Digital Critical Editions of Texts in Greek and Latin

Items below are endeavors at Open Source Critical Editions. For more on the concept and the history of OSCEs, see Open Source Critical Editions.

Classical (Greek and Latin)

 * Homer and the Papyri (editors: Casey Dué, Mary Ebbott, John Lundon, Dimitrios Yatromanolakis). A database of the textual variants found in a large number of Homeric papyri
 * Galenus' commentary on Hippocrates' "On the articulations" (editor: Christian Brockmann). C. Brockmann has published this digital critical edition within the frame of the Corpus Medicorum Graecorum-Latinorum Project
 * The Curculio portal includes a number of critical editions of a number of classical authors: Claudian (2004), Juvenal (1st edition 2000), Martial IV (2007), Ovid, Heroides 1 (2008), Propertius (select, 2000), Sulpiciae Conquestio (Butrica). The editor of these texts, except Sulpicia, is Michael Hendry. These edition does not encode primary sources or variants through a declarative markup language, but is an HTML-based presentation of a traditional critical edition, with an essential critical apparatus. A new, database-based version is currently (March 2014) under construction in Quot Lectores, Tot Propertii
 * Catullus Online (editor: Dániel Kiss) It includes digital images of the main manuscripts
 * Hyperdonatus - Editiones collectae antiquorum commentorum electronicae cum translatione, commentariis et adnotationibus criticis

Biblical

 * The Online Critical Pseudepigrapha project . Electronic editions of the best critical texts of the Old Testament Pseudepigrapha and related literature. All texts are encoded in XML (not TEI-compliant). The following are critical editions (i.e. have an in-line apparatus criticus): Enoch ( introduction, text ; editors: Pierpaolo Bertalotto, with Ian W. Scott and Ken M. Penner); Testament of Adam ( introduction , text ; editors: David M. Miller and Ian W. Scott); 2 Baruch ( introduction , text ; editors: Daniel M. Gurtner, with David M. Miller and Ian W. Scott); The Testament of Job ( introduction , text ; editor: Ian Scott).
 * Digital Nestle-Aland Prototype (Universität Münster). A real digital critical edition of the first and second Epistle of John, based on a complete digital transcription of 24 manuscripts. The New Testament Transcripts Prototype, cured by the same University, features a digital critical edition of the whole New Testament, but based on a number of manusripts variable from 2 to 26.

Medieval

 * Editions électroniques de l'Ecole des chartes (Sorbonne)
 * William of Ockham: Dialogus (British Academy)
 * Vita Eufrosine
 * Digitale Edition: MS83II der Dom und Dioezesanbibliothek Köln : Eine komputistische Sammelhandschrift von 798/805. (Universität zu Köln)

Neo-Latin

 * Addison's Latin works (Dana F. Sutton)
 * Phineas Fletcher's Sylva Poetica (1633) A hypertext critical edition by M. T. Anderson and Dana F. Sutton
 * Other Neo-Latin texts from the Library of Humanistic Texts (ed. by Dana F. Sutton et al.)
 * Argenis Barclaii (Stoa Consortium)
 * Carmen de fundatione, ruina et restauratione inclyti monasterii Gemmeticensis, Pierre BOUET (Université de Caen Basse a Normandie)
 * Pico della Mirandola, de hominis dignitate (Progetto Pico / Pico Project)
 * The Bracton Browser (Harvard)
 * The Newton Project
 * Niccolo Canussio, de restitutione patriae (editor: O. Canussio). This is not a digital critical edition, but an HTML-based presentation of a traditional critical edition, with an introduction, an italian translation and fotographical reproductions of the most important manuscripts.

Links to other sitographies
A larger commented sitography (in Italian) on digital philology can be found in the 'E-Philology' section of the Digital Variants site (editor: Cinzia Pusceddu). Almost all the projects quoted here belong to medieval or modern philology. A comment on C. Pusceddu's sitography, with a focus on the Classics (in Italian, again) is here.

Greta Franzini published a fairly extensive catalogue of digital editions (not only critical, not only classical).

The catalogue published by Patrick Sahle focusses more specifically on scholarly digital editions (not only classical).