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The Perseus Digital Library, formerly known as the Perseus Project, is a free-access digital library founded by Gregory Crane in 1987 and hosted by the Department of Classical Studies of Tufts University. One of the pioneers of digital libraries, its self-proclaimed mission is to make the full record of humanity available to everyone.
The Alpheios Project is an open source initiative originally focused on developing software to facilitate reading Latin and ancient Greek.Dictionaries, grammars and inflection tables were combined in a set of web-based tools to provide comprehensive reading support for scholars, students and independent readers.
Logeion is an open-access database of Latin and Ancient Greek dictionaries. [1] Developed by Josh Goldenberg and Matt Shanahan in 2011, it is hosted by the University of Chicago . Apart from simultaneous search capabilities across different dictionaries and reference works, Logeion offers access to frequency and collocation data from the ...
Cynossema (Ancient Greek: Κυνὸς σῆμα and Κυνόσσημα) [1] and Cynosemon (Κυνόσημον), [2] meaning Dog's Tomb, was a promontory on the eastern coast of the Thracian Chersonesus, near the town of Madytus.
Navigate to a text page at the Perseus Project website. At the top right of the text, there is a box with a shorthand citation of the part of the work that you are viewing. Use the information in the citation for the three parameters of the template, replacing the spaces with the vertical bar symbol ("|").
Navigate to a text page at the Perseus Project website. At the top right of the text, there is a box with a shorthand citation of the part of the work that you are viewing. Use the information in the citation for the three parameters of the template, replacing the spaces with the vertical bar symbol ("|").
Sepulchral inscription for Epaphroditus, imperial freedman and nomenclator, and his wife Flavia Prisca. A nomenclator (/ ˈ n oʊ m ən. k l eɪ t ər / NOH-mən-KLAY-tər; English plural nomenclators, Latin plural nomenclatores; derived from the Latin nomen- name + calare – to call), in classical times, referred to a slave whose duty was to recall the names of persons his master met during ...
The Volsci spoke Volscian, a Sabellic Italic language, which was closely related to Oscan and Umbrian, and more distantly to Latin. [ 10 ] In the Volscian territory lay the little town of Velitrae (modern Velletri ), home of the ancestors of Caesar Augustus .