NPNF: Volume V. The Fathers of the Third Century. Hippolytus; Cyprian; Caius; Novatian; Appendix.
Cassiodorus has his own page.
St. John Chrysostom has his own page.
See the six volumes of his works on the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers page.
ANCL: IV. Clement of Alexandria, Vol. I.
ANCL: XII. Clement of Alexandria, Vol. II.
NPNF: Volume II. Fathers of the Second Century. Tatian, Theophilus of Antioch, Athenagoras of Athens, Clement of Alexandria.
See the page of Apostolic Fathers.
ANCL: III. Tatian, Theophilus, and the Clementine Recognitions.
NPNF: Volume IV. The Fathers of the Third Century. Tertullian IV. More Ethical writings; Minucius Felix; Commodian; Origen.
The Epistles of C. Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage and Martyr, with the Council of Carthage on the Baptism of Heretics; to which are added, the Extant Works of St. Pacian, Bishop of Barcelona. Oxford: James Parker & Co., 1868.
Select Epistles of St. Cyprian treating of the episcopate, after the translation of Nathaniel Marshall. Edited with introduction & notes by T. A. Lacey, M.A. London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, [1922].
The Lapsed; The Unity of the Catholic Church. Translated and annotated by Maurice Bévenot, S.J. Westminster, Maryland: The Newman Press, 1957.
St. Cyprian on the Lord’s Prayer. An English translation, with introduction. By T. Herbert Bindley. London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1914.
The Treatises of S. Cæcilius Cyprian, translated, with notes and indices. Oxford: John Henry Parker, 1840.
Treatises. Translated and edited by Roy. J. DeFerrari, et al. New York: Fathers of the Church, Inc., 1958.
ANCL: VIII. The Writings of Cyprian.
NPNF: Volume V. The Fathers of the Third Century. Hippolytus; Cyprian; Caius; Novatian; Appendix.
Patrologiae Tomus IV.—S. Cypriani tomus unicus. —In Migne’s Patrologiae Cursus Completus, series prima.
See also The Martyrdom of Cyprian and Justina, by Edgar J. Goodspeed. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1903. —This is a translation of an Ethiopic version of a legend that grew up around Cyprian, which is credited by some as the beginning of the Faust legend.
Commentary on the Gospel According to S. John. By S. Cyril, Archbishop of Alexandria.
Vol.
II. (1885).
Another
copy.
A Commentary Upon the Gospel According to S. Luke, by S. Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria. Now first translated into English from an ancient Syriac version by R. Payne Smith. Oxford, 1859.
Five Tomes Against Nestorius; Scholia on the Incarnation; Christ Is One; Fragments Against Diodore of Tarsus, Theodore of Mopsuestia, the Synousiants. Oxford: James Parker and Co., 1881.
The Three Epistles of S. Cyril, Archbishop of Alexandria. With revised text and English translation. Edited by P. E. Pusey. Oxford: James Parker and Co., 1872.
The Armenian Version of Revelation and Cyril of Alexandria’s Scholia on the Incarnation and Epistle on Easter. Edited from the oldest mss. and Englished by Fred. C. Conybeare. London: Text and Translation Society, 1907.
Cyril
of Jerusalem: Catechetical Lectures.
The
same at Google Books.
Miscellaneous Coptic Texts in the Dialect of Upper Egypt. Edited, with English translations, by E. A. Wallis Budge. With forty plates and twenty illustrations in the texts. London: British Museum, 1915. —Includes two texts ascribed to Cyril, but almost certainly later:
The Discourse on Mary Theotokos by Cyril, Archbishop of Jerusalem, describing her human origin and death.
The Discourse of Cyril, Archbishop of Jerusalem, on the discovery of the Cross, and on the baptism of Isaac the Samaritan.
NPNF: Volume VII. Cyril of Jerusalem, Gregory Nazianzen.