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Greek and Roman Studies

Greek and Roman Studies (also known as Classics) is the study of the ancient civilizations of Greece, Rome, and the broader Mediterranean world from approximately 2000 BCE to 700 CE. Students can expect to study the languages, literatures, history, philosophy and archaeological remains of this region.

Program Information

What You Will Study

Study an Entire Civilization

The world of the ancient Greeks and Romans stretched from Britain to the deserts of North Africa and Spain to Afghanistan, encompassing the entire Mediterranean and Black Seas coastline.

The Roman Empire
The Roman Empire at its greatest extent. 3rd century. (Credit:

Ancient History

The Romans brought to the known world the common Hellenistic civilization, which they inherited from the Greeks, which itself had spread through the Middle East through the conquests of Alexander the Great. The political order, city-planning, and infrastructure, such as roads brought by the 鈥楻oman Peace鈥 (Pax Romana) fostered the rapid spread of political, artistic, and philosophical ideas. When the empire declined, in Late Antiquity, it bequeathed its rich philosophical and political heritage to Latin Medieval Christendom, Greek Byzantium, and the Islamic world.

Classics students study all aspects of this history, such as:

  • Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations of Greece during the Bronze Age
  • The archaic and classical periods in Greece, from the emergence of Greek city-states to the disastrous world-war between Athens and Sparta
  • Alexander the Great and the birth of Hellenistic Greek civilization
  • The rise of the Roman Republic and its transformation into a world empire
  • Students study archaeological evidence such as architectural ruins, material remains, artistic products, etc.
  • The relations between Rome and its non-Roman neighbours at the fringes of the empire
  • The decline of Rome and the transition to Medieval Europe, Greek Byzantium, and the Islamic world
  • Political change, social and economic forms, military campaigns
  • Students read primary texts such as Herodotus鈥 The History,&苍产蝉辫;罢丑耻肠测诲颈诲别蝉鈥&苍产蝉辫;The Peloponnesian War, Livy鈥檚 The History of Rome, Caesar鈥檚 The Gallic Wars, Tacitus鈥 The Annals, etc.
Site of Palmyra (Syrian Arab Republic), Credit: Francesco Bandarin, .

Ancient Literature

Greek and Latin literature is incredibly rich. Most of the literary forms we know either had their origin in the classical world, or had ancient parallels: epic, drama, lyric poetry, love poetry, satire, the novel, etc.

Classics students study the riches of Greek and Latin literatute, such as:

  • Greek and Roman epic: Homer鈥檚 Iliad and Odyssey and Virgil鈥檚 Aeneid
  • Greek Tragedy and Comedy: Aeschylus鈥 Oresteia, Sophocles鈥 Oedipus the King, Aristophanes鈥 Clouds
  • Roman Comedy: Plautus鈥 Swaggering Soldier
  • Greek and Latin lyric poetry, love poetry, etc.: Archilochus, Sappho, Simonides, Catullus, Propetius
  • Satire: Horace and Juvenal
  • The novel: Petronius鈥 Satyricon
Battle over the body of Patroclus, from Homer鈥檚 Iliad. Vase
Battle over the body of Patroclus, from Homer鈥檚 Iliad. National Archaeological Museum, Athens. Circa 530 B.C.E.

Mythology

What we think of a 鈥楪reek Mythology鈥 are the stories about the gods and heroes found in Greek and Roman literature that, for the Ancients, were an important part of their religious life. The Olympian gods were imagined by the ancients in striking and vivid ways as just like human beings, only deathless and more powerful than us, and beyond us in wisdom and insight into the machinery of the universe.

Classics students study the sources of Greek and Roman mythology, like:

The battle of Heracles against Hippolyte and the Amazons. Frieze of the Temple of Bassae.
The battle of Heracles against Hippolyte and the Amazons. Frieze of the Temple of Bassae. British Museum, London. 420鈥400 B.C.E.

