Vergil for Beginning and Intermediate Readers

Vergil for Beginning and Intermediate Readers

Course Description: Meeting two nights a week (an hour per session), the class will read selections from the student-friendly edition of Vergil’s Aeneid (Books I-VI) by Clyde Pharr, who provides abundant guidance and helpful notes. Additional resources may be furnished or recommended as needed. The course will be paced for an understanding of the grammar and will advance the acquisition of effective reading strategies while studying one of the most important of Latin texts.

DETAILS

Level: Intended for students with an introductory or intermediate knowledge of Latin grammar who wish to improve their proficiency, in order to prepare for advanced reading or conversational courses. The ideal student may have just completed a course in introductory Latin grammar without yet having taken a course reading the great authors, or may have already taken a reading course but does not yet feel completely confident and would like more practice before moving on to advanced reading programs.

Textbook:Clyde Pharr, Vergil’s Aeneid: Books I-VI, Revised Edition (D.C. Heath & Co., 1964). The reprinted edition is available from Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc. or on Amazon

Sections capped at: 5 students. If the course is sold-out, please fill out this waiting-list form.

When
Mondays, Wednesdays, 8:30p.m.-9:30p.m. U.S. Eastern Time

Cost
$650

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Instructor

Robert Ziomkowski

Robert Ziomkowski has degrees in History from Siena College (B.A., 1991) and Cornell University (M.A., 1994; Ph.D., 2000), and a post-doctoral degree from the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (L.M.S., 2002). His research focuses on medieval Platonism and cosmology. His publications include a translation and study of a text by the eleventh-century polemicist Manegold of Lautenbach, as well as a study guide for Western Civilization and articles in the New Dictionary of the History of Ideas and PLOS ONE (“Mathematical Philology”). He attended Fr. Reginald Foster’s summer Latin course in 1994 while doing manuscript research at the Vatican Library, and his fascination with human languages has merged with an interest in computer languages (JavaScript, Python) for the creation of computerized Latin exercises. His other interests include animation and video editing; with his former students at Ithaca College, he produced a short film in Latin on Homer’s Odyssey entitled Ulixes.