Courses In Philosophy And Humanities to the language between the classical and medieval an attempt to clarify the specific character and important philosophic works by medieval authors as well as http://www.dhs.edu/dhs_home/dhs_phil.html
Extractions: Students advance to the more complex syntax and irregular morphology of classical Latin as well as to the rudiments of rhetorical stylistics. Tools of historical linguistics are introduced so that students can master the changes in orthography that occur to the language between the classical and medieval period. LT 555/556 - Latin III-IV: Introduction to Medieval Latin Language and Literature I (3) An introduction to the Latin language and literature of the late antique and mediaeval periods (c. A.D. 300 - 1500), with emphasis on the close reading of selected philosophical and theological texts. Designed primarily to equip students to read patristic and mediaeval Latin texts with an appreciation of their characteristic vocabulary, syntax and style, and secondarily to introduce them to the principal areas of mediaeval Latin scholarship, including bibliographies, collections, and repertories of sources, and lexica and other reference aids for the study of Latin works composed in the Middle Ages. Generally the first semester (not necessarily a prerequisite for the second) is devoted to the study of Latin works written before A.D. 1000.
J. Willard Marriott Library Research Guides the classical world and addressing specific topics as from History Ancient and medieval Series A biographical and critical essays on major classical authors. http://www.lib.utah.edu/ResGuides/classics.html
Beloit College Classics -- Minor syntax, followed by readings in ancient and medieval authors. Introduction to classical Studies (1). An investigation specific focus and topic will vary from http://www.beloit.edu/~classics/minor/minor_courses2.html
Extractions: Classics Greek 103. Beginning Greek I (1). Intensive presentation of essential Greek forms and syntax enabling the student to read competently classical texts as soon as possible. Offered each fall. (Hadavas, Robson) Greek 108. Beginning Greek II (1). Review of Greek forms and syntax followed by readings in ancient authors (including Herodotus, Plato, and the New Testament). Offered each spring. (Hadavas, Robson) Latin 103. Beginning Latin I (1). Intensive and thorough presentation of all Latin Grammar and forms. Designed to enable a disciplined student to deal as soon as possible with the Latin text in a competent and sure manner. Offered each fall. (Hadavas, Robson). Latin 108. Beginning Latin II (1). Intensive review of Latin forms and syntax, followed by readings in ancient and medieval authors. Offered each spring. (Hadavas, Robson) Classical Studies 100. Introduction to Classical Studies (1). An investigation of the people and ideas that shaped and led the Golden Age of Greek and Roman civilization. Specific focus and topic will vary from term to term. The principal emphasis will be literary, but any aspect of the Greek world may be included at the option of the instructor. Designed for both the general student and the major in classics or comparative literature. Offered each fall.
Medieval Trojan Romance General Indexes, ETexts, Bibliographies, specific authors Works lead one to just about every medieval source on but, like Perseus, the classical metasite, it http://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/Troy/MEDREN.html
Extractions: Site Contents Troy: Main Page Greek Dramas Transform Troy Virgil's Aeneid ... Troy Stories Today: Literary and Popular Culture Two of the three earliest medieval romances were Troy stories: the massive Roman de Troie by Benoit de Ste. Maure and the anonymous Eneas , a retelling of the Latin Aeneid with an added happy ending. These two 12th century Troy romances were narrated in Anglo-Norman, the vernacular language of the rulers of France and Britain, who traced their history back to Brutus, descendant of Aeneas. Passion, war, exotic places and politics were always at the heart of the Trojan story, and these medieval retellings followed in that tradition. History was an important factor in the renewed popularity of Troy, which medieval Europeans considered a real place, from which real people had fled to found the Roman Empire. It is possible that the crusades also contributed to interest in Troy, since crusaders were traveling into the Near East and visiting cities such as Constantinople, only a few miles from the ancient site of Troy. Certainly, there are many description of eastern "wonders" in both the Troie and the Eneas.
