Paleojudaica.com
By Dr James Davila of St Andrews University, Scotland: this weblog began in March
2003 and provides regular, interesting notes of new publications, links of interest and articles from the world's media, all relating to the topic of Ancient Judaism and Its Context.
Orion Centre for the Study of the Dead Sea Scrolls
An excellent site with an associated E-List.
Exploring the Dead Sea Scrolls
By Loren Johns: a fine page featuring course materials, bibliography and all the best links for the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls
Dead Sea Scrolls
By Mahlon Smith: a useful compendium of annotated links -- part of Virtual Religion Index
Flavius Josephus - josephus.yorku.ca
First class web site designed by Annette Yoshiko Reed and managed by Steve Mason in conjunction with the Brill Josephus Project and the SBL Josephus Seminar. Features information about the project, links to relevant resources, full text reproductions of papers for the SBL Josephus Seminar and more.
The Flavius Josephus Home Page
By G. J. Goldberg: a useful site on Josephus with basic bibliography, some unique material and a comprehensive set of Josephus links. The site focuses specially on the author's theories about the Testimonium Flavianum.
Josephus in Greek
You can read The Jewish War, Antiquities and Vita on-line in Greek at the Perseus site. This is a remarkable resource and like all the classical texts at the Perseus site, each word has a morphological analysis at the click of the mouse-button, including a link to Liddell-Scott's Lexicon.
The Works of Flavius Josephus (New URL)
On-line in Whiston's English translation, hosted by the Wesley Center for Applied Theology, Northwest Nazarene University, U.S.A.
The Works of Flavius Josephus
Also available in Whiston's translation at this link, Bible Study Tools at Goshen. Includes useful "Power Search" feature.
Josephus-Projekt
A useful resource from Institutum Judaicum Delitzschianum at Münster University, with major, searchable bibliography.
WWW Resources on Philo of Alexandria
By Torrey Seland: the place to begin one's research on Philo.
Ioudaios Review
An on-line journal on Judaism in the Greco-Roman world. It has an associated E-List, Ioudaios-L.
Dinur Center for the Study of Jewish History
At the Hebrew University, Jerusalem: a useful resource featuring, among other things, an index of Ancient Jewish History Topics.
Bibelwissenschaft Sirach
By Franz Böhmisch: the place to begin your internet research on Ben Sira: introduction, links, and massive, comprehensive bibliography.
The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha Web Page
By Dr James Davila: designed to accompany a course at the University of St Andrews which ran in 1997 and 1999.
Arbeitshilfen für das Studium der Pseudepigraphen
By Thomas Knittel (University of Leipzig): an excellent German guide to the Pseudepigrapha featuring introductory material, bibliography and links. Particularly useful is the list of NT parallels to Pseudepigraphical texts.
The Aseneth Home Page
By Mark Goodacre: a web page devoted to Joseph and Aseneth, established to coincide with a course I taught here in Spring 1999. The site features a translation of the text, an introduction, bibliography and links.
The Enoch Page
By Ian Hutchesson: fast access to Charles's translation of 1 Enoch and some links to related sites.
Divine Mediator Figures
By Dr James Davila: a web page designed to accompany a course at the University of St Andrews which ran in 1998.
History: The Second Temple
A useful introduction from the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Eliezer Segal's Home Page
By Eliezer Segal: an award-winning resource for the study of post-Biblical Judaism
A Page of Talmud is particularly recommended; it features a fine introduction to The Mishnah.
Second Temple Synagogues
By Donald Binder: a fine web site based on the author's 1997 Southern Methodist University PhD dissertation, Into the Temple Courts: The Place of the Synagogues in the Second Temple Period.
Philip A. Harland:
Associations, Synagogues and Congregations
Web site to accompany the book of the same name published in 2003 by
Fortress; aims to bring the social world of early
Christians and Jews to life using inscriptions, monuments, archaeological finds,
and literary texts from the Roman empire, especially Asia Minor.
Northwest Semitic Links
By Reinhard G.Lehmann: useful, extensively annotated collection of links relevant to the study of Classical Hebrew, Aramaic Studies and Northwest Semitic epigraphy in general.