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David Hilton

Online sources of early Medieval Europe - 13 views

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    "This is a collection of hyperlinks to digitized editions of source-documents and literature concerning early medieval Europe that can be found on the internet today. Sources listed here are all available to the public, free of charge. Currently there are 3696 entries in this collection. "
David Hilton

Romans in Sussex - 0 views

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    A database maintained by the Sussex Archaeological Society of Roman artefacts found in Sussex. Has a good search function.
David Hilton

MGH - 3 views

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    You'll need to be able to read German and Classical Latin, but once those minor hurdles are overcome this is a rich collection of primary sources on early German history. I only had a brief peek but it seems to focus on ancient & medieval Germany. I guess they're written in Latin as it was the lingua franca of Europe at the time. They're organised into books with chapters and indices so it's unlikely they were written in Roman times (or at least it seems so to me).
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    Actually, the MGH is a collection of sources mainly for medieval Germany (of course including areas that are not German today), initially started with the intent to create a complete edited version of sources for the middle ages. They are in fact organised by type, like legal documents, letters, chronicles, etc., whereas chronicles are also organised by author. It's an invaluable reference for everyone doing work in medieval history. By the way, the link you saved doesn't work, I'd instead use this one: http://www.mgh.de/dmgh/
David Hilton

Welcome to the RHS Bibliography - 0 views

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    "The Royal Historical Society bibliography is an authoritative guide to what has been written about British and Irish history from the Roman period to the present day. The Bibliography is hosted by the Institute of Historical Research, which is part of the University of London." How nice of them.
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    The Royal Historical Society bibliography is an authoritative guide to what has been written about British and Irish history from the Roman period to the present day. The Bibliography is hosted by the Institute of Historical Research, which is part of the University of London.
David Hilton

The Classics Pages: Antony Kamm's 'The Romans': start page - 0 views

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    Most of the information from this site is secondary, however it has some quotes from ancient authors in context and some beautiful images. The site maintains that the images are copyright and should be used only with permission and of course we'll do that. Of course.
David Hilton

Vindolanda Tablets Online | Welcome - 0 views

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    Black-and-white images of the writing tablets from Vindolanda, in Roman Britain. Contains translations and descriptions.
David Hilton

Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents - 0 views

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    The Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents, run out of Oxford. Seems to have an eclectic assortment of images of primary sources and translations from many Classical and early Medieval civilisations.
David Hilton

LacusCurtius * Greek and Latin Texts - 4 views

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    An excellent collection of English translations of Greek and Latin texts. You'll also find some great biographical information on the authors that students can use to improve their source evaluations (if you teach in a system which requires that - it's massive here in Queensland).
David Hilton

Sacred Texts: The Classics - 1 views

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    A large and comprehensive collection of Graeco-Roman primary texts. Excellent for research into Classical civilisations.
David Hilton

Antique Roman Dishes - Collection - 0 views

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    What an excellent find! Ancient Roman recipes. I couldn't find any containing the infamous garum (fermented fish oil) but there was still some weird stuff. Guess every country has its weird food (kimchi for Koreans, Vegemite for us). Anyway thank God the Europeans discovered the Americas or we'd still be eating this stuff. Yuck.
David Hilton

Translations of Classical Authors, U. of Saskatchewan - 0 views

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    Site is maintained by a prof at the University of Saskatchewan and contains some selections from Graeco-Roman writers. Focus on Classical Athens and Augustan Rome.
David Hilton

Forum Romanum - 1 views

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    An excellent site for Roman history.
David Hilton

LacusCurtius * A Gateway to Ancient Rome - 1 views

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    A collection of primary texts on Rome.
David Hilton

http://www.bsrdigitalcollections.it - 4 views

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    The British School at Rome Archive (BSR) thanks to the Getty Foundation, made freely available digital copies of the John Bryan Ward-Perkins photographic collection. A website of the "BSR digital collections was created to present not only the photographic material (Photographs) but also other types of resources which follow into different categories: Maps, Prints, Documents, Postcards, Drawings, Paintings and Manuscripts". But "the majority of the digital images displayed on the website are represented by the photographic prints and negatives from unique historic collections, including calotypes, glass and film negatives, slides and lantern slides."
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    Seems to focus more on the history of the British School at Rome rather than Roman history. Should revise the tags at this point but this summer heat here in Queensland is making me lazy...
David Hilton

History of Britain - 13 views

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    Interesting little interactive map of Britain. 
David Hilton

Harvard College Library - 5 views

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    It's a rather obscure topic but you never know, they might be useful for someone. Most of the manuscripts are partial and are from the Roman period in Egypt.
Ben Pope

Open Archive > Home - 0 views

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    British archaeological reports archived and searchable by name or map location.
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