Links for 30 May

Alpheios is a plug-in for Firefox that shows on-demand glossing and grammatical data for ancient texts.
Memrise is another memorization website (like Quia, Quizlet, or Anki). What makes this one unique is the ability to create your own mnemonics or other ways to remember information.
The Packard Humanities Institute (PHI) has released its canon of Classical Latin authors online. It also includes concordances of words.
The Digital Classicist Wiki includes many resources, tools, and online projects related to Classics. A great place to browse and see what’s out there.
Luke Henderson discusses his use of active Latin in the classroom and shows an impressive feature film (in Latin!) created by his students.
Marvel at some wonderfully preserved gladiator mosaics from Bad Kreuznach, Germany.

More from the CANE blog

ETAW Workshop – March 10, 2026

Sphinxes, lions, griffins, winged demons, angels, chimeras of all sorts are some of the most captivating and enduring images of Mediterranean antiquity. Monsters are found across in objects of all sizes, from tiny scarab amulets to monumental statues, across the region. They were part of the visual imaginary of people in antiquity, cutting across regions, periods, social classes, and communities.

Propaganda in Caesar and Vergil

This week’s feature post comes to us from Ruth Breindel: After reading Vergil and Caesar for the AP, I give my students this assignment, so

Links for February 6th

A comparison is drawn between storytelling in Homer and storytelling in a modern epic like Star Wars. On the methods employed by ancient counterfeiters to fool

Links for the Week of 10 February

Summer Opportunities UT-Austin is offering its Intensive Summer Greek course again: http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/classics/courses/Summer.php The Vergilian Society has a variety of trips and classes available for the