Reviving Latin teaching in Great Neck –

It looks as though what we would call secondary school students are teaching Latin in primary schools. Good for them.

Newsday

Forty fifth-graders at E.M. Baker and Lakeville elementary schools in the Great Neck district are learning the basics of Latin this fall through an after-school program coordinated by Great Neck South High School students Brian Miranda and Christopher Leung.

The program was initiated last year by Brian’s brother, Stephen Miranda, who was a senior then and concerned about the declining interest in Latin. He secured a grant to provide Latin lessons from Ascanius: The Youth Classic Institute.

“My goal is to increase enrollment in middle-school Latin by showing fifth-graders that Latin is not as difficult as it’s proclaimed to be, and that it’s actually quite interesting,” said Stephen.

The weekly classes are being offered through January.

FT letters on the financial crisis and Roman parallels

This month the Financial Times (I recently heard someone describe it as the UK’s only reliable newspaper) has published three letters which Classics teachers may find interesting.

The first was from Prof David Potter of Ann Arbor on the problems facing Vespasian on his accession.

The second, from Andrew Morrison of King’s Lynn, blames Tiberius for a ‘catastrophic financial downturn’.

The third, from Prof Gautam Pingle of Hyderabad, quotes a book by Charles Beard in which he wrote about the fortunes of ancient Rome: “With many weak minds the theme has become a disease”.

The all-party Parliamentary Classics Group

A friend has given me the url (web address) giving the officers and members of the all-party parliamentary Classics group. It is http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmallparty/register/memi211.htm

The group is chaired by Michael Fallon; the treasurer is Tim Loughton. Contact details:

Mr Michael Fallon MP, House of Commons, London SW1A OAA. Tel: 020 7219 6482

Sophocles helps US soldiers deal with stress

This link is copied from Rogue Classicism. I don’