Please contact me!
Allen and Greenough’s New Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges
Susan Chadwick Shelmerdine's Introduction to Latin. In Print Only
Floyd L. Moreland and Rita M. Fleischer's Latin: An Intensive Course.In Print Only
Traditional Grammatical Terminology
Peter L. Corrigan's College Latin: An Intermediate Course
Jean-Francois R. Mondon's Intensive Basic Latin: A Grammar and Workbook
Cross-Database Search Tool (Brepolis)
Patrologia Latina (Corpus Corporum)
Musisque Deoque - A Digital Archive of Latin Poetry
Pede Certo - Digital Latin Metre
Ten hacks for getting better at Latin, by Mike Fontaine
Latin Reading Challenge, by Jason Slanga
Request items from other institutions (ILL) - University of Toronto Libraries
Medieval Latin Arts of Poetry & Prose
Curtius, Ernst Robert, and Colin. Burrow. European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages. . With a New introduction by Colin Burrow. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2013.
Davis, R.H.C. A History of Medieval Europe from Constantine to Saint Louis. Longman, 2005.
Oxford Handbook of Medieval Latin Literature
Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages
Up to date, and intended for both novices and specialists, this 4-volume set covers European history, society, religion, and culture between A.D. 500 to 1500. Articles number about 5,000. They range from brief to lengthy, include bibliographies, and often unearth material you can only find elsewhere with difficulty. Women and children, for example, get substantial attention. The set contains a thematic listing of entries, a general index, a list of medieval popes and antipopes, and an index of alternative place names.
The major English-language encyclopedia on Catholic topics, it contains some 17,000 articles, each with a bibliography emphasizing the primary sources. Unfortunately many of the articles in the 2003/online edition are reprints from the 1967 edition without any updating. Use this work to get an overview of a subject and to see how it can be divided into narrower topics for a paper.
Viking invasions, language, mythology, saints, clothing, craftsmanship, architecture—these are some of the many topics covered in this encyclopedia. The entries, centred on such themes as lineage, manuscripts, persons and scholarship, focus on the period 500 to 1600 A.D., and come with cross-references and bibliographies. There are alphabetical and thematic tables of contents.
Pick up this 2-volume set for an introduction to mediaeval Italian life and culture. With nearly 1,000 entries ranging from 500 to 10,000 words, and covering specific topics in the brief articles (e.g. Camerino, Duchy of) and general topics in the lengthy ones (e.g. Florence), this set includes 3 pages of maps, along with a reference list of Popes and Rulers in the appendix.
In entries varying from 500-word descriptions to 3,000-word overviews, this encyclopedia aims at helping undergraduates and the general public in coming to grips with the political, social, religious, economic, intellectual, literary and artistic history of France between roughly 500 and 1500 A.D.. Various useful lists complement these entries: The Kings, Counts, Dukes; Popes; Architectural Terms; and Musical Terms.
Search LibrarySearch
Known as LibrarySearch, this interdisciplinary database is UofT's largest--and your best bet when more focused databases let you down. It combs through more than 1,200 databases, journal packages, e-book collections, and other resources ranging from the sciences to the social sciences and humanities. At its best, LibrarySearch finds relevant results you won't find elsewhere; at its worst, however, LibrarySearch can overwhelm you will a mish-mash of results from different subject areas.
International Medieval Bibliography (IMB)
Over one million bibliographic citations to journal articles, essays in books, and book reviews in the field of religion. Covers all aspects of the major world religions and now includes all the content of the online Catholic Periodical and Literature Index.
The MLA is the major English literature database. It covers criticism related to literature, linguistics and folklore from 1921 to the present, and contains more than 1-million citations to journal articles, series, books, working papers and conference proceedings. Most of the materials indexed before 1963 are American.