No doubt most of us are either writing papers are grading them about now. I just finished the chapter I was working on, so took a break to look for other Virgil websites. The following list is now online at
http://www.virgil.org/links but perhaps an email listing might be in order as well. Other Virgil Sites ------------------ Joseph Farrell Pagina domestica P. Vergili Maronis http://vergil.classics.upenn.edu/home/ Many links to Virgil resources, including course materials, syllabi, and the archives of an online Virgil seminar. Ray Clark and Joseph Farrell The Vergilian Society http://vergil.classics.upenn.edu/vergilius/ Table of contents, abstracts from Vergilius, the journal of the Vergilian Society. Annual bibliographies of Vergilian scholarship. Joseph Farrell The Vergil Project http://vergil.classics.upenn.edu/ View Latin text of the Aeneid in any one of five versions, with online commentary and brief essays on topics such as Virgil's meter. Also allows individuals to create their own, personalized versions of the text. Ongoing work, under construction. Charlie McAllister History and Epic http://www.catawba.edu/dept/history/epics3.htm Hotlist of sites relating to Virgil's world and poetry, including readings on the Aeneid organized by book. Steven Hale The Virgil Home Page http://www.dc.peachnet.edu/~shale/humanities/literature/world_literature/vir gil.html Well-organized links to texts, recordings, essays, background readings, and bibliographies. Shirley Werner A Bibliographic Guide to Vergil's Aeneid http://classics.rutgers.edu/vergil.html Selective, annotated bibliography covering ancient scholarship, anthologies, bibliography, biography, commentaries, cultural context, editions, electronic, encyclopedia, ideology, individual books and passages, major studies, patronage, predecessors and literary traditions, reception and influence, religion, philosophy, cosmology, Rome and Italy, style, themes, techniques, theory and approaches, translation, transmission and text. Laura Gorney Introduction to Latin Epic http://www.sjc.ox.ac.uk/users/gorney/index1.htm Includes very basic bibliography, a summary of each of the twelve books of the Aeneid, a brief introduction to the poem's structure and style, useful family trees for Aeneas and Augustus, and a timeline correlating Virgil's life with contemporary events in Roman history. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- David Wilson-Okamura http://www.virgil.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of Chicago Online Virgil discussion, bibliography & links ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- To leave the Mantovano mailing list at any time, do NOT hit reply. You will just prove to everyone that you can't read directions. Instead, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the message "unsubscribe mantovano" in the body.