- Centre for Ancient Drama and its Reception, University of Nottingham (CADRE)
CADRE, Department of Classics, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham, NG7 2RD
Home page: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/classics/cadre/
- Association for Latin Teaching (ARLT)
Dr Alison Henshaw, Nottingham High School for Girls, 9, Arboretum Street, Nottingham, NG1 4JB
Home page: http://www.arlt.co.uk
- FIEC (Federation Internationale des Associations d’Etudes
Classiques)
International Federation of the Societies of Classical Studies
Professor Paul Schubert, Secrétaire général de la FIEC, 7, rue des Beaux-Arts, CH-2000 NEUCHATEL, Switzerland
Home page: http://www.fiecnet.org or e-mail: paul.schubert@lettres.unige.ch
- Didaskalia
Didaskalia is an English-language publication about Greek and
Roman drama, dance, and music as they are performed today. The name Didaskalia is taken from the inscriptions used to record the outcomes of drama and
music festivals in Athens. The need for records of productions is greater
today than it was in Athens, because there is more Greek and Roman drama
performed in more parts of the world than there ever was in antiquity.
Home page: http://didaskalia.open.ac.uk or email: h.denard@warwick.ac.uk
- Aphrodisias in Late Antiquity: The Late Roman and Byzantine Inscriptions(revised second edition)
Aphrodisias in Late Antiquity is the electronic second edition, expanded and revised from the version published by the Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies in 1989. The editions and commentary are by Charlotte Roueché, except for Text 1, by Joyce Reynolds. The electronic editorial conventions were developed by Tom Elliott (EpiDoc), and the website and the supporting materials are the work of Gabriel Bodard, Paul Spence, and colleagues at King's College London. This site contains: Inscriptions; Commentary; Indices and reference materials; Information about the project; Credits.
Email: gabriel.bodard@kcl.ac.uk
Website: http://insaph.kcl.ac.uk/ala2004
- Archaeology for Amateurs: The Mysteries of Crete
This website offers an introduction for students and others to the methods and approaches of archaeology. This introduction focuses on the island of Crete - in particular, a region of Crete called Sphakia - and it discusses excavation, field survey and art history. The course covers three main
epochs: Prehistoric, Graeco-Roman and Medieval-Modern, ranging in date from ca. 3000 BC to AD 1900.The site, which is freely available to all, could be used in any courses in Archaeology, Classics and History which require an introduction to archaeological methods, or which make use of case studies on the relationship between archaeology and history.
Website: http://crete.classics.ox.ac.uk/
Sphakia Project website: http://sphakia.classics.ox.ac.uk
DVD website: http://sphakia.classics.ox.ac.uk/video.html
Emails: Lucia Nixon: lucia.nixon@st-hildas.ox.ac.uk Simon Price: simon.price@lmh.ox.ac.uk
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