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The
links on this page have been divided into three main divisions:
Gateways, Subjects, and Institutes. The Subjects
section has been further divided to reflect specific areas of interest
such as art history or religion, etc.
Click
below to skip directly to a subsection of interest.
Gateways
- Subjects
- Institutes
Gateways:
WEMSK
What
Every Medievalist Should Know offers
a great list of non-digital source materials "meant for the
beginning-to-semi-advanced graduate student," but of use
to just about any medievalist researching afield. Arranged topically.
Created and Maintained by Stephen M. Carey.
Labyrinth
This is the largest and best maintained web site for medieval
studies. Labyrinth provides the greatest number of links to other
WWW sites that would be of interest to medievalists. Deborah Everhart
and Martin Irvine, Co-Directors, Georgetown University.
NetSerf
This gateway site for medieval studies resources is maintained
by Beau Harbin, The Catholic University of America. Its arrangement
is simpler than is that of Labyrinth, but it makes
fewer links.
ORB Online Reference Book for
Medieval Studies
This site serves the purposes of a gateway, reference tool (including
the Internet Medieval Sourcebook).
Internet Medieval
Sourcebook
An extensive collection of translated sources provided through
ORB.
Also available through EURODOCS
The
Bryn Mawr Medieval Review (MAILSERV: e-mail to join list)
Reviews of books in Medieval Studies.
Art
History, History, History
of Law, Literature, Manuscript
Studies, Music, Philosophy
and Religion
Art History:
Index of Christian Art
This index to artistic motifs, including extensive medieval holdings,
still is under development (visit site for a test version).
History: Medici
Archive
Online access to the contents of the archive of the Medici grand
dukes of Tuscany provided by Johns Hopkins University.
University
of Kansas HN Source
This site is a "list of lists." Contained are hundreds of sites
for electronic resources for historians. The list is available
in alphabetical form, by "subject tree," country and epoch. Maintained
by Lynn Nelson, University of Kansas.
History of Law:
History of Law
(feudal, common, canon) at Louisville University. (MAILSERV: e-mail
to join list)
Literature:
Charrette Project
This site is a "multi-media electronic archive containing a medieval
manuscript tradition - that of Chretien de Troyes Le chevalier
de la Charrette (Lancelot, ca. 1180)." Maintained by the Dept.
of Romance Languages, Princeton University.
Online
Medieval and Classical Library
The purpose of this archive is to "provide a free and easy way
for the average computer user to access some of the most important
literary works of Classical and Medieval civilization." Included
in the archive are works of Chaucer, Norse sagas, and Medieval
legal texts. There is no search engine associated with the texts.
Maintained by Douglas B. Killings at Cal. Berkeley.
SEENET
at the University of Michigan
The Society for Early English and Norse Texts has begun a series
of electronic texts of Old Norse, Old English and Middle English
texts. The first title in the series is an electronic edition
of the Piers Plowman.
TEAMS
Middle English Texts
TEAMS, the Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages, the
University of Rochester, and the Medieval Institute of Western
Michigan University have provided electronic editions for 17 Middle
English texts. Included are editions of The Avowying of
Arthur, The Greene Night, and Why I Can't be a Nun.
There is no search engine associated with the texts.
Manuscript Studies:
D-SCRIPTORIUM
Images of medieval manuscripts in several libraries in Europe
and North America.
Medieval
and Renaissance Manuscripts from the Atrium Site
This site provides images, transcriptions of texts and English
translations of them.
Rabanus Maurus De
rerum naturis
This is W. Schipper's transcription of this ninth century encyclopedic
compilation, taken from the manuscript at Karlsruhe, Badische
Landesbibliothek, MS Augiensis 93 and 68. Also included is a list
of manuscripts; a bibliography is in progress. There is no search
engine for the text. Maintained at the University of Newfoundland.
Music:
Thesaurus
Musicarum Latinarum. Indiana University, Bloomington.
"The Thesaurus Musicarum Latinarum (TML) is an evolving database
that will eventually contain the entire corpus of Latin music
theory written during the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance."
Philosophy and Religion:
Philosophy
Virtual Library. University of Bristol.
"This Virtual Library section is located at the University of
Bristol department of Philosophy, and is intended to provide an
overview of the various Internet resources related to Philosophy."
Medieval Philosophy
Mailserv (MAILSERV: e-mail to join list)
Medieval philosophy and socio-political thought.
Institutes:
Libraries
and Research Institutes, Medieval Studies Programs,
Regional Associations
Libraries and Research Institutes:
Medieval Institute,
University of Notre Dame.
Medieval Institute,
Western Michigan University.
Renaissance
Society of America.
Vatican Film Library,
Saint Louis University.
Medieval Studies Programs:
Center
for Medieval Studies. University of Toronto.
Medieval
and Renaissance Studies, Yale University.
Medieval Studies Web
Page University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Program in Medieval
Studies Princeton University.
UCLA
Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies.
Regional
Associations:
Medieval Academy
of America
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