Classical Studies Resource Guide Includes scholarship from the medieval period to the present Cambridge History of classical Literature essays introducing the works of specific authors, or works http://www.lib.duke.edu/reference/subjects/classics/classicalstudies.html
Extractions: at the Duke University Libraries This subject guide is an introduction to the resources the Duke Libraries hold in Classical Studies. It emphasizes two related and overlapping areas. The first is reference books that may be consulted for thumbnail sketches of a topic in Classics, fact- and date-checking, and orientations to a research topic that is new to you. For these tasks, dictionaries encyclopedias , and atlases will probably be of most use. The second is introductory sources for beginning larger-scale research projects on Classical topics. Bibliographies , on-line and in print, are emphasized, as are more detailed sources for tracking down obscure references to minor historical personages, places, works of art, literary characters, etc. Classical Studies is very much an international discipline. This guide has been written with a bias towards sources in English, but includes many valuable resources in other modern European languages, in addition to Classical texts which will be in ancient Greek or Latin. Classical Studies is also a discipline with a long history. While many of the references below have been published recently, some date back to the nineteenth century. It can be well worth the effort to look carefully at older scholarship; for some topics, it is essential. Using this Guide Resources listed below are organized into loose categories. A series of general references for all of Classical Studies is followed by more specific resources for specialized areas such as history, literature, and art and archaeology. Suggested subject headings can be used to search the library's
ENGLISH to a multitude of women authors in many both to the Invisible Web and specific sites. on the Net links to Biblical, classical, medieval, Renaissance, Victorian http://home.gwi.net/brhs/engla.html
Extractions: English Undergraduate Courses-First Year ENG 1003. Introduction to Writing. Required of all freshmen who do not meet entrance requirements for ENG 1013. Includes intensive instruction and exercise in syntax, punctuation, spelling. and vocabulary development. English 1003 does not satisfy any English requirement, and hours earned will not count toward graduation requirements. Three lecture hours, week. Credit: Three hours. ENG 1013. Composition I. (ENGL 1301) Required of all freshmen. Theory and practice of written and oral exposition and explication; rhetorical principles and organization practice especially in the essay. Prerequisite ENG 1003 or its equivalent. Three lecture hours a week. Credit: Three hours. ENG 1023. Composition II. (ENGL 1302) Required of all freshmen. Theory and practice of critical exposition and basic rhetorical analysis; composing informative and investigative exposition based on research. Prerequisite: ENG 1013 or its equivalent. Three lecture hours a week. Credit: Three hours.
Elmira College - GTL Research A Subject - Literature TOPICspecific RESOURCES. The Labyrinth Resources for medieval REF Z 1224 .C6 Contemporary authors, New Revision classical, medieval, Renaissance Literature. http://www.elmira.edu/academics/library/web/literature.shtml
Extractions: Quick Links Request Admissions Info Apply to Elmira Financial Aid Calendar of Events College Bulletin (PDF) Directions to Elmira College Part Time Undergrad Programs Graduate Programs Summer Programs Library Bookstore Employment Opportunities Check Campus Email Computing Services Faculty-Administrator Index Mark Twain Connection
Chronology Of Medieval Boys' Clothing Specific Centuries Many authors object to the term as misleading. The Christian Church which dominated the medieval era was The end of classical antiquity is generally seen as the http://histclo.hispeed.com/chron/med/chron/me-chron.html
Extractions: Figure 1.Bottecelli's work shows the contiunuing hold of the Church on the art of the late Medieval period as the refinements of the Renaissance was beginning to change Italy and soon all of Europe. Rome unified Europe as never before or since. We have only begun to assess Roman clothing styles. The 5th and 6th centuries winessed the successive migratioins of Germanic tribles whichb slowly overwealmed the Western Empire. Tribe after tribe renetrated the Roman frontier defenses and eventually reached Roime itself. The end of classical antiquity is generally seen as the collapse of the Western Roman Empire The early medieval period is often referred as the Dark Ages, dark of course compared to the glories of Rome and dark with the extinction