ArchaeoAstronomy

http://www.archaeoastronomy.com/2014.html

Gives information about the exact date and time for the holy days based on the rotation of the earth. From the site “Equinox and Solstice data from the U.S. Naval Observatory, Washington DC. Cross-Quarter moments are interpolated as the midway points between the Solstices and Equinoxes measured in degrees along the ecliptic. Former NASA scientist Rollin Gillespie uses this spatial method rather than simply splitting in half the time interval between a Solstice and an Equinox.”    

Read more

Epona.net

http://www.epona.net/introduction.html

A scholarly resource on Epona. From the site “On this website, the fruits of …(our) research… presented to an English-speaking audience. Examining the evidence for Epona we ask: when and where was she worshipped? How, and by whom?”

Read more

Online Tarot course

http://www.learntarot.com/

From Joan Bunning’s site “My main purpose in this course is to show you how to use the cards for yourself. The tarot can help you understand yourself better and teach you how to tap your inner resources more confidently.”

Read more

Diotima: Materials for the study of women and gender in the ancient world

http://www.stoa.org/diotima 

This is an archive of an amazing site which served as “an interdisciplinary resource for anyone interested in patterns of gender around the ancient Mediterranean and as a forum for collaboration among instructors who teach courses about women and gender in the ancient world.” This site includes course materials, the beginnings of a systematic and searchable bibliography, and links to many on-line resources, including articles, book reviews, databases, and images. Ross Scaife and Suzanne Bonefas launched this project in early 1995; since that time it has been developed mainly by Scaife, but with help and contributions from many quarters.

Read more

Feminism and Religion

http://feminismandreligion.com/
From their site “We establish this blog in the hope that feminist scholars of religion — and all who are interested in these issues — will use this forum to share their ideas, insights, and experiences, so that this community of thinkers will be nurtured as we explore diverse and new directions.” 

Read more

Suppressed Histories

http://www.suppressedhistories.net/secrethistory/diana.html

Max Dashu…need I say more This piece is about finding Diana.

Read more

Theoi

http://www.theoi.com/Cult/ArtemisTitles.html

This is one of my favorite repositories of information about Greek religion and mythology. It is searchable and easy to navigate. From their site “Welcome to the Theoi Project, a site exploring Greek mythology and the gods in classical literature and art. The aim of the project is to provide a comprehensive, free reference guide to the gods (theoi), spirits (daimones), fabulous creatures (theres) and heroes of ancient Greek mythology and religion.”

Read more

Moonspeaker’s Amazon pages

http://www.moonspeaker.ca/Amazons/amazons.html

Moonspeaker’s site is amazing and diverse but includes so much material about Amazons. 

Read more

AmazoNation

http://www.amazonation.com/

AmazoNation’s site is an amazing collection of materials (some scholarly, some devotional) about Amazons, Artemis and Athena http://www.hellenicaworld.com/Greece/Mythology/en/Amazons.html A lovingly comprehensive and somewhat disorganized, searchable collection of original text and images, including an extensive set of materials on mythology, This link is to the Amazon section.

Read more

Glasgow Women’s Library

http://womenslibrary.org.uk/

From their site “Glasgow Women’s Library is a vibrant information hub housing a lending library, archive collections and contemporary and historical artefacts relating to women’s lives, histories and achievements.”

Read more

Journal of Menstruation and Culture

http://metaformia.org/ Journal of menstruation and culture.

From their site “We think the world needs fresh new approaches to questions of the origins of culture, why humans differ from animals, why we are the marvelous, amazing, terrible, peculiar, cruel, kind, dangerous, and occasionally constructive beings that we are. So in this Journal we introduce Metaformic Theory because it is a new approach, one of several in the arena of menstruation and culture, but the one calling for the broadest changes in the way we think of human origins and processes through which we, and our ancestors, have attained the culture that surrounds us.”

Read more

Trivia: Voices of Feminism multimedia forum

http://www.triviavoices.com/

Trivia is derived from tri-vum, referencing Her crossroads and the triple goddess, and a play on the notion that feminist thought is considered by patriarchal thought as trivial. Trivia embraces women’s voices in all forms of media.

Read more

Mary Daly tribute Blog

http://marydalytribute.blogspot.ca/

Mary Daly tribute Blog http://www.starhawk.org/ From her site “Welcome! I’m Starhawk, author of many works celebrating the Goddess movement and Earth-based, feminist spirituality. I’m a peace, environmental, and global justice activist and trainer, a permaculture designer and teacher, a Pagan and Witch. To see how it all weaves together, follow the many strands of my web.”

Read more

The Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation

http://www.matildajoslyngage.org/

From the site “One of the most radical, far-sighted and articulate early feminists, Matilda Joslyn Gage was deliberately written out of history after her death in 1898 by an increasingly conservative suffrage movement…The Foundation is dedicated not only to educating current and future generations about the lifelong work of this major woman’s rights thinker, author and activist, but also its power to drive contemporary social change. “

Read more

Museum of Menstruation and Women’s Health

http://www.mum.org/index.html

Museum of Menstruation and Women’s Health is a valuable repository, and has been described as an “… odd, funny and well-researched site (created by a man), on the history of menstruation as told by women around the world” Janice Maloney, “Finding Some Warm Havens in the Web’s Information Blizzard,” Women’s Health: A Special Section, The New York Times, 21 June 1998. This site was the first of the few sites recommended in the article ”

Read more

The “other bible” video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-tSnjqD2io

From the publisher ”The Other Bible gathers in one comprehensive volume ancient, esoteric holy texts from Judeo–Christian tradition that were excluded from the official canon of the Old and New Testaments, including the Gnostic Gospels, the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Kabbalah, and several more. The Other Bible provides a rare opportunity to discover the poetic and narrative riches of this long–suppressed literature and experience firsthand its visionary discourses on the nature of God, humanity, the spiritual life, the world around us, and infinite worlds beyond this one.”

Read more

Goddesses in searchable archives

http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/help/quickstart.jsp

The Perseus digital library is a publicly available, searchable collection of images, text, and archeological material from a vast collection including the Roman-Greco world and many, many others. The resources are massive and just a key work “Artemis” brings up 186 documents, 216 images, 165 artifacts (including coins and pottery). An example quote from a supplicant woman in a Chorus in the 5th century BC “We pray that other guardians be always renewed, and that Artemis-Hecate Artemis and Hecate watch over the childbirth of their women.”

Read more

Ancient Greece Resources

http://www.ancient-greece.org/resources/timeline.html

Have you ever wondered when the eras in ancient Greece were? Here is an easy to use reference 

Read more

Sacred Texts Archive

http://www.sacred-texts.com/wmn/rca/rca02.htm

This is an amazing repository! To get you started, I link a book about the amazons.  But this is searchable and very complete.  From their site “This site is a freely available archive of electronic texts about religion, mythology, legends and folklore, and occult and esoteric topics. Texts are presented in English translation and, where possible, in the original language.” Here I link to a book about the religious life of the Amazons. However, there is a massive section on women and religion. From their site “All of the major world religions deprecate women to some degree. This page archives texts which relate specifically to women and religion from a female perspective. This includes historic feminist texts on the topic, texts about Goddess-oriented spirituality and Amazons, as well as texts from otherwise male-dominated religions in the same vein. As might be expected, there are far fewer of these than might be desired.”

Read more

MatriArchiv

http://www.matriarchiv.ch/?page_id=74&lang=en

This is a Matriarchal Studies research group in Switzerland. There is a ton of information here, but here is their Home page.

Read more