https://www.brown.edu/Departments/Italian_Studies/pico/
Texts, translations, and studies of De hominis dignitate.
https://www.brown.edu/Departments/Italian_Studies/pico/
Texts, translations, and studies of De hominis dignitate.
An online library providing access to a wide variety of primary and secondary sources of classical texts and translations such as Lewis and Short’s Latin Dictionary, as well as Renaissance sources and texts which are searchable via the site’s search function. The site also includes database of art and archaeology artifacts.
https://www.luc.edu/media/lucedu/history/pdfs/Incipit_Catalogue.pdf
The database, in PDF form, contains manuscript and printed copies of funeral orations and a few other orations. It is arranged alphabetically by incipit.
Hvmanistica Cordvbensia is coordinated by Julián Solana Pujalte, Área de Filología Latina de la Universidad de Córdoba. It includes the following: Bibliotheca Erasmiana Hispanica: Erasmo en las bibliotecas españolas actuales e históricas. Genesivs: Estudios sobre la obra de Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda (1490–1573) y el humanismo renacentista. Cvm Privilegio: Libros, bibliotecas y lecturas en Córdoba en la Edad Moderna.
An Incipitarium of Funeral Orations and a Smattering of Other Panegyrical Literature from the Italian Renaissance (ca. 1350–1550).
The database, in PDF form, contains manuscript and printed copies of funeral orations and a few other orations. It is arranged alphabetically by incipit.
Cusanus-Portal offers a searchable full text version of the critical edition of the Opera omnia, links to translations of the texts, an encyclopedia on the life and work of Nicholas of Cusa, and a regularly updated bibliography.
Iter, The Online Interdisciplinary Gateway to Renaissance Studies
Iter, meaning a journey or a path in Latin, is a not-for-profit research project with partners in Toronto, Canada (the headquarters), and Tempe, Arizona. Iter was created for the advancement of learning in the study and teaching of the Middle Ages and Renaissance (400–1700) through the development of online resources. Mainly by subscription though some resources are freely available.
A database of 38,000+ links to freely accessible electronic texts and digitized photographic reproductions of Neo-Latin works, dating from late fifteenth century to present, organized by author/commentator and title. Searchable