Sources & Acknowledgments
Πηγαὶ καὶ Εὐχαριστίαι
Eulogikon builds upon the foundational work of scholars and institutions who have committed to making ancient Greek texts freely accessible. We gratefully acknowledge the following projects and resources.
Primary Text Sources
The texts in our corpus derive from these open-access repositories, supplemented by our own OCR processing:
PhilOcr
Eulogikon Project
Our own OCR pipeline for processing scanned editions of ancient Greek texts from public domain sources. Used to digitize works not yet available in open-access repositories.
Open Source
Tufts University · Gregory R. Crane, Editor-in-Chief
Pioneering digital humanities project providing morphologically analyzed Greek and Latin texts with integrated lexica since 1987.
CC BY-SA 3.0 US Primary source materials in the public domain; modern contributions under Creative Commons
Perseus Digital Library · Eldarion
Modern reading environment for Open Greek and Latin texts using Canonical Text Services (CTS) protocol.
Open Source
Open Greek and Latin Project · Perseus, Center for Hellenic Studies, Leipzig
TEI XML editions of Greek works from Homer to 250 CE, with ongoing expansion to the Early Modern period (First2KGreek).
CC BY-SA 4.0
International Collaboration · Tufts, Harvard, Leipzig, Mt. Allison, UVA
International collaboration creating open educational resources for ancient Greek and Latin, including deep-reading tools and open-source software.
CC BY-SA 4.0 All materials downloadable, modifiable, and redistributable
Specialized Collections
These projects provide essential resources for specific textual traditions:
Monica Berti · University of Leipzig / Alexander von Humboldt Chair of Digital Humanities
Digital edition of Karl Müller's five-volume Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum (1841–1870), providing access to fragments of lost Greek historians.
CC BY-SA
Monica Berti · University of Leipzig
Digital edition of the Deipnosophists of Athenaeus of Naucratis, preserving fragments of hundreds of lost Greek authors.
CC BY-SA
Integrating Digital Papyrology · Duke University, Heidelberg, others
Integrated resource for documentary papyri, providing searchable texts and translations of Greek and Latin papyrus documents from Egypt and beyond.
CC BY 3.0
Reference Infrastructure
These databases provide essential scholarly infrastructure:
University of Oxford · Jonathan Prag
Digital corpus of inscriptions from ancient Sicily, providing EpiDoc-encoded texts with translations and commentary.
CC BY 4.0
KU Leuven · Mark Depauw
Interdisciplinary portal connecting texts, places, people, and archives from the ancient world, providing stable identifiers for scholarly reference.
CC BY-SA 4.0
Partnership of Academic and Research Libraries
Collaborative repository preserving and providing access to digitized content from research libraries, including out-of-copyright critical editions of Greek texts.
Public domain materials freely accessible; some items restricted by copyright