Early Modern Studies Links

You will find many better places for a list of Early Modern related sites on the Internet. Rather than try to post a comprehensive list of all the web has to offer, I have posted here the sites I use most often. Many of them feature excellent and quite current lists of annotated links.

Early Modern Literary Studies: In my view the best and most up to date source for everything from electronic texts and web resources to the best scholarship in the field.

Jack Lynch's Resources for Literary Study-Renaissance section has another excellent set of quite current annotated web referals.

Early Modern Resources: Sharon Howard's sites has a useful and current set of links for Early Modern history and cutlure.

The Furness Shakespeare Library a great resources for electronic texts.

English Renaissance in Context: Related to the Furness Library, Eric provides a wealth of teaching and learning resources about Early Modern literature and culture.

Mr. William Shakespeare and the Internet: The best place to start your use of the web to supplement Shakespeare study. Includes links to texts, timelines, and a wealth of other resources: invaluable starting point.

Luminarium: A spectacularly well-constructed anthology of text and image related to the Early Modern period.

Renaissance Electronic Texts: "A series of old-spelling, SGML-encoded editions of early individual copies of English Renaissance books and manuscripts, and of plain transcriptions of such works, published on the World Wide Web as a free resource for students of the period."

Silva Rhetoricae: A well-written and organized introduction to classical rhetoric that includes definitions and examples for most classical rhetorical terms, tropes, and concepts.

The Edmund Spenser Home Page: The definitive starting point for Spenser related web explorations.

The Milton-L Home Page: An excellent place to begin web investigations related to Milton studies.

The Perseus Digital Library: A collection of web based texts with a solid renaissance section--especially strong for Shakespeare and Marlowe.

Page last updated: 10 January, 2004