References/Links
Early English Text Society: http://users.ox.ac.uk/~eets/
Hortulus: Online Community for Graduate Students in Medieval Studies: http://www.hortulus.net/~hortulus/index.php/Main_Page
International Arthurian Society: http://www.uhb.fr/alc/ias/
Internation Society of Anglo-Saxonists: http://www.isas.us/
Medieval Academy of America: http://www.medievalacademy.org
Organizational (At some point or another, each of these groups really have admitted an affiliation with me. I have receipts to prove it.)
Halifax County Little Theatre: http://www.hclt.org
Southeastern Medieval Association: http://www.sema-online.us/
Medieval Studies Blogs: (Sometimes, these are even more educational and enlightening than the professional research sites are. They are always more interesting and entertaining. [Which is why I spend more time on them when I'm online.] But, at least I’m frittering away my time supporting others who fritter away their time writing about medieval matters. We could all be discussing and blogging about the Real Housewives of Wherever They’re Filming This Year, and THAT would be sad and a travesty.)
Geoffrey Chaucer Hath a Blog (And Yes, It’s All Written In Iambic Meter!): http://houseoffame.blogspot.com/
Blogenspiel (Home of Another Damned Medievalist): http://www.blogenspiel.blogspot.com/
In the Medieval Middle: http://www.inthemedievalmiddle.com/
And, Other Places I Frequent That Can Only Be Termed “Time-Sucks”. But, They’re My Time -Sucks. and They Wouldn’t Be Time-Sucks If They Weren’t Great Places To Visit.
(And also, they remind me (In a nice way, not hitting me over the head and saying “Gawd, why are you LIKE that with all the medieval shit?”) that I don’t live in the 12th-15th centuries, and keep me abreast of what’s going on outside of the pages of a book.)
Image credit: http://www.calligraphicstudio.com/Illuminated_manuscripts.jpg

