Classical Literature. This term is used to describe the literature of ancient Greece and Rome.
Incorporating the Other: the Catalogue of Women in Odyssey 11 This is a study of part of Homer's epic poem, The Odyssey. The article assumes familiarity with the literary work, so it is not a good place to start if you have not read the literary work or are not familiar with its characters and plot.
Klytaimestra: A Study of Aeschylus' Agamemnon 1372-1576 This thesis examines the character of Klytaimestra in Aeschylus' group of three plays called The Oresteia, by considering a passage in one of them, the Agamemnon. The thesis assumes familiarity with the plays, so it is not a good place to start if you have not read them or are not familiar with their characters and plot.
Professor Walter Englert's "Introduction to Greek Theater." Includes a timeline of Greek drama, the origins of Greek drama, and best of all, a readable explanation of how an ancient Greek play was staged. The plays of the Greeks communicate amazingly well to us twenty-first century folks, but our understanding of them can be enriched even further by the understanding that drama can have a different role in a society than it does in ours.
Didaskalia: Introduction to Greek Stagecraft This introduction to ancient Greek stagecraft is provided by Didaskalia, an English-language publication about Greek and Roman drama, dance, and music as they are performed today. Other parts of the site are also very interesting. The journal contains discussions of how ancient Greek plays are staged in the modern theater, and reading these is like an education in theater production and also raises fascinating issues in relation to the interpretation of the plays. The articles are more meaningful if you have read or are reading a Greek play, preferably one under discussion. The introduction to stagecraft is a good place for people just beginning their first Greek play.
Greek Tragedy This is the syllabus of Professor Barbara McManus' classics course at the College of New Rochelle. It has some wonderful links to material on the Structure of the Greek Theater, as well as on the Staging, Actors, Masks, as well a sa link to a location describing what Greek tragedy is. If you scroll down, there is also some fine material on the Oresteia, both background material and study guides.
Photograph, Greek Theater at Epidaurus
Line Drawing, Greek Theater at Epidaurus
The Aeneid of Virgil This web site contains an English translation by English poet John Dryden of the entire Latin epic poem.

Middle English Lit-Renaissance
EAWC: A Chronology of Medieval Europe
This detailed listing covers from the accession of Clovis, founder of the Merovingian dynasty, to the French and Belgian throne and his conversion of the country to Western Catholic Christianity (500) to the succession of Henry VIII to the English crown (1509).
National Historical Bibliographies and Dictionaries: Medieval Studies
This is a guide to the library's best sources of information on the middle ages. It is broken down by country and provides an in-depth account of where to go for more information of different sorts.
The Earth & the Heavens: The Art of the Mapmaker
This site from the amazing collections of the British Library provides images of maps (with brief discussion) ranging from Ptolemy's map of the world (150 AD) up to the 19th century. The majority of the maps is from the Middle Ages and Renaissance and shows the perspective of these eras on what the world is like. When you have seen and enjoyed the maps, you can poke around the other collections and exhibitions of the library and see a great deal else that is illuminating.
Online publications on Dante
NetSERF: Medieval History
ORB--Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies
Medieval Sourcebook: Introduction
Renaissance Project Page
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Essays and Articles on Middle English Literature
GAWAIN:TEXTS, IMAGES, BASIC INFORMATION
Gawain
Sir Gawain and The Green Knight
Sir Gawain and The Green Knight: Resources
MQUP Catalogue - Williams
Sir Gawain and the Carle of Carlisle: Introduction
EAWC: Medieval Europe