World Wide Web Sources

The images, maps, documents and graphics that are incorporated into the tutorial, or are accessed through internal links, are listed here by chapter and in order of appearance. In most cases, it is the site's home page that is listed. The information provided in brackets is the URL ending as identified within the tutorial. The sites for the external links, on the other hand, are not provided here. Please do not download any images from this site.



Home Page

The University of Calgary Logo: The University of Calgary's Graphic Images [http://www.ucalgary.ca/images]

The University of Calgary Logo: The University of Calgary's Graphic Images [http://www.ucalgary.ca/images]

In most files

Red and blue dots: The University of Calgary Library, [http://www.ucalgary.ca/UofC/departments/INFO/library/]

Left and Right Arrow Buttons: ImageServe, Buttons-Icons-Labels-Textures [http://rubens.anu.edu.au/imageserve.index.html]

Territorial Expansion of the Roman Empire

Hochdorf Bronze Celtic Lion (image14.html): Barbarians on the Greek Periphery? Origins of Celtic Art [http://faraday.clas.virginia.edu/~umw8f/Cze/HomePage.html]

A Topographical Map of Italy (map1.html): The Kelsey On-Line [http://www.umich.edu/~kelseydb/]

Greek Colonisation of the Mediterranean (map2.html): Tony Belmonte's Historical Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps/map.html]

The Rise of Rome (map4.html): ibid.

Roman and Carthagian Territories in the Mediterranean (map5.html): [http://www.ma.org/maps/classical/b270med.gif]

The Mediterranean after the First Punic War (map6.html): ibid.

The Second Punic War (map7.html): Tony Belmonte's Historical Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps.map.html]

Roman Domination of the Mediterranean (map8.html): [http://www.ma.org/maps/republic/b86eu.gif]

Julius Caesar (image3.html): A Visual Compendium of Roman Emperors [http://www-dial.ece.arizona.edu/~paola/Emperors/baggin_emperors.html]

The Conquest of Gaul (map9.html): Tony Belmonte's Historical Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps/map.html]

Rome after the Victory of Augustus (map10.html): Tony Belmonte's Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps/republic/b25eu.gif]

Augustus (image4.html): A Visual Compendium of Roman Emperors [http://www-dial.ece.arizona.edu/~paola/Emperors/baggin_emperors.html]

A Topographical Map of Germany (map11.html): The Kelsey On-Line [http://www.umich.edu/~kelseydb/]

Rome at the time of the Defeat at Teutoburg Forest (map12.html): Tony Belmonte's Historical Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps/map.html]

Deployment of the Legions (map13.html): ibid.

Rome at is Greatest Extent, during the Reign of Emperor Trajan (map14.html): ibid.

Trajan's Column (image1.html): ArtServe, the Australian National University [http://rubens.anu.edu.au/]

Rome at the Height of the Crisis of the Third Century (map15.html): Tony Belmonte's Historical Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps/map.html]

The Sack of Rome (map16.html): ibid.

The Germanic Invasions of Western Europe

Barbarian Invasions into the Later Roman Empire (image13.html): Adventus Saxonum: The Coming of the Anglo-Saxons [http://engserve.tamu.edu/files/linguistics/ling410/adventus/adventus.html]

A Topographical Map of Germany (map11.html): The Kelsey On-Line [http://www.umich.edu/~kelseydb/]

Rome during the Disaster at Adrianople (map17.html): Tony Belmonte's Historical Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps/map.html]

The Sack of Rome (map18.html): ibid.

The Defeat of the Hunnic Empire (map19.html): ibid.

The End of the Western Empire (map20.html): ibid.

The Invasion of Italy by the Ostrogoths (map21.html): ibid.

The Germanic Kingdoms before the Reconquest by Justinian (map22.html): ibid.

The Reconquest by Justinian (map23.html): ibid.

The Invasion of Italy by the Lombards (map24.html): ibid.

The Frankish Empire

Dagobert's Throne (image6.html): Creating French Culture, Monarchs and Monasteries, Treasures from the Bibliothèque nationale de France [http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/bnf/bnf0001.html]

The Invasion of Italy by the Ostrogoths (map21.html): Tony Belmonte's Historical Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps/map.html]

The Germanic Kingdoms before the Reconquest by Justinian (map22.html): ibid.

The Reconquest by Justinian (map23.html): ibid.

The Invasion of Italy by the Lombards (map24.html): ibid.

Throne of Charlemagne (image8.html): Tulane University, Period and Style for Designers [http://www.tulane.edu/lester/text/lester.html]

The Frankish Empire at the Death of Pepin III (map25.html): Tony Belmonte's Historical Atlas of Europe and the Middle East [http://www.ma.org/maps/map.html]

The Frankish Empire at the Death of Charlemagne (map26.html): ibid.

The Final Breakup of the Frankish Empire (map27.html): ibid.

The Emergence of Western European States (map28.html): [http://www.ma.org/maps/dark/a910eu.gif]

Latin and the Vernacular Languages

Three Latin Scholars (LATIN.GIF): Armarium Labyrinth: Labyrinth Latin Bookcase [http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/library/latin/latin-lib.html]

Visigothic Handwriting (image5.html): Area de ciencias e téchnicas historiográficas [http://www.usc.es/~troia/paleo/paleogal.html]

Beneventan Script (image9.html): A Gallery of Manuscripts owned by SUL [http://www-library.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/medieval/mss/gallery.html]

Carolingian Minuscule (image10.html): Bibliothèque nationale de France [http://www.bnf.fr/loc/bnf003.jpg]

Carolingian Writing Centers (image11.html): Carolingian Writing Centers [http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/map.html]

Cassiodorus' Monastery (VIVAR.GIF): Worlds of Late Antiquity [http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/wola.html]

Art and Architecture

All the images found in this chapter (image15.html - image39.html) come from Tulane University, Period and Style for Designers [http://www.tulane.edu/lester/text/lester.html]


Return to Bibliography and WWW Sources

First Europe Tutorial / The Applied History Research Group / The University of Calgary / August 1996
Copyright © 1996, The Applied History Research Group