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A page from Martin Kraus’ Aethiopica Epitome processed using LatinOCR within VietOCR. It handles the opening chapter summary well but is only 88% accurate with the italicized body text.

Blog: Review: LatinOCR and Rescribe

hmcelroy |

Blog: Inscribed Memory, the Holocaust, and the Jewish Population of Rome

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Exploring the Newly Reopened Domus Transitoria, Nero’s First Palace on the Palatine Hill

Agnes Crawford |

Blog: Classics Everywhere: Activating your Imagination through the Arts

Nina Papathanasopoulou |
Eta Sigma Phi students, Callie Todhunter, Noah Andrys, and Myles Young, staff the Homerathon booth at the University of Iowa

Blog: Connecting with Community at the University of Iowa's Homerathon

Rosemary Moore |

Blog: What a Difference an ἤ Makes: Hippocrates, Racism, and the Translation of Greco-Roman Thought

Lisl Walsh |

Blog: The Oral Tradition: How Classics Students Organized a Homerathon in Nebraska

Matthew Loar |
Roman Triumphal arch panel copy from Beth Hatefutsoth, showing spoils of Jerusalem temple. Image via Wikimedia under a CC BY-SA 3.0 License.

Blog: Roman Festivals in Rabbinic Literature and the intersection of Judaism and Rome

Catherine Bonesho |

Blog: Sites of Memory and Memories of Conflict: Imperial Rome, Jerusalem, and Nero

Catherine Bonesho |
Composite RGB image of manuscript E3, Escorialensis 291 (Υ.i.1): overview of folio 32 recto Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Review: Reviewing A Digital Edition of Homer

Bill Beck |
A landscape of a mountainside with text reading AMPHORA

The Bumpy Path to Classics

Wells Hansen, erich |
Text that says AMPHORA

Changing the Guard at Amphora

Wells Hansen, Ellen Bauerle |
Alexander the Great and King Poros

Review: Brill Jacoby Online

Matt Simonton |

Amphora: How to Use the Exhibit Hall at the Annual Meeting

Ellen Bauerle |
Marble left hand holding a scroll

Review: Guidelines for Encoding Critical Editions for the Library of Digital Latin Texts

Donald Mastronarde, Richard J. Tarrant |

Amphora: Flipping a Coin—Building a Numismatic Database with Undergraduate Researchers

Julie Langford |
Aeneas Departs from Carthage (Aeneid, Book IV)

Review: Latin Scansion App

Patrick Hogan |

Amphora: Labors and Lesson Plans—Educating Young Hercules in Two 1990s Children’s Television Programs

Angeline Chiu |

Amphora: A New Incarnation of Latin in China

Yongyi Li |
Sparrow sitting on a fountain

Review: Catullus Online

Christopher Nappa |