of learning and formalized education. Rome did not disappear in an instant. By the mid 6th centurty, however, those in the West with personal memories of Rome were gone. Few outside the Church were now literateeven the aristocratic classes. The quality of life also declined with Roman learning and security. Life in the Dark Ages in Hobbes noted description was nasty, brutish, and short. Even so, the Dark Ages in recent years have been the subject of an historical reappraisal. Many authors object to the term as misleading. Other scholars increasingly see in the so called Dark Ages the foundation for many of the basic beliefs and social institutions of the West. [Brown] Pope Gregory the Great (540-604) played a major role in establishing the authority of the papacy his writings, especialy the
Computers & Texts 11: Dutschke information to study the transmission of classical texts as a cataloguing location for medieval manuscripts have incipits; the command specific to authors is f http://users.ox.ac.uk/~ctitext2/publish/comtxt/ct11/dutschke.html
Extractions: Columbia University An enthusiastic 'hurrah' for In Principio! This Brepols CD-ROM, now available in its third edition, includes over 400,000 incipits of classical, medieval and early renaissance Latin texts, with a planned leap up to 750,000-800,000 in the forthcoming editions. Negotiations are underway for yet further expansion (my personal hope is for the incipit files in the Cambridge University Library, representing the CUL itself, the college libraries and the Fitzwilliam - English manuscripts not yet constituting a formal presence). This radically new richness employs as access to texts the age-old device of incipits, or opening words, as the CD's punning title tells us. Incipits were, for the pre-moveable type world, what title pages are to us today - the weight-bearing identifiers of a text. Some remnants of this habit have stayed with us, in the way in which the prayer entitled the Lord's Prayer is frequently referred to as the 'Our Father'. But 'duplicate' entries are a desideratum in the sense of the same incipit and the same author but with differing bibliographic citations, whether to manuscript or printed source. In fact, In Principio is intended to produce a number of matches, thus allowing the scholar to locate additional copies of his text, and to begin tracing the patterns of reception of a text (with which other texts did it circulate?) and patterns of transmission of a text (where and when was it copied?). In this sense, In Principio's 'duplicate' entries are a boon to the encompassing reaches of intellectual history as well as to the very basic techniques of research on primary sources.
Philosophy: Subject Specific Works Readings in classical Political Thought One can gain further information on the following topics regarding medieval philosophy Narrower topics/individual authors. http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/hss/medieval/Advanced Searching/PhilosophySpecific1.htm
Extractions: Medieval Studies Subject Guide Resource Services Section Name Legal Information Center George A. Smathers Libraries Health Science Center Library Library Catalog Databases Search Site Map ... Other Subject Guides Ancient Philosophy Bibliographies Companions General Sources Histories ... Web Resources Medieval Philosophy Bibliographies Companions Gereral Sources Histories ... Web Resources Ancient Philosophy Bell, Albert. Resources in Ancient Philosophy: An Annotated Bibliography of Scholarship in English, 1965-1989 . Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press. 1991.
Fachrichtungen V medieval German Literature Open to students of V classical Contemporary German Literature Open to Sometimes specific authors and their works are chosen as http://www.ku-eichstaett.de/ECTS/faecher/germanistik/fachrichtungen
Extractions: The following is a general list of courses offered. It only lists courses that are offered every semester and briefly describes their general aims. The individual topics of the courses vary from semester to semester. See the course catalogue ( Vorlesungsverzeichnis ) for details. Type of course Courses SWS Obligatory courses PS Introductory Course German Linguistics PS Introductory Course Historical German Linguistics PS Introductory Course Medieval German Literature PS Introductory Course German Literature PS/Ü Introductory Course Didactics of German Language and Literature PS/Ü Introductory Course German as a Second Language/ German as a Foreign Language PS German Linguistics PS Historical German Linguistics PS Mediaeval German Literature PS PS Didactics of German Language and Literature PS Didactics of German as a Second Language/ German as a Foreign Language HS German Linguistics HS German Historical Linguistics HS Medieval German Literature HS Classical and Contemporary German Literature HS Didactics of German Language and Literature HS Didactics of German as a Second Language/ German as a Foreign Language Non-obligatory courses V German Linguistics V German Historical Linguistics V Medieval German Literature V V
