My notes and papers on the Comedy and Tragedy of Classical Antiquity
ANTIQUA MEDICINA: From Homer to Vesalius: An on-line exhibition prepared in conjunction with the Colloquium "Antiqua Medicina: Aspects in Ancient Medicine."
The Asclepion, devoted to the study of ancient (Egyptian, Babylonian, and Greek) medicine.
Classics Collection, at the University of Florida; great links site.
Diotima, Materials for the study of women and gender in the Ancient World.
EMORY CLASSICS: Publications, found a few good articles here on Aristophanic theater. (DOWN???)
Medicina Antiqua: a site speaking to my (melancholic) heart; contains hypertext translations of Hippocratic and Galenic works (filling the void left by the Perseus Project).
The Perseus Project: not only the best classical website I've found, but the best website period. Two thirds of the Greek texts that anyone cares about are available in Greek and English (chunks of Aristotle being the biggest missing gap); the priceless morphological analyzer; thousands of indexed images of artifacts and archaeological sites; not to mention the on-line atlas of the Ancient Greek world and the "hypertextual essays" developed by Tufts Classics students... and now they have Latin texts, too!!! (plus so much more...) But they, like so many other sites, are selling a product (The Perseus 2.0 CD-ROM, not as useful as the website itself), which may have something to do with the paucity of external links from the site.