Chapters
The Roman and Greek Empire, not only left behind them ancient languages that somehow still survived today, but they also left a huge heritage and mark on the land they conquered. Even though both empires fell, they created the foundation of the European civilisation. The Roman civilisation is so wide and complex that hundred if not thousands of books have been written to attempt to retrace, understand and rediscover an Empire that disappeared more than 1,500 years ago.
Learning Latin Today
In the past, Latin was probably one of the most boring subjects you could be studying. You had to learn all the declension by heart, repeating them again and again. Memorize endless lists of vocabulary and verbs and their translations. No wonder that the number of Latin learner dropped drastically after it was no longer necessary to study Latin to enter a Law or Medicine School, in the early 20th century. Current teaching method has managed to make Latin a much more interesting subject to study by including more than learning how to speak, read or write Latin. If you learn Latin today you will also learn about :
- The history of Literature
- The Greco-Roman mythology and religions
- Politics, philosophy and rhetoric
- Science and Arts
- The influence of Latin on modern languages including English
- The history of the Roman civilisation
- The laws and civil institutions of the Roman Empire
Rather than only learning a language, teachings include a multi-disciplinary curriculum that will take you beyond the simple Latin to English or English to Latin translations. Despite being a dead language, Latin has the main advantage to be the mother tongue of 5 of the main Indo-European languages: French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian. The Rosetta Stone which was discovered in Egypt in 1799, was engraved in two different Egyptian languages and in Greek but was first translated in Latin by Jean-Francois Champollion in 1822. Did you know Latin works as a gateway to other Romance languages?
Short History Of The Roman Civilisation
When one speaks about the Roman civilisation, one usually thinks about the Roman Empire. However the Empire era "only" cover 5 of the 13 centuries of the History of Rome. Historians agree to say that the History of the Antic Rome lasted at least 1229 years and has known 3 different political systems. Legend has it that the city of Rome was founded on the banks of the Tiber River, in the region of the Latium in 753BC, by Romulus, who after winning a duel whit his brother Remus, bequeathed his name to the city.
The Roman Monarchy
- Romulus (753-716BC), founding father of Rome and creator fo the Senate.
- Num Pompilius (715-671BC), invented the first Roman calendar made of 12 months and created the first Roman laws.
- Tullus Hostilius (671-640BC), began the expansion of Rome in the Latium region.
- Ancus Marcius (640-616AD), created the city of Ostia, the port of Rome.
- Tarquin the Elder (616-578AD.
- Servius Tullius (578-534AD).
- Tarquin the Great (534-509AD).
Very few texts about the three centuries of the Roman Monarchy survived since the Archaic Latin used at the time mainly rested on a verbal tradition. Yet, we know that the last three kings of Rome were Etruscans and that they adopted the Etruscan alphabet (derived from the Greek alphabet).
The Roman Republic
The Republic started in 509BC and lasted until 27BC when Emperor Augustus was coronated. The Roman Republic was characterised by many conflicts that led to the conquest of Etrusca and the rest of Italy (from Rome to Campania, from Pompei to Sicily), of Gaul and all the Mediterranean basin. The defeated people often spoke a different dialect and had to learn a foreign language, i.e. Latin, to be able to integrate the Roman Empire. One of the greatest threat that the Roman had to face during that period was the attack and siege of Rome by the Gauls in 390BC. Lasting seven months the siege saw the Roman armies defeated several times. The invasion ended with the defeat of the Roman and the sack of Rome. The political and economic institutions of Rome strengthened and the alliances and partnerships that Rome created allowed the city to win many military victories and eventually to dominate the Italic peninsula. The Greek language remains very important during the era of the Empire: Virgil writes in ancient Greek and The Iliad by Homer was at the time considered to be a Roman masterpiece. Many of the Roman elite spoke conversational Greek as it was often taught as a first language in the noblest families hence the explanation why most senators were at least bilingual. Latin and Greek became the vehicular vernacular, lingua franca, in the whole of the Western Mediterranean basin. According to the Roman historian, Titus Livius, because Rome was constantly under attacks from barbaric (non-Roman) tribes, it was decided as early as the century BC that only a territorial expansion policy would guarantee the safety of Rome and its institutions. The Republic became an autocratic Empire, where one main possess all powers and is supported by a well-trained army and a massive administration. Did you know you could improve your English skills by learning Latin?
The Roman Empire
The Imperial era of Rome spreads from 27BC to 476AD, the year of the fall of Rome.
"Veni, Vedi, Vici" (I came, I saw, I conquered), famous Latin phrase attributed to Julius Caesar
To complicate it even more, Christianity started to spread shortly after the coronation of the first Emperor, Augustus. At first, Christians would be persecuted, but Constantine I would abolish this in 313AD and granted all Christians safety within the Roman Empire. He also built what was to become the centre of the Catholic Church, St. Peter's Basilica. From early on, all newly annexed province had to learn and use Latin as their official language. It was the only language schools were allowed to teach in the provinces. Vulgar Latin was the version of the language that was spoken, in opposition to Classical Latin that was mainly used to write literature and philosophical texts. Both the legionnaires and the civil servants of the Roman Empire were instrumental to spread the use of Latin amongst the local populations of the Empire. This influence and the mix with the native language the local population used was the beginning of the Romance languages. After a long period of trouble and many successive barbaric attacks, Rome eventually fell to the hands of Odoacer, who deposed the last Emperor of the Western Roman Empire, Romulus, and declared himself king of Italy in 476AD. Discover Superprof's top ten reasons you should study Latin...
Latin Culture: Roman Literature and Arts
The oldest documents of the Latin literature are liturgical songs and political theatre plays. The Roman literature was greatly influenced by the Greek language and culture which was held as nobler at the time. Historians discovered many texts from the ancient world written in Greek. Cato the Elder (234-149BC) is one of the first known Roman authors use Latin vocabulary to write poetry. Latin literature saw the development of many genres: prose, satire, poetry in verse, comedy, tragedy and rhetoric, all reflecting a taste for logic and common sense, an interest for laws and the defence of the motherland against the barbaric invaders. Cicero (106-43BC), Plautus (254-185BC), Terence (190-159BC), Lucrecius (94-54BC), Catulla (84-54AD) all produced numerous political texts. The Golden Age of the Latin culture is referred by historians at the "century of Augustus" and comprises many very famous authors mostly active during the first years of the Empire under Emperor Augustus: Vergil (70-19BC), Horace (65-8BC), Seneca (4BC-65AD), Titus Livius (59BC-17AD), Pliny the Elder (23-79AD), Pliny the Younger (61-113AD). Literature became a noble art reserved to the intellectual elite of the Empire and which kept track of the splendour of Rome. Do you know all of the great benefits you could derive from learning Latin?
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