Kandy
http://www.bps.lk

The BPS is a nonprofit publisher of books on Theravada Buddhism, with an excellent international mail-order service. Their current international mail-order catalog is available from their website. The BPS runs the Nyanaponika Dhamma Dana Project, which distributes free copies of BPS publications to libraries and schools. Publications from the BPS are distributed in the Americas (North and South) by Pariyatti Book Service and in Europe by Wisdom Books.

 

http://blogs.dickinson.edu/buddhistethics/

The Journal of Buddhist Ethics is the first academic journal dedicated entirely to Buddhist ethics. We promote the study of Buddhist ethics through the publication of research and book reviews and by hosting occasional online conferences.

http://www.lankalibrary.com/bud.html

Website which introduces Buddhism and its modern context:

- Buddhism: A Way of Life;

- Buddhism & Society;

- Buddhism & Science;

with an emphasis on Sri Lankan realities.

http://web.archive.org/web/20050119043442/www.geocities.com/venkumara/evinaya/index.html

eVinaya is a website aimed at facilitating search of materials concerning the Vinaya in the Internet.

http://www.mahasi.us/

Here you can find information about Vipassana meditation in the tradition of the Ven. Mahasi Sayadaw of Burma (now Myanmar).

http://www.pirith.org/

Pirith is the Sinhala word for paritta (in Pali), which means protection. "It protects one from all directions", is the traditional definition. This is the recitation or chanting of the word of the Buddha.

http://www.sirimangalo.org/bio

Information on the Satipatthana Vipassana Meditation Teachings of Most Venerable Chao Khun Phra Rajaprommajaan (Taan Ajaan Tong Sirimangalo), in Thailand and around the world.

 

http://www.dhammadownload.com/VideoInEnglish.htm

Video Dhamma talks by Venerable monks from Myanmar: U Nyanissara, Pa Auk Sayadaw, Monley Sayadaw, Dr. Nandamalabhivamsa, Sayadaw U Pandita, Dr. Mehm Tin Mon and others.

http://readingfaithfully.org/

On this website you will find suggestions and encouragement for reading the teachings of the Buddha as found in the Pali Canon of the Theravada Buddhist tradition. The intention is to build a relationship with the suttas through perpetual daily contact.

http://pathpress.wordpress.com/bodhesako/

Samanera Bodhesako (Robert Smith, known also as Ven. Vinayadhara and Ven. Ñanasuci in his early monastic life) was an American Buddhist monk. During the last years of his life he founded the Path Press for which he edited Clearing the Path: Writings of Ñanavira Thera (Colombo, 1987). For the BPS he edited The Tragic, the comic and the Personal: Selected Letters of Ñanavira Thera (Wheel Publication series No. 33941, 1987.) In 2008 BPS published Beginnings: Collected Essays by S. Bodhesako. This book contains all the known published and unpublished essays by S. Bodhesako: Beginnings, Change, The Buddha and Catch-22, The Myth of Sisyphus, Faith, and Being and Craving.

http://www.insightmeditation.org/

Christopher Titmuss, a former Buddhist monk in Thailand and India, teaches Awakening and Insight Meditation around the world. He is the founder and director of the Dharma Facilitators Programme. He gives retreats, participates in peace walks and facilitates Dharma gatherings. A senior Dharma teacher in the West, he is the author of numerous books including Light on Enlightenment, An Awakened Life and Transforming Our Terror. A campaigner for peace and other global issues, Christopher is a founder member of the international advisory board of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship. Poet and writer, he is the co-founder of Gaia House, an international retreat centre in Devon, England. He lives in Totnes, Devon, England.

http://bodhileaf.wordpress.com/

A blog dedicated to reflections on the Dharma and announcements about Dharma events in the Ottawa region.

http://buddhismatoz.com

The purpose of this website is to offer concise and authentic information on Buddhist doctrine, the Buddhist perspective on various contemporary issues and subjects pertaining to Buddhism. Included are hundreds of authentic quotations from the sacred scriptures, each with references from the Pali Tipitaka, the oldest record of the Buddha’s teachings, and information about life in India during the Buddha’s time.

Dhapakhel
http://www.theravadanepal.net/

Nepal Theravada portal, maintained at Dhapakhel Buddha Vihar.

http://www.buddhanet.net/4noble.htm

A book by Venerable Ajahn Sumedho on The Four Noble Truths, the central teaching of the Buddha: that the unhappiness of humanity can be overcome through spiritual means.

http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/ariyesako/layguide.html

This book by Bhikkhu Ariyesako provides a very readable summary of the bhikkhus' (monks') rules, with a particular emphasis on giving laypeople a better understanding of the monks' way of life. Included also are questions-and-answers concerning the proper etiquette for laypeople when in the company of monks, examples of the particular customs and rules of etiquette that apply at specific Theravada monasteries, and a wealth of other valuable information.

http://www.forestmeditation.com/audio/audio.html

Audiofiles and texts of:
- Morning Chants;
- Evening Chants;
- Reflections;
- Refuge; 
- The Discourse on Setting the Wheel of Dhamma in Motion;
- Blessings.

http://www.asiasocietymuseum.org/buddhist_trade/index.html

The ancient trade routes running through Asia were the main arteries of communication and transport for international travelers. Along these routes, Buddhism and Buddhist artistic influences from various areas of India, the homeland of Buddhism, spread to the Himalayas, Southeast Asia, and East Asia.

http://www.keap-net.org/

KEAP  is an international "friends of Buddhism in Cambodia" humanitarian organization, assisting with education and learning needs of Cambodian monks, nuns, and laypersons devoted to harnessing the wheel of the Dharma to create a culture of peace, reconciliation, and people-centered development in Cambodia.

http://members.chello.nl/l.bontes/sans_n.htm

This dictionary can be quite useful in looking up the meaning of some Pali words, if you know how to find the Sanskrit counterparts of Pali forms. The on-line version of the dictionary is available at http://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/scans/MWScan/tamil/index.html .