View Article  To be continued in our next
From now on, postings may be found here.   more »
View Article  Was Pompeii really like this?
Mary Beard's blog deals with the interesting fact that the Pompeii that we visit, and the images we see, have been reconstructed and repainted, sometimes so as to misrepresent the original desperately.   more »
View Article  Corinium Museum’s new Roman Garden
Visitors can come and relax in a setting similar to ancient Italy this summer thanks to a makeover of the Corinium Museum’s Roman Garden.   more »
View Article  The Eagle of the Ninth to be a film
Focus Features and Film4 announced they will finance the Roman epic adventure The Eagle of the Ninth, with Academy Award winner Kevin MacDonald (The Last King of Scotland) as the director.   more »
View Article  Princeton's Latin salutatorian
As a chemical engineering major, James Morrison has earned the top ranking in the department and a reputation among his professors as one of the most impressive students they have taught at Princeton.   more »
View Article  Automatic crossword puzzle maker
See new blog   more »
View Article  Latin Language dot us blog
Teachers may find some interesting stuff on this blog. I've only just come across it. It has been written, since last December, by Chris Jones.   more »
View Article  Two and a half thousand articles
I notice that this will be blog article number 2502.

I am seriously considering the migration of the blog to a different server, but am daunted by the task of moving so much stuff.   more »
View Article  Roman surgical instruments
A useful page from the University of Virginia of photos with explanations.   more »
View Article  Missed this one - Philip Howard to Boris Johnson spd
To Boris Johnson, who apparently favours Latin as the official language of City Hall...   more »
View Article  Chichester Roman baths uncovered - link with new museum
The baths will form a key feature of the proposed Chichester District Museum and will be temporarily uncovered for archaeologists to inspect the relics.   more »
View Article  Bob Lister's retirement
We are trying to contact ex trainees and ex mentors of Bob's time at Cambridge but are having difficulty with addresses etc   more »
View Article  Buy a home with a Roman skeleton
a customer in York will acquire one historic feature which may test the nerve of future occupants – a Roman burial chamber complete with its own skeleton.   more »
View Article  Keeping up Latin after GCSE or after A level
"I am kept very busy in my roles as taxi driver for the children, farm secretary etc, etc and must admit that I have not looked at any Latin or Greek for many years!"   more »
View Article  Year 6 video of Prometheus and Pandora on the Minimus website
I enjoyed this cleverly edited video of the Prometheus story acted in Latin. I suppose one might hear some rumores senum severiorum about some of the pronunciation, but it's a good production.   more »
View Article  TV programme on Hadrian's Wall
HISTORY expert and television presenter Neil Oliver has chosen a North East landmark as his favourite place, highlighting Hadrian’s Wall as the place he most likes to visit.   more »
View Article  Is classics still relevant? An alfresco Latin lesson convinces Christopher Middleton
Yes, it's quarter past two on a Sunday afternoon and, while other park-users are engaged in dog walking and frisbee throwing, this group of a dozen students has gathered to swap reflexive verbs under the banner of Latin in the Park.   more »
View Article  Chester holds Roman festival tomorrow and Monday
The second annual Festival of Minerva is a free event set up by Roman Tours/Deva Victrix and the Grosvenor Museum.   more »
View Article  Fishbourne Roman Palace celebrates its 40th anniversary
On Saturday May 31 a fleet of 1960s vintage cars will welcome visitors to the Palace for a return to 1968 to see how the archaeologists uncovered the world-famous mosaics.   more »
View Article  Video on Latin roots
Er ... that's it.   more »
View Article  Hear Peter Jones on Radio 4
Radio 4's Today programme had a piece with Peter Jones and Michael Fallon about Peter's new book 'Vote for Caesar'.   more »
View Article  Avitus on YouTube
Those who took part in the Latin conversation group at a recent Summer School with Avitus will be interested in this video.   more »
View Article  Vindolanda - massive granaries found
Excavations at Vindolanda are revealing two massive granaries whose quality even outshone the nearby commanding officer’s quarters. The dig is also uncovering a magnificent flagged roadway next to the granaries.   more »
View Article  Independent reprints Miles Kington article on Latin
The British like to think of themselves as bad linguists, especially when it comes to Latin – yet the curious thing is that we all know more Latin than perhaps we realise.   more »
View Article  Boris and the Classics - two views
The claim that classical education is in decline in Britain is a popular one, but I'm afraid that it is not an accurate one. In fact, there are more students studying Classics at my university (Oxford) than ever before; moreover, Latin in schools has increased threefold in the last seven years   more »
View Article  "British Public School" in France
Learning Latin, attending Catechism and hurrying along draughty corridors to prayer   more »
View Article  Latin and history; Latin and French
In 2006 Bringfield's Head Press published a book of prose and verse, some written in Latin, about the Battle of Ramillies. This year they will be dealing with the Battle of Oudenarde in July, 1708.   more »
View Article  altius, citius, fortius, sed ...
