into to specific dates.
- Map History / History of Cartography
- Historical and Cultural Atlas Resource
Maps in a new on-line atlas use the latest technology -- animation and pull-down menus --
to help show how nations have been settled and how empires have risen and collapsed. The
atlas offers more than 50 maps -- about half of them interactive -- and is divided into
two sections. A group of maps of North America focuses on important themes in 18th- and
19th-century U.S. history, such as territorial expansion and slavery. A section on Europe
explores trade routes, political change, urbanization, and the distribution of natural
resources. Also on the site are maps of North Africa and the Middle East. Users can follow
the expansion of Macedonia under Philip II and his son, Alexander the Great, in the fourth
century B.C.; compare migration routes of the Vandals, Franks, Huns, Saxons, and Visigoths
during the time of the Roman Empire's disintegration; and examine changes in
slave-population density in 19th-century America. To see the interactive maps, users must
have free Shockwave software installed on their computers and must have computers that can
handle graphics.
- Maps: Earth Images from NASA
- Historical Map
Collection -- U. of Georgia
- Rank Xerox Public Web Maps
- The World Lecture Hall A set
of links to faculty prepared homepages for a variety of courses.
- Evolution Entrance
- Black/African
Internet Resources
- University of
Maryland at College Park inforM system on Women's Studies
- Women's Studies
Database [US]
- Maritime History
- Virginia Tech Libs
- Virginia Tech Books
- World
Factbooks, 1990-1992
- World History Gateway
- World History Association
- New England Regional World
History Association Archives
- World History Documentary
Archives
- World History Image
Archives
- The Modern English
Collection at the Electronic Text Center, UVa
- University of
Toronto English Library Author Index
- World-Wide Art
Resources - Galleries and Exhibitions
- Demography: Center for the Study of Population:
Florida StateU
- Demography &
Population Studies
- Population Studies Center at U Michigan
- Demography Search the "ANU-Demography-Publications database"
- Digital Image Center Image
Collections
- Eastman Kodak* [US]
- Fine Art Archive* [JP]
- Berea College Museum
- Icon Browser: PisaU
- Icons
- Graphics: Images, Icons, Flags
- Critical Theory Website
- United Kingdom: Institute of Historical
Research [IHR-INFO]*
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General Research Resources
- New York Public Library Home Page
- CARRIE: An
Full Text Electronic LIbrary at U. Kansas
- Eye on the Arts Eyes on Art.
This is a site for beginning to advanced students of the visual arts (painting in
particular) created for the Education First Initiative in California. Seven activities
comprise the site and lead students from creating an online monitor museum (using arts
images from the Web and PGView or Lview Pro) through studying art through the ages in
"Miles of Styles" and ultimately ending up with a fun Expert's Quiz.
- IATH Server Insitute for
Advanced Technology in the Humanities at University of Virginia in Charlottesville, VA.
- Britannica Online You can have a trial two
week subscription to the entire EB. After that you must pay. Still...
- Ordnance Survey British Map Site
- Computer Aided Language Learning A
site which collects links to language shareware worldwide.
- Multilingual Instruction Software DOS and
MacOS shareware and demonstration programs teaching grammar and/or vocabulary of Basque,
Bulgarian, Catalan, Cornish, French, Georgian, Gothic, Greek, Indonesian, Irish, Latin,
Malagasy, Nahuatl, Old English, Old Occitan, Pali, Portuguese, Quechua, Romontsch,
Sanskrit, Sardinian, Urdu, Welsh and Yiddish .
- List of Lists Guide to all lists in all subjects
- Queer Resources
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- Unclassified Links
The author and maintainer of this site is Paul Halsall [a
picture!] . He can be contacted by email at
Please do not hesitate to mail comments or suggestions. |