The Egeria Project
This interesting site is sponsored by a variety of civic and religious institutions, as well as cultural agencies; the full name of the project is Egeria: Mediterranean Medieval Places of Pilgrimage....
View ArticleTraditions of Magic in Late Antiquity
This site, from the (relatively) early days of the web, is the result of an exhibit at the Kelsey Museum of the University of Michigan, curated in 1996 by Gideon Bohak, who has recently published...
View ArticleBibliography on the Roman Imperial Cult
This site, administered by John Paul Adams of Cal State-Northridge, is a bibliography of the Roman Imperial Cult, last updated in May 2004. It is arranged by subject matter: General; Cult Features;...
View ArticleVisualizing Statues in Late Antiquity
Image from http://inscriptions.etc.ucla.edu/ This fascinating and innovative project seeks to give users the experience of how statues (and their inscribed bases) constituted a collective memory among...
View ArticleThe Virtual Magic Bowl Archive (VMBA) and Prosopography
The Virtual Magic Bowl Archive is a collaborative environment for the publication of magic bowls in the Moussaieff, Dehays, and Barakat collections. It is housed at the University of Southampton,...
View ArticleThe Campbell Bonner Magical Gems Database
This database of magical gems, named after Campbell-Bonner’s famous collection of 1954, is in fact far more extensive, containing over 1,000 items. These are drawn from over 30 collections, including...
View ArticlePrêtres Civiques: A Prosopography of Imperial Cult Officials in Roman Asia Minor
This important site by Gabrielle Frija is something of an online companion to her recent study of the Roman imperial cult in Asia Minor, Les Prêtres des empereurs. Le culte impérial civique dans la...
View ArticleTM Magic
The TM Magic Database, administered by Franziska Naether and Mark Depauw, is the newest addition to Trismegistos, a premier information portal for the ancient world, with a focus on Egypt between 800...
View ArticleThe Roman Cult of Mithras by Roger Pearse
This site, part of Roger Pearse’s Tertullian.org, serves as both an introduction to the history and iconography of Mithraism suitable for undergraduate instruction and an extensive collection of...
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