Brian Bishop has spotted an apt Latin tag, aptly extended.   more »
View Article  Summer School update 2 - lectures
The latest list of lectures at the ARLT Summer School in Uppingham School, from Monday 21st July to Saturday 26th July 2008.   more »
View Article  Summer School update 1 - option groups
A lot more detail about the option groups at the ARLT Summer School in Uppingham School, from Monday 21st July to Saturday 26th July 2008.   more »
View Article  Agricola - where Tacitus and archaeology don't meet
People who, like me, prefer their history to come in memorable, uncontroversial stories, are advised to stay away from the Agricola papers. But in fairness to our students we perhaps should read about why Tacitus should not be taken as a reliable narrative - and where the standard histories of Roman Britain are probably wrong.   more »
View Article  The Mayor, the AGM and CICERO
Boris Johnson is going to announce the winners of the CICERO competition in his Presidential Address to the Joint Association of Classical Teachers   more »
View Article  Paperback translations from OUP
My selection from the new list from Oxford. The first is an original work, and the rest are translations. They are all less than £20.   more »
View Article  Euripides' Hippolytus in Gilbert Murray's translation in Oxford
Please find the details below for a production of one of Euripides' most famous and influential tragedies, to be staged at New College Oxford next month.   more »
View Article  Maternity cover needed at Hulme Grammar Schools
Full-time Classics teacher required by the Hulme Grammar Schools, Chamber Road Oldham, OL8 4BX   more »
View Article  The Red Ladies
The University of Oxford Onassis Programme (which supports the development of new theatre work inspired by ancient Greek drama) is bringing the Red Ladies to Oxford and London at the end of this month.   more »
View Article  The message of The Oresteia for today
A couple of weeks ago, my wife and I saw an amazing play at the Barbican theatre in London, `Molora'. It is a South African version of the three Greek tragedies by Aeschylus, known as the Oresteia trilogy.   more »
View Article  Teaching the earliest Latin lessons by the Direct Method
How the Direct Method, described in detail in this article, could be combined with the Latin courses at present in use is an interesting question.   more »
View Article  100 plus photos of mosaics from the Bardo Museum
See new blog   more »
View Article  Vatican site has the most recent Vulgate
Dipping into the Vatican Latin site (see recent post) I find that the Vulgate is there on line, but not as I know it, Jim. Apparently the Second Vatican Council authorised a new scholarly version, first of the Psalms and then of the whole Bible:   more »
View Article  Young pilgrims to sing Latin as they walk
This weekend about 6,000 young Catholics will set off on a 75-mile walk from Paris to Chartres Cathedral — and as they walk they will all be praying and singing in Latin.   more »
View Article  James Curle - chatty article on this Scots archaeologist
HOW a solicitor from Melrose became Scotland's most celebrated archaeologist – thanks to a Roman treasure trove on his doorstep.   more »
View Article  Class-con - sandals for modern gladiatrices
It is historical fact that there were female gladiators" writes Stephen Wisdom, author of Gladiators: 100 BC to AD 200. The proof lies in literature: Suetonius and Martial, among other authors, made mention of gladiatrices. A marble relief in the British Museum depicts combatants named Achillia and Amazon in the midst of a match in a region of the Roman Empire called Halicarnassus.   more »
View Article  Vatican Latin website
The Roman Catholic Church, for centuries a bastion of Latin usage, has given the ancient tongue a 21st Century boost by launching a website in Latin.   more »
View Article  Class-con from Ireland
Going through my pictures from last summer I came upon this, which I like very much.   more »
View Article  Did gladiators get killed?
In gladiatorial combat, the death rate was only about 5 percent, and that was usually through accidental injury or poor medical care. One doctor to a gladiatorial troupe in Turkey wrote that none of his athletes died.   more »
View Article  Not hugely sexy, but ...
Catching up on Mary Beard's blog, I was amazed, and very pleased, to find that this blog featured in her list of ten best blogs.   more »
View Article  On teaching Latin - films on YouTube
Transferred to the new blog   more »
View Article  Have you discovered Classics Comeback yet?