Literary Criticism Search by author, specific works or create a custom search. Black Literature Criticism PS 153 N5 B556 1992 Ref, classical and medieval Literature Criticism http://www.com.edu/library/internet/intsub/eng_lc.htm
Extractions: From SIL International (formerly known as the Summer Institute of Linguistics), an organization devoted to work with language communities worldwide to facilitate language-based development through research, translation, and literacy. This site is a brief glossary of terms frequently used in literary criticism. See the
Latin Literature poets, scansion, genres of Latin poetry, and prayers. Latin Literature medieval Latin Post-classical Latin literature and authors. http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/litauthors/
Extractions: zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About History Ancient / Classical History Ancient Rome - Romans ... Latin Language Literature Latin Literature Home Essentials Site Map - Start Here! Atlas - Myths - Timelines ... Trojan War Hero Achilles - Troy zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Atlas and Places - Where? Ancient Greece - Greek Ancient Rome - Romans ANE Egypt Persia Israel... ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb); Subscribe to the About Ancient / Classical History newsletter. Search Ancient / Classical History Poetry and prose, from classical, and medieval authors of Latin literature. and information on classical literature. Alphabetical Recent Classical Writers Greek and Roman writers developed the genres we know of as literature out of star-gazing, song and dance, and telling stories. Texts The Labyrinth Library has a wide selection of medieval Latin texts and translations (c.400-c.1500). Textual Criticism In the process of copying the codices, scrolls, and papyri on which ancient writers wrote, scribes added mistakes, which supplemented by various losses, make the job of interpreting the best reading of many ancient passages a challenge. Bibliotheca Augustana A collection of Latin and Greek writings from all literary periods.
Roman Literature And Authors General Information On Roman Writers Perseus Project Visit such authors as Caesar, Catullus Traditio Journal of ancient and medieval history The Major Periods Comedy, classical, Christian, Technical http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/authorsgeninfo/
Extractions: zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About History Ancient / Classical History Home ... Trojan War Hero Achilles - Troy zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Atlas and Places - Where? Ancient Greece - Greek Ancient Rome - Romans ANE Egypt Persia Israel... ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb); Subscribe to the About Ancient / Classical History newsletter. Search Ancient / Classical History Roman Literature Authors
The Medieval Problem Of Universals customary to classify medieval authors as being realists discuss how the specific medieval questions concerning universals metaphysical disagreements among the authors of this period http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/universals-medieval
Extractions: SEP universally , for all medieval problem of universals is a logical, and historical, continuation of the ancient problem generated by Plato's (428-348 B.C.) theory answering such a bundle of questions, namely, his theory of Ideas or Forms. The inherent problems with Plato's original theory were recognized already by Plato himself. In his Parmenides Plato famously raised a number of difficulties, for which he apparently did not provide satisfactory answers. Aristotle (384-322 B.C.), with all due reverence to his teacher, consistently rejected Plato's theory, and heavily criticized it throughout his own work. (Hence the famous saying, amicus Plato sed magis amica veritas Nevertheless, despite this explicit doctrinal conflict, Neo-Platonic philosophers, pagans (such as Plotinus ca. 204-270, and Porphyry, ca. 234-305) and Christians (such as Augustine, 354-430, and Boethius, ca. 480-524) alike, observed a basic concordance between Plato's and Aristotle's approach, crediting Aristotle with an explanation of how the human mind acquires its universal concepts of particular things from experience, and Plato with providing an explanation of how the universal features of particular things are established by being modeled after their universal archetypes.
