nuclas.ufc.br
NUCLAS :: Links
http://www.nuclas.ufc.br/links/links.php
Núcleo de Cultura Clássica. Universidade Federal do Ceará. O NUCLAS promove, de 17 a 22 de agosto, a XXVI Semana de Estudos Clássicos: Identidade e Alteridade no Mundo Antigo [ mais. II Congresso da Sociedade Brasileira de Retórica, de 27 a 30 de agosto. [ mais. Faculdade e Centros de Estudos Clássicos. Center of Hellenic Studies. Center of Hellenic Studies. Associações Nacionais e Internacionais de Estudos Clássicos. Da SBEC e na própria revista do NUCLAS. Sociedade Brasileira de Estudos Clássicos.
furman-classics.blogspot.com
Classics at Furman: September 2014
http://furman-classics.blogspot.com/2014_09_01_archive.html
This blog will be home to news of research and events from the Department of Classics at Furman University. The Department of Classics teaches courses in the ancient Greek and Latin languages, and on subjects related to Greek and Roman history, archeology, literature, and culture. We emphasize an integration of teaching and research, where faculty and students collaborate to make significant new contributions to our knowledge of the ancient world. Tuesday, September 30, 2014. So after a few years away fr...
homermultitext.github.io
Links · The Homer Multitext project on github
http://homermultitext.github.io/links
Site last updated: August 27, 2015. The Homer Multitext project on github. Archival data and software for working with editions of Homeric manuscripts. The Homer Multitext project web site. The hmteditors organization on github. We rely on the CITE architecture. From the homermultitext organization on github: wiki with notes on technical design.
homermultitext.github.io
HMT archive · The Homer Multitext project archive
http://homermultitext.github.io/hmt-archive
Github source for this site. Site last updated: August 17, 2016. The Homer Multitext project archive. Integrating contributions from more than 100 scholars. The github repository at https:/ github.com/homermultitext/hmt-archive. Is the central repository for archival data from the Homer Multitext project. The repository includes a gradle build system for assembling packages of published material that has passed final editorial review and verification. The master branch normally maintains the most recent.
botanicacaroliniana.blogspot.com
Botanica Caroliniana: Data, Tools, & Views
http://botanicacaroliniana.blogspot.com/2014/09/data-tools-views.html
Updates on research on historical botany, focusing on the Carolinas. This is a collaboration between researchers at the South Carolina Botanical Garden at Clemson University and Furman University’s Department of Classics. Monday, September 22, 2014. Data, Tools, and Views. After a busy summer of development, we have online a new web application dedicated to Botanica Caroliniana’s data. This is a customized implementation of CITE/CTS Services. Christopher W. Blackwell. This project is a collaboration betw...
homermultitext.github.io
About HMT on github · The Homer Multitext project on github
http://homermultitext.github.io/about
Site last updated: August 27, 2015. The Homer Multitext project on github. Archival data and software for working with editions of Homeric manuscripts. About HMT on github. The Homer Multitext project is creating an open, replicable, and verifiable scholarly archive of material documenting the transmission of the Homeric. The projects web site is http:/ www.homermultitext.org. On http:/ homermultitext.github.io.
homermultitext.blogspot.com
The Homer Multitext: Good men are always exceedingly prone to tears
http://homermultitext.blogspot.com/2015/06/good-men-are-always-exceedingly-prone.html
Monday, June 29, 2015. Good men are always exceedingly prone to tears. In this morning's Homer Multitext seminar we began exploring the scholia that accompany Iliad. 19 in the Venetus A manuscript. In my previous post. 8521-531, in which Odysseus, weeping in response to the third song of Demodokos, is compared to just such a woman (see also here. As I have written about in my 2006 book. The Captive Woman's Lament in Greek Tragedy. The comment refers explicitly to the simile of Odyssey. 19 is described wi...