Maps and Tools: Difference between revisions
From Dickinson College Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
*[[Roman Customs|Roman Customs relevant to the Gallic ethnography in Book 6]] | *[[Roman Customs|Roman Customs relevant to the Gallic ethnography in Book 6]] | ||
*[http:// | *[http://www.archive.org/details/completelexicono00sihluoft Sihler's Lexicon] E. G. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Gottlieb_Sihler Sihler], A Complete Lexicon of the Latinity of Caesar's Gallic War (Boston, Ginn and Co., 1891) in .pdf format. | ||
*[[Vita Caesaris Latina]] Brief biography of Julius Caesar in Latin, from Dinter's Teubner edition of Caesar's works, based on various ancient and modern sources. | *[[Vita Caesaris Latina]] Brief biography of Julius Caesar in Latin, from Dinter's Teubner edition of Caesar's works, based on various ancient and modern sources. |
Latest revision as of 01:58, 2 February 2012
- Introduction to the Gallic Wars, Caesar, and the organization of the Roman army by Arthur Tappan Walker
- Maps Historical maps relevant to the Gallic War.
- Audio The selections read by Christopher Francese, in .mp3 format.
- Sihler's Lexicon E. G. Sihler, A Complete Lexicon of the Latinity of Caesar's Gallic War (Boston, Ginn and Co., 1891) in .pdf format.
- Vita Caesaris Latina Brief biography of Julius Caesar in Latin, from Dinter's Teubner edition of Caesar's works, based on various ancient and modern sources.
- Argumenta Outline of the Gallic War in Latin, from Dinter's Teubner edition of Caesar's works.
- Caesar Links A small selection of links with good scholarly content
- Caesar Bibliography An annotated introductory bibliography intended for teachers, by Christopher Francese (2010)
- Latin Sight Reading Latin sight passages (with some glosses) of comparable difficulty to the Caesar selections.
- List of Caesarian Idioms, from Harper and Tolman
- Common Latin Idioms from D'Ooge, Easy Latin for Sight Reading
- Caesar for Beginners The Helvetic War (1841). Breaks Caesar into very simple sentences, and one word or phrase or tense shift is added at a time, so the learner reads with a huge amount of repetition. Thanks for Evan Millner for the link. Listen to Evan read this aloud here.