Bibliotheca Augustana http://www.fh-augsburg.de/~harsch/augustana.html
Ancient and Mediterreanean Greek texts.
Requires a special font and it's best viewed with Netscape. Microsoft Internet Explorer users try "Encoding=User Defined".
The Stoa
- A Consortium for Electronic Publication in the Humanities
Suida's lexicon on line: http://www.stoa.org/sol/
Academie de Toulouse: Travail cooperatif dans les disciplines Lettres http://www.ac-toulouse.fr/lettres/tgrecs.html Textes grecs: 5 or 6 original texts in Word format with "Greek" font
Saint-Petersburg School of Religion and Philosophy (SRPh), The Green Library
http://www.stormloader.com/cactus/ (new url)
with texts in pdf format: Aristotle
"On the Soule", Plato "The Republic",
Plotinus
"The Enneads", Porphyrius "The Life of Plotinus",
Plutarch "The Genius of Socrates" and others in French and Russian.
University of Pennsylvania, Andrew Wiesner
The Fourth Book of the Christian Topography of Cosmas Indicopleustes http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~awiesner/cosmas.html
English Text (with links to the Greek)
http://www.philoctetes.com/index2.htm
fragments of Heracleitus, Parmenides, Thales and Anaximandrus in PDF and HTML (unicode). Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, Plato's Phaedrus in French translation.
Thesaurus Indogermanischer Text- und Sprachmaterialien http://titus.uni-frankfurt.de/ Pre-Socratic fragments, Septuaginta , New Testament, Corpus of Greek Hagiographical Texts: Martyrium Theodori Teronis (A/B),
Martyrium Theodori Stratilatis (A/B), Vita Theodori.
Land of Ionians: Persomal page of Alexandros Alexiou http://users.forthnet.gr/the/loi/
Panathenaikos of Isocrates, Theogony of Hesiod and Timaeus of Plato.
In "self-extracted" file. Ancient text in monotonic greek font.
http://www.multimania.com/malsnectai/Lucullus.html
Anaxagore De la nature, Democrite Fragments, Empedocle Fragment 3 Fragments 15 a 22 Fragment 109,
Epictete Le Manuel, Entretiens, Epicure La lettre a Menecee, Eschyle Les Suppliantes, Hippocrate Serment,
Parmenide Fragment VI, Pythagoriciens et Pythagore, Les Vers d'Or, Xenophane Fragments 23 a 25 et 27
The Aesop Text Project:
http://casweb.cas.ou.edu/lgibbs/aesop/texts/AesopTexts.html
Very nice and profesional-like project.
Editions in Greek by Aphtonius, Babrius, Syntipas, Chambry. Original text in unicode and beta code and english translation.
Also Early English, Classical Latin, Medieval Latin and French translations.
Page of Ancient Philosophy and Literature http://mkv.www5.50megs.com/classpage.html
"You can read online or download (and print) with Acrobat Reader 4.x some ancient philosophical and literary texts as PDF files".
Anaximander, Anaximenes, Aristotle, M. Aurelius, Epicurus, Euripides, Heraclitus, Justin Martyr, Libanius, Parmenides, Plato, Plutarch, Theophrastus, Xenophanes.
DOCUMENT GALLICA http://gallica.bnf.fr/scripts/ConsultationTout.exe?O=0026391&T=0
Procli commentarium in Platonis Parmenidem / [introd. de Victor Cousin].
Relatively "heavy" pages as the text is in PDF format. Interesting and hard to find works
Navigation is in French.
GRAMMATICA http://grammatika.150m.com/ (new url)
Some hard to find texts (Oxyrhynchos Hellenika, Aesop, Archilochus, Herodas, Lucian, Solon, Tyrtaeus) in unicode or encoded according to the "SP_Ionic" font.
Greek Schools Homeworks (E-Gate of Education)
http://www.pe.sch.gr/books/
Plato, Iamblichus, Hippocrates, Plutarch, Aristotle, St John of Damascus, Epiphanius of Cyprus, St John Chrysostomus,
Philo of Byzantium, Fintys, Theages.
The non-unicode font "PYLH" is required.
Navigation is in Greek.
The New Testament according to the Ecumenical Patriarchate edition
Appolonius Dyscolous http://andreas.schmidhauser.ch/apollo.html
"Apollonius is the greatest grammarian of the Greek and Roman antiquity. He lived in the second century AD, probably in Alexandria. In his work, he covered practically every aspect of the Greek language, be it morphology or syntax, orthography or dialectology, etc. Through Priscian, who calls him 'maximus auctor artis grammaticae', he became nothing less than the founding father of the European reflexion on language."
by Andreas Schmidhauser