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Welcome to Bill Thayer's Web Site
where you will find:


[image ALT: The head of the famous Etruscan sculpture known as the Capitoline Wolf.]

LacusCurtius: a major site on Roman antiquity, including a photosampler of Roman and Etruscan cities and monuments (with a very large site on the city of Rome of course); a site for teaching yourself to read Latin inscriptions; the complete Latin texts of Pliny the Elder's Natural History, Quintus Curtius' Histories of Alexander the Great, the Saturnalia of Macrobius, and Censorinus' de Die Natali; Suetonius, the Historia Augusta, Vitruvius, Claudian, Frontinus, Velleius Paterculus, Celsus, and Cato's de Re Rustica in both Latin and English; complete English translations of Plutarch's Lives, Polybius, Cassius Dio, Dio Chrysostom, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Appian's Civil Wars and Quintilian; Rodolfo Lanciani's book Pagan and Christian Rome, Christian Hülsen's book on the Roman Forum, Bury's 2‑vol. History of the Later Roman Empire, Bevan's House of Ptolemy, 4 books on Roman Britain, George Dennis's Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria; Platner and Ashby's Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (nearly complete) and most of Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities; about 45% of Plutarch's Moralia; some maps of the Roman Empire, and lots more.

[ 3/31/12: 3253 webpages, 751 photos,
719 drawings & engravings, 119 plans, 74 maps ]

  But this website isn't all Roman:


[image ALT: an apparently abstract pattern of three V's — both arms of each V end in a trefoil, and the apex of the V is a small round button — stacked one above the other; superimposed on this design, three narrow parallel lines extending diagonally from the upper right to the lower left. It is a fairly close rendering of the device on the sleeve of the uniform of a First-Class cadet at the United States Military Academy at West Point.]

[ 3/17/12: 3338 webpages (including 37 complete books)
— 20,268 pages of print, 660 photos,
211 maps, 245 other illustrations ]

After September 11, like many other Americans, I found myself drawn to the history of my own country; and as my small wartime contribution, I started an American History site, which has turned into one of the larger ones on the Web. Large sections on Louisiana and North Carolina and Freeman's biography of Robert E. Lee are joined by subsites on American Railroad History and American Catholic History, several books on West Point (and over 2000 entries from Cullum's Register), the journal of a Mormon pioneer, a book on Washington's presidency and one on Wilson's, two books on the Spanish in America, a contemporaneous account of the Baltimore Riot of 1812, a book on the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, another on early‑19c Illinois, the log kept by the Spanish commander at the siege of Pensacola in 1781, journal articles on a variety of subjects, and many other items. More is on its way.

Onsite link

[ 9/16/11: 71 webpages (including 2 complete books)
— 1114 pages of print, 21 photos, 6 maps ]

The History of the Americas section is of course hardly an appendage to United States history, but the other way round; still, I'm a North American, so we can expect the broader part of the site to be smaller. Right now, Bourne's Spain in America, Galdames' History of Chile, and a section on the History of Brazil.


[image ALT: A large old church, in a field with parasol pines, built on several arches of a Roman bridge: it is the church of S. Giovanni de Butris in Umbria (central Italy).]

My Gazetteer of Italy — currently a few hundred mostly non-Roman pages of churches, frescoes, etc. — is my own favorite part of the site. Since 2003, I've mostly been adding to the Churches of Italy section, which currently (7/21/11) covers 677 churches in 390 pages and 1582 photos; plus, quite separately, three entire books on the churches of Rome, covering about 900 of them, past and present, in great detail. (The merest drop in a bucket, by the way: Italy's churches present and past must number at least 500,000.)


[image ALT: One side of a residential street, with its sidewalk, extending 200 meters to the background: lawns and barren trees, and low single-story and two-story houses with pitched roofs. It is a view of the 1700 block of West Arthur Avenue in Chicago, Illinois.]

The United States, my home, I know far less well than I do Italy: for one thing, they're a much larger country. My American Scrapbook for now — 1/21/10 — is mostly about Kentucky (in particular the little town of Jenkins), with a bit of Chicago.


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Also, a few loose ends that will eventually be better organized; in roughly chronological order:

Vahan Kurkjian's History of Armenia.

Some of the work of the 12th‑century Arab geographer Sharif al‑Idrisi: for now only the First, Second, and Third Climates (in French).

Yellin and Abrahams' biography, Maimonides.

Some chapters of King's Handbook to the Cathedrals of England: currently, only Ely, Lincoln, Norwich, Oxford, and Peterborough.

A small section on The History of The Netherlands:

53 webpages, 1227 pages of print
— but most of them counted elsewhere onsite.

Royal Memoirs on the French Revolution (in English translation): the Flight to Varennes, the Flight of Monsieur to Coblenz, and the Imprisonment of the Royal Family in the Temple, as recorded by some of the principals themselves.

Excerpts from the Souvenirs of the Marquise de Créquy (1710?‑1803).

A few collected sundials.

[An onsite link]

[ 6/30/06: 330 pages, 741 photos ]

About 16 months' worth of my diary. Nothing terribly titillating, really; but it's the laid-back section of this website (read: "easy to put online"), and the raw material for much of the Gazetteer. A bit of London, France, and Kentucky, and lots of Italy: Rome, Milan, Tuscany, Umbria and the Marche, large tracts of which I explored on foot, so that the diary includes details that could be useful if you're planning a trip or a bike tour. Illustrated with photos not usually found elsewhere onsite, cross-linked to Gazetteer pages and external sites, and lavishly supplied with Google maps, it's also partly indexed by place and topic.

In a similar vein, eight Letters from Colombia written in 1993.

The newest pages, put onsite in the last 10 days or so:

(Any numbered or lettered links, while good, are reported here just to help search engines pick up all the new pages quickly.)

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31 Mar:

Δίων Χρυσόστομος· Λόγος ξδ´

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30 Mar:

Δίων Χρυσόστομος· Λόγοι ιζ´ ξϝ´

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28 Mar:

Δίων Χρυσόστομος· Λόγος κη´

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27 Mar:

Δίων Χρυσόστομος· Λόγος μα´

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26 Mar:

Δίων Χρυσόστομος· Λόγοι νβ´ νγ´

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25 Mar:

Δίων Χρυσόστομος· Λόγος νϝ´

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24 Mar:

Δίων Χρυσόστομος· Λόγοι νζ´ π´

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22 Mar:

Antiquary's Shoebox:

Ancient Names of the Cat

For earlier new stuff, see the complete What's New page.


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Site updated: 31 Mar 12