Sed pleni omnes sunt libri, plenae sapientium voces, plena exemplorum vetustas; quae iacerent in tenebris omnia, nisi litterarum lumen accederet.
--Cicero, Pro Archia 6
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Classics & Archaeology Classical Civilization Ancient Athletics Greek Monuments Neolithic & Bronze Age Archaic Greek Sanctuaries Ancient Egypt Art History of the Cinema Classical Art & Archaeology Classical Greek Tragedy Classical Field Archaeology Classical Greek Literature Classical Tradition Classics in America Early Christianity Egyptian Architecture Egyptian Art & Archaeology Etruscan Art & Archaeology Greek & Roman Painting Greek & Roman Religion Greek & Roman Sculpture Greek Architecture Greek Drama Greek Mythology Greek Pottery Greek & Roman Novel Homer Latin Literature Myth & Archetype Provincial Archaeology Research Methods Roman Art & Architecture Roman Drama Roman Empire Roman Epic Roots of Classical World Women in Antiquity |
Latin & Greek Ancient Greek Elementary Ancient Greek Intermediate Ancient Greek Composition Lyric Poetry Orators Homer & Hesiod Literature of Archaic Greece Greek Historians Herodotus Pausanias Thucydides Greek Philosophy Greek Tragedy Aristophanes Modern Greek Elementary Modern Greek Intermediate Modern Greek Latin Elementary Latin Intensive Elementary Latin Intermediate Latin Intensive Intermediate Latin Augustan Literature Catullus, Horace, Ovid Cicero Composition Late Antique Literature Love Elegy Mediaeval Latin Republican Prose Roman Drama Roman Historians Roman Satire Silver Age Latin Teaching Methodology Vergil |
Department of Classics Fall 2011 Courses




