Welcome to These Links Pages

This page gives information on:

  1. Site Organisation and Symbols Used
  2. Background: History and Purpose
  3. Suggestions for New Links
  4. Technical and Stats
  5. Other Pages on this Site


1: Site Organisation and Symbols Used

The links homepage leads to 14 primary subject pages, which contain the links to external resources.
These pages also link to another 18 subsidiary pages. In the primary pages, links are grouped by topic. Within these groups, links are listed either in alphabetic order, or with key resources first, when that seems likely to be more helpful.

Sites that are especially slow to load are indicated by a clock icon next to the link. If you have a slow internet connection, access speed can be improved by disabling JavaScript in your browser Preferences before accessing a site, though this will of course disable all dynamic features.


2: Background: History and Purpose

Arch of Titus Cambridge Academic Links have been online since 1996, when they comprised the Faculty of Classics External Gateway to Humanities Resources.

From 1996 to 2000, the Gateway was one of the associate sites of the ARGOS search engine, a searchable collection of metalinks to classical and mediaeval resources.

In 2000, the pages were renamed and moved to be included with the author's personal pages at Cambridge University. They migrated to the current server in 2007.

This is a personal selection of links: a major reason for maintaining these pages is to bookmark resources which I consult regularly, and I hope the result may be of use to others with similar interests.

Their contents are the responsibility of the author, to whom any enquiries should be addressed, and they are not in any way endorsed by the University of Cambridge. Thanks.


3: Suggestions for New Links

I'm very happy to hear suggestions for further useful online resources, especially beyond the Anglo-American orbit. Three principles guide my choice of links:


4: Technical and Stats


  • 5: Other Pages on this Site
  • CV.

  • Legacy pages from the ongoing Cambridge Greek Lexicon Project, archived here for reference.

      legei pou Hērakleitos hoti panta chōrei, kai ouden menei
     "... Heraclitus says that everything dances, and nothing remains the same"
     (Plato, Cratylus 402a8-9).


    | Bruce Fraser. May 2012 | Links Homepage |