ICG collects and documents early Christian inscriptions from Asia Minor and Greece. Each entry provides the original text and a translation of the inscription, succinct comments (as applicable), bibliographic references, as well as important information about the date, provenance, and place of keeping of the inscription. Furthermore, the database includes images and/or facsimiles (whenever available) of the epigraphic documents. Free but requires login: Username: guest; Password: guest
From their website
The database Archivum Corporis Electronicum allows access to the collection of squeezes, photographs and bibliographical references maintained by the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum research centre, sorted by inscription-number. Digital images of inscriptions and squeezes (when available) can be viewed at different resolutions. Additions are made to the database continuously.
Inscriptiones Latinae Liberae Rei Publicae (ILLRP), Degrassi
CN520.D34 RR4Cla
Inscriptiones Latinae Liberae Rei Publicae. Imagines, Degrassi
The database Archivum Corporis Electronicum allows access to the collection of squeezes, photographs and bibliographical references maintained by the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum research centre, sorted by inscription-number. Digital images of inscriptions and squeezes (when available) can be viewed at different resolutions. Additions are made to the database continuously.
The Epigrafik-Datenbank Clauss-Slaby (EDCS) is a searchable resource providing texts and bibliographic citations (lemmata of editions) for nearly all Latin inscriptions.
"On this site you find a data base that records almost all Latin inscriptions. The texts are presented without abbreviations and completed where possible. The presentation of the texts is kept as simple as possible. Beside the commonly used indications for resolution, completions and erasures as few special characters as possible have been used. The abbreviations give the references for the publications used. The statistical data indicates which volumes (with how many texts per volume as far as the Latin inscriptions are concerned) are recorded completely in the data base."
From their Website
The Inscriptions Search Engine is the main gateway into the EAGLE’s massive epigraphic database, the place where the content provided by the epigraphers’ community is aggregated and stored and where it is made accessible to the users.
From their website
The picture database www.ubi-erat-lupa.org (short form lupa) contains stone monuments (sculptures, reliefs, inscriptions, architectural pieces etc.).
lupa is a non-commercial project dedicated to informing scientists and interested laypersons. The project’s scope is from prehistoric stone monuments to around the time of Justinian (500 AD). Due to its inception in Vienna, most project data at the moment is from the mid- and south-eastern european region.
The goal of the U.S. Epigraphy Project is to gather and distribute information about ancient (mainly but not only) Greek and Latin inscriptions preserved in the United States of America.
2,300 inscriptions (720 Greek, 1,575 Latin) registered by the Project by the middle of 1997 and listed in Greek and Latin Inscriptions in the USA. A Checklist, by J. Bodel and S. Tracy formed the core of the original website of the U.S. Epigraphy Project founded at Rutgers University in 1995.
Attic Inscriptions Online (AIO) publishes the inscriptions of ancient Athens and Attica in English translation. They have been adding Greek over the last few years.
This is a list of over 500 English translations of Latin inscriptions from the time of the Roman Republic, which are available online. The inscriptions are almost all contained in the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, the comprehensive collection of Latin inscriptions, and the Latin text of the inscriptions can be found in the Epigraphische Datenbank Clauss-Slaby. A few additional inscriptions can be found at the end of the list.
From their website
The Inscriptions Search Engine is the main gateway into the EAGLE’s massive epigraphic database, the place where the content provided by the epigraphers’ community is aggregated and stored and where it is made accessible to the users.
From their website
The database Archivum Corporis Electronicum" allows access to the collection of squeezes, photographs and bibliographical references maintained by the CIL research centre, sorted by inscription-number. Digital images of inscriptions and squeezes (when available) can be viewed at different resolutions. Additions are made to the database continuously;
The Etruscan Texts Project (ETP) is an online editio minor of Etruscan inscriptions. When completed, the ETP database will include all Etruscan inscriptions that have been recovered and made public since 1990, the date at which Helmut Rix et al. Etruskische Texte (1991) went to press. The ETP Web site includes:
* A searchable online database of recently recovered Etruscan inscriptions.
* A guide that provides general information about the organization of the Web site, the structure of the database, and the conventions employed in the presentation of texts.
From their website
Bibliographer for Classics, the Ancient Near East, & General Humanities and interim Linguistics
Joseph Regenstein Library,
Room 471
Office: 773-702-2783
Cell: 773-820-2842