Annalisa Bracciotti has kindly brought this to my attention, and I'm passing it along to the list (even though the material is primarily classical rather than medieval). Grazie mille, Annalisa! -- George PS: The original post had a misleading Web address, which I've rectified below. -- G Forwarded message: > WEB SITE ANNOUNCEMENT > > Exploring Ancient World Cultures > Second Edition > > http:// eawc.evansville.edu/ > > The second edition of Exploring Ancient World Cultures is now on-line at > http://eawc.evansville.edu/ > > The second edition adds many new and exciting features to the first, > including an anthology of readings, an interactive chronology, the > beginnings of a collection of essays, computer-graded quizzes, and, of > course, the web site directory that made up most of the first edition. > > The new addition of EAWC also incorporates a mailing list for teachers of > the ancient world, EAWC-Teachers, dedicated to pedagogy and the web. It > will (hopefully) be a forum for discussing how to integrate electronic > technologies in the classroom. (See the Educator's Resource Page for > more.) Another list, EAWC-Readers, will be dedicated to questions of > content. > > EAWC is dedicated to becoming a full-service electronic textbook of > ancient world cultures available for free use to the global community. For > our future plans, please see the "Letter from the Editor," accessible from > the EAWC homepage. > > For a brief introduction, please see the EAWC Information Page, also > accessible from the homepage. > > ________________________________________________________________________ > > A.F. Beavers, Ph.D. Assoc. Prof. Philosophy & Religion > Gen. Ed., Exploring Ancient World Cultures > eawc.evansville.edu > ________________________________________________________________________ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%