Have a look at the recent contribution from Fettes on our Forum.   more »
View Article  Paul McCartney on Latin
“I always used to encourage my own kids to learn a bit of Latin because it’s the root of the English language and all the romantic languages. Sometimes, when you are trying to work out what a word means, you can go back to the Latin root and I like that aspect.”   more »
View Article  Helpful books for teaching
Classical Workbooks sent an update with the recent JACT/ARLT mailing.   more »
View Article  Rap based on Amores I
Thanks to Sally Knights and Redland School for this rap based on Amores I.   more »
View Article  Hic, haec, hoc - on YouTube
Thank to Sally Knights and Redland School for this.   more »
View Article  Ovid Amores I 4.31-40
More from Chigwell on YouTube   more »
View Article  Amores I 4.61-70 - the text translated and explained.
On YouTube   more »
View Article  JACT President takes on new day job
Congratulations must go to JACT President Boris Johnson on his election as Mayor of London.   more »
View Article  Biennial JACT/British School at Athens Teachers' Course, Easter 2009
With the latest mailing from JACT/ARLT came this notice. The course seems to be a comprehensive tour of all the sites in southern Greece you will ever want to visit, in the company of learned Classicists, so I commend it to teachers.   more »
View Article  Why was Rome called Rome?
How many times have we read: Romulus, the eponymous founder of Rome?   more »
View Article  A personal experience of walking on Hadrian's Wall
the one that most captivates walkers is Hadrian’s Wall.   more »
View Article  Studying Roman technology
Perl and his classmates are learning first-hand how the ancient Romans engineered and built architectural monuments like the Pantheon and the Colosseum, Roman baths, aqueducts, mosaics, and catapults. At the same time, they are learning about Roman daily life, from art and architecture, to transportation and urban planning.   more »
View Article  Antonine plague (smallpox) in Gloucester - they think
It's worth visiting the link and watching the video of the Points West report.   more »
View Article  Iris 6 is out in May
The sixth issue of Iris magazine will be out in May. This edition focuses on the search for truth in the ancient world, and includes:   more »
View Article  Latin in the Park - Oxford Mail report
The Oxford Mail reports on Lorna Robinson's initiative.   more »
View Article  Schools Event at Yorkshire Museum
Lizzie Belcher has sent details of an epigraphy day at the YM on June 23rd.   more »
View Article  Classics job going in Saffron Walden
See the advert here for Latin at both GCSE and Advanced Level. Currently over 20 students are studying Latin GCSE.   more »
View Article  Deva Victrix
Our primary function was to parade through the streets of Chester during the summer as a tourist attraction.   more »
View Article  3-dvd edition of The Fall of the Roman Empire reviewed
Finally, a third DVD delivers a series of short films, commissioned by the Encyclopedia Brittanica, which offers a classroom like take on Roman History (this material is only available as part of the limited edition package).   more »
View Article  Another site for sharing Classics teaching resources
"The Classics Library is a month old, and I hope you’ve been able to make some use of it!"   more »
View Article  CIRCE wins an EU award
It's a long time - too long - since I visited the CIRCE site. The news page announces that the project has won an award:   more »
View Article  From Lorna Robinson: Radio 4 report on Latin in the Park
I've only just been told! Radio four recorded a Latin in the Parks session   more »
View Article  Sharing experiences and tips about school trips
A suggestion that a Classics teachers' TripAdvisor be set up.   more »
View Article  Roman gate found in Cologne
A town gate that was probably built with a grant from Roman Emperor Nero has been discovered in Cologne   more »
View Article  Editor of Technology Review re-learning Latin
I am hoping that memorizing the language's endless conjugations and declensions, and submitting myself to its exacting syntax, will keep my brain plastic as I cruise into my 40s.   more »
View Article  Some bits of Roman Britain news
Roman Britain is alive and popular, and being dug up or exhibited   more »
View Article  OUP Classical Studies Catalogue 2008 now available online
I pass on this notice that came to me from OUP   more »
View Article  Doctor Who still available - just!
Here is the link to the BBC player. It's available for only 7 days after broadcast.   more »
View Article  Hellenic Bookservice is moving up the road and holding a party
You are cordially invited to the launch of The Hellenic Bookservice’s new shop, 100 metres from our current address   more »
View Article  CICERO competition in Malvern
A slideshow with comments.   more »
View Article  CICERO competition - report on the Spanish section
The CICERO experience on April 18th was truly wonderful   more »