Ancient Greek Links
Located at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Interactive Ancient Mediterranean is an online atlas of the ancient Mediterranean world designed to service the needs and interests of students and teachers in high school, community college, and university courses in classics, ancient history, geography, archeology, Latin, Greek and related fields.
Located at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, this is the American Society's website, providing membership information and an extensive collection of links and resources related to the study of Greek and Latin epigraphical texts.
Located at Tufts University, the Perseus Project's primary focus is on Greece's art, architecture, and texts of authors. The Perseus Project is fairly extensive, owing no small part to grants by education-supporting entities such as the Getty Institute, the Annenberg/CPB Group, and the NEA. The site includes a large number of Greek authors, in addition to the more famous ones such as Aristotle, Plato, and Thucydides. Sites of interest to Greek readers in Perseus include:
Liddell-Scott-Jones Greek Online Lexicon: This online dictionary allows you to enter a word and receive a definition as well as cited examples of it in texts to help place its meaning in context.
Texts by Greek Authors: Contains many authors' works, both in Greek and in English. NOTE: The texts provided are not in whole form available for copying or downloading for personal or educational use. They are broken up into chunks, with words hyperlinked for morphological purposes. Its primary use, in conjunction with the online dictionary, would be aid in translating small passages of a Greek author.
Located at the University of Pennsylvania, the Vergil Project's purpose is to provide an online area for the discussion of Vergil's epic works. The Vergil Project has online versions of at least four scholarly texts, as well as a so-called "communal text," which is constructed out of the other four, based on majority access. So if a section of Vergil in one manuscript is accessed more often than the same section in the other manuscripts, that manuscript's section is placed in the communal text. Obviously the communal text is constantly changing. Nevertheless, this site provides one of the most comprehensive looks at Vergil.