SELECT PRINT RESOURCES
Cambridge Companion to Renaissance Humanism. J. Kraye. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Tisch Book Stacks CB361.C26 1996
Companion to Ne0-Latin Studies. Jozef Ijsewijn. 2nd revised edition. Louvain: Louven University Press : Peeters Press, 1990-1998.
Tisch Book Stacks PA8020 137. 1990
Catullus and his Renaissance Readers. J. H. Gaisser. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993. Tisch Book Stacks PA6276.G35 1993
Erasmus and the Age of Reformation. J. Huizinga (trans. F. Hopman). New York: Harper: 1957. Tisch Book Stacks PA8518.H83 1957
Lexique de la prose latine de la renaissance. R. Hoven. Boston/Leiden: Brill, 2006. Tisch Reference PA8081.H68 2006
Renaissance Latin Poetry. ed., I.D. McFarlane. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1980. Tisch Books Stacks PA8164.R46 1980
Renaissance Latin Verse: An Anthology. eds., A. Perosa and J. Sparrow. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1979. Tisch Book Stacks PA8123.R4 1979
Saturae. G. Pascoli (introduzione, testo, commento e appendice a cura di Alfonso Traina). Firenze: La Nuova Italia, 1977. Tisch Stacks PQ4835.A3 S38 1977
SELECT ONLINE RESOURCES
An Analytic Bibliography of On-Line Neo-Latin Texts. This is a meta-page with pointers to all the neo-Latin texts online, including page images of early modern books, HTML presentations of texts, and every other format available.
Andy Holt Virtual Library: Incunabula. The incunabula section is composed of a home page devoted to the history, features, materials and procedures early printing, a second page containing catalogs and databases, and a third page with links to whole or selected pages of photographic facsimiles consultable online.
Iter: The Bibliography of Medieval and Renaissance Europe from 400-1700.
CAMENA. A project digitizing German neo-Latin; they’ve worked with Perseus a bit.
Johann Ramminger Neulateinische Wortliste. Ein Wörterbuch des Lateinischen von Petrarca bis 1700.
Bibliographical Aid to the Study of Renaissance Latin Texts. This regularly updated online bibliography brings together details of publications relating to the study of Renaissance Latin texts. The extensive bibliography is organized thematically and covers the following broad topics: lexicographical aids (including dictionaries and word lists); characteristics of humanistic Latin (with sub-sections on: language and style; prose; poetry and meter; and individual texts and authors); and editing Renaissance Latin texts. Each section gives information on both general reference works and more detailed studies on the topic. Included in the list are references to journal articles as well as scholarly monographs. Links are also provided to those items which are available online.