Art and Architecture

When we think of Greek and Roman art and architecture, we think of the symmetry and order, the perfect physique of the statue of a god or goddess, the incredible movement in Hellenistic sculpture, and the order and grandeur of Greek temples and Roman civic buildings. But, in addition to these aspects emphasised since the Renaissance, Ancient art includes the outlandish and grotesque, the 鈥榩rimitive鈥, and simple and moving images that give us insight into real people鈥檚 daily lives.

Classics students study all varieties of ancient art and architecture, such as:

  • The evolution of major cities like Athens and Rome
  • The form and function of Greek sanctuaries such as Delphi, Olympia, and the Athenian acropolis
  • Images of ancient vase paintings and wall frescoes, which are rich in the minor details of ancient daily life
  • Ancient buildings such as , and the Roman  and 
  • Artworks such , the  (Venus de Milo), , and 
  • Religious artwork such as  and 
  • The grotesque and 鈥榩rimitive鈥, such a The Mistress of Beasts vase image
Mistress of the Animals, the great goddess of nature, flanked by lions, with dismembered bovine and birds in the background.
Mistress of the Animals, the great goddess of nature, flanked by lions, with dismembered bovine and birds in the background. National Archaeological Museum, Athens. 680鈥670 B.C.E.

Archaeology

Classical Archaeology is the study of the material remains of Ancient Greece and Rome. It ranges from the study of architectural remains, artistic works, and the implements of everyday life, from famous sites such as Troy, Mycenae, or Knossos, to Greek sites along the Ionian coast in modern-day Turkey, to Greek and Roman sites in Sicily, Italy, and as far afield as Africa, France, and Britain.

Frescoe in the Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii, Italy.
Frescoe in the Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii, Italy. Buried by the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius, C.E. 79.

Meet Our Graduates

Ancient Philosophy, Rhetoric, and Political Theory

Classical Athens was the setting of intense discussions about the makeup of the cosmos, human nature, and how best to think and to speak, among philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, and sophists and rhetoricians such as Protagoras and Isocrates. The Romans took what they found useful from the traditions of Platonism, Aristotelianism, and Stoicism, and added their own practical bent to it, to work out a theory and practice of politics suited for world government.

Classics students study the rich intellectual history of Greece and Rome:

Socrates bust. British Museum, London.

Socrates. British Museum, London. Roman copy of lost Greek original dating to 380鈥360 B.C.E.

Ancient Science

Our word 鈥榮cience鈥 expresses the Greek 峒愊喂蟽蟿萎渭畏 (别辫颈蝉迟锚尘锚) or Latin scientia, a knowledge of the orderly workings of nature. Ancient science was partly the same as ancient philosophy, and included inquiries into the basic makeup of the cosmos, from the revolutions of the heavenly spheres down to the four elements, the study of the physiology and behaviour of animals and plants, and pure mathematics, and extended to applied fields such as medicine and mechanics.

Euclid鈥檚 Elements of Geometry, in the original Greek with a Latin translation. Printed 1558.
Euclid鈥檚 Elements of Geometry, in the original Greek with a Latin translation. Printed 1558. Manuscript annotations by Galileo Galilei. Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze. (Image used under Creative Commons 3.0 License).

Greek and Latin

杏吧原创 students can study the Ancient World without learning classical languages, but the experience is greatly enriched by learning Ancient Greek and/or Latin. Learning another culture鈥檚 language gives you invaluable insight into its patterns of thought. Unlike English, Greek is a fundamentally verb-based language, which gives it a rich fluidity and movement; Latin has a stark and spare beauty that comes from the fact that it has no word for 鈥榯he鈥 or 鈥榓鈥, so that for example 鈥榓 ship鈥 鈥榯he ship鈥 and 鈥榮hip鈥 are all expressed by 鈥榥avis鈥.

Apollo. Archaeological Museum in Delphi, Greece. 6th cent. B.C.E.
Apollo. Archaeological Museum in Delphi, Greece. 6th cent. B.C.E.