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Welcome to the wiki for HUM 124 The Ancient World, a course taught in the Humanities Program at the University of North Carolina Asheville! This is a project created by faculty and students of the course and is student-driven.
UNC Asheville students: You can create a new page manually or use the following input box. If you try and create a page that already exists, it will bring you to the editing window of that page.
Enter the title for the page you want to create:
Tip: If a new page is not linked on another page, it will be virtually undiscoverable!
Welcome! Before you begin editing pages, make sure you work through the following steps, taking your time and asking any questions you have on the discussion tab of this page (click "Discuss" at the top, above the page title).
New pages are created manually by creating a link on a page and then clicking it, or by entering in the page title as an URL in your browser. When creating a page manually, please make it a subpage that is nested within the project's main page (the page you are reading now). This is done automatically in the page maker input above. New pages should be entitled The_Ancient_World_(HUM_124_-_UNC_Asheville)/NEW PAGE NAME
. A forward slash (/) separates the title of the main page from the title of the new page. Remember, if a new page is not linked on another page, it will be virtually undiscoverable!
Try to create as many hyperlinks to different pages on the wiki as you can! When linking to a page, make sure to link to its full name, i.e. The_Ancient_World_(HUM_124_-_UNC_Asheville)/PAGE NAME
. Linking to just PAGE NAME
will redirect to the wrong page if it exists, and if it doesn't exist, may cause a user to create that page instead.
If you are using the VisualEditor, clicking the "insert link" button will allow you to search to see if the page has already been created in some form. When using the link editor, typing "/" (if you are on the "Wikiversity" option) will automatically add The_Ancient_World_(HUM_124_-_UNC_Asheville)/
to the title of the new page, making it easy to create a nested page.
In practice, you will frequently find yourself getting the idea to create a new page while reading another page. When that happens, create your new page by linking to existing or new text on the page you are reading.
Make sure your username is listed on the appropriate page below, linked to your user page. The name for your user page to use in links is User:USER NAME
. Pages for working groups are also listed under each section.
The project news page will be a central information hub. Here you will find a list of news items such as major edits and important pages added. A running list will also be kept of pages or edits that involve the use of a new wiki editing technique. Keep an eye on this so you can see examples of different ways to create content. There is also a to-do list. Use this resource to your advantage and edit freely!
Individual pages should be created for each of the textual primary sources read in HUM 124. Once created, they should be added to the list of texts, which is organized geographically.
The page for The Odyssey is hosting a large-scale, multi-week project.
If you would like to begin writing about connections between texts, see this page first.
Though written texts predominate in the course, other objects from antiquity, such as statues, monuments, and artworks, are explored and referenced as often as possible. Once created, they should be added to the list of objects.
This page will be used to give information about different religions encountered throughout the texts. Please link relevant texts to the religion that is discussed in the text.
Drafts are useful if you want to begin creating a page, but are unsure of what the final product is going to be. It is not necessary to do so, however. If you wish to create a draft of a page, make sure that the page title includes Draft:
before the page title (e.g. Draft:Cherokee Syllabary
).
If you aren't sure where to link a page that you want to create yet, don't let that keep you from starting it: link it here, and as the project grows and changes an appropriate place will be found for it!
The creation of dry land in ancient sources
Creatures and their significance
Relationships between Ancient Texts
Confucius People: Sam Kershner
Reference books in Ramsey Library (UNCA)