While the Golden Era is something I like to try and base my life and interests around, it comes at a distant second to my true calling, Classics (the conglomeration of Latin, ancient Greek, and the histories of the two cultures).
There are easily less than 10 people in my year that are classics/Latin/Greek majors, and that's fairly accurate for the upperclassmen too.
I'm interested in seeing how these subjects were taken from the 1930s-1950s.
From what I've heard and read, there was a lot of activities going around in the Classics world during that time, and it seems that most schools (maybe just in Britain) would require several years of Latin as part of curriculum.
It's folly to say that Latin and Greek are unimportant because they are dead languages. Most people forget that Rome, and to a lesser extent Greece, had a society and culture that is comparable to our modern day society, and that Romans were far from uneducated, merciless barbarians.
I know for a fact that my old highschool is shutting down its Latin programme because they don't have anyone to teach it (possible career for me ).
Does anyone else fear the day when Virgil will no longer be taught in Latin, and the sheer beauty and complexity of his poetry in his native tongue will be lost to time?
There are easily less than 10 people in my year that are classics/Latin/Greek majors, and that's fairly accurate for the upperclassmen too.
I'm interested in seeing how these subjects were taken from the 1930s-1950s.
From what I've heard and read, there was a lot of activities going around in the Classics world during that time, and it seems that most schools (maybe just in Britain) would require several years of Latin as part of curriculum.
It's folly to say that Latin and Greek are unimportant because they are dead languages. Most people forget that Rome, and to a lesser extent Greece, had a society and culture that is comparable to our modern day society, and that Romans were far from uneducated, merciless barbarians.
I know for a fact that my old highschool is shutting down its Latin programme because they don't have anyone to teach it (possible career for me ).
Does anyone else fear the day when Virgil will no longer be taught in Latin, and the sheer beauty and complexity of his poetry in his native tongue will be lost to time?