NYPL, Classics Research Guide Includes links to other authors. Archived from 1990 to the present. classical and medieval History http//www.loc.gov/rr/main/alcove9/classics.html Library http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/grd/resguides/classics/classics.cfm
Extractions: @import "/styles/markup-nonNS4.css"; Skip to Left Navigation Skip to Main Content get a library card? find a book? renew a book? reserve a book? research a topic? find a job at NYPL? volunteer for NYPL? support NYPL? rent space? learn to read? learn English? find events? find exhibitions? find classes? connect with wireless? Ressourcen f¼r die klassische Philologie im Internet
The Medieval Review About The medieval Review. Since 1993, The medieval Review (TMR; formerly the Bryn Mawr medieval Review) has been publishing reviews of current work in all areas of medieval Studies, a field it interprets as broadly as possible. and, of course, from authors and publishers wishing to the right to forbid specific uses deemed injurious to http://www.hti.umich.edu/b/bmr/tmr.html
Extractions: Basic Boolean Proximity Bibliography ... Help Since 1993, The Medieval Review (TMR; formerly the Bryn Mawr Medieval Review) has been publishing reviews of current work in all areas of Medieval Studies, a field it interprets as broadly as possible. The electronic medium allows for very rapid publication of reviews, and provides a computer searchable archive of past reviews, both of which are of great utility to scholars and students around the world. TMR operates as a moderated distribution list. Subscribers receive reviews as e-mail; TMR posts each review as soon as the editors have received and edited it. There is no paper TMR. Once posted, reviews are archived and available for viewing, searching, printing, etc. on this website ( http://www.hti.umich.edu/t/tmr/ A board of distinguished review editors assists the editors in finding reviewers for books. The editors welcome expressions of interest from potential reviewers and, of course, from authors and publishers wishing to submit review copies. Please address any questions about TMR to the editors at TMR-L@wmich.edu, or at the snail-mail address below. Permission to reproduce TMR reviews may be broadly presumed, but the editors reserve the right to forbid specific uses deemed injurious to the best interests of the project or its home institutions. Permission to retransmit or republish will be granted to noncommercial media on condition that TMR is supplied with copies of the retransmission.
NYPL, Classics Research Guide RS*GBI 95-754. Fundamental resource for classical, medieval, and Renaissance manuscripts. Bibliography to the ancient medical authors.Bern Hans Huber, 1973. http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/grd/resguides/classics/bib.html
Extractions: @import "/styles/markup-nonNS4.css"; Skip to Left Navigation Skip to Main Content get a library card? find a book? renew a book? reserve a book? research a topic? find a job at NYPL? volunteer for NYPL? support NYPL? rent space? learn to read? learn English? find events? find exhibitions? find classes? connect with wireless? Classics Berkowitz, Luci. Thesaurus Linguae Graecae canon of Greek authors and works. 3rd ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990. *RS-NRE 90-13500. Offers "a printed version of the literary-historical and bibliographic substructure upon which the TLG data bank rests." Boyle, Leonard E. Medieval Latin paleography: a bibliographical introduction. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1984. JFD 86-5288. Covers all aspects of medieval texts. Bruggemann, Lewis. A view of the English editions, translations and illustrations of the ancient Greek and Latin authors. New York: Burt Franklin, 1971.
Extractions: THE "MIDDLE" CENTURIES OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION FROM BYZANTIUM TO THE FRENCH REVOLUTION Central Site Return Above Virtual Renaissance - A Journey Through Time - A SPECIAL SITE For the Renaissance, spend a day on this site. "Travel back through time and space to a world completely different from your own. The incredibly creative " New Apprentices on The Way to Guild Hall." Stunning and remarkable project by the faculty and students of Twin Groves Junior High School really has no competition. If this level of writing and creativity is indicative of what young students can do, some of American education, at least, is producing miracles. - SPECIAL CREATIVITY Dawn of Man to Ancient Times. Gods, Goddesses, Vikings, Mongols. Dark Ages to Renaissance. King Arthur, Robin Hood, Crusades, Religion. Ships, and Sea. The Great Wars. History of Science and Medicine, resources for educators, students, reenactors. This site is like a whirlpool that can suck up a lot of your time! Grover Furr's Medieval History and Literature Page - SPECIAL LINKS Essential resource links located on this web site! Basic Medieval Resources on the Web, Chaucer, Middle English and Other Medieval Literatures, Journals and Criticism, History, Art, Music, and Culture. Medieval History Course by Paul Halsall of Fordham University presenting an excellent course outline summarizing "The End of the Classical World to the Later Middle Ages." If you can't find what you're browsing for on our fantastic site, Mr. Furr's reference of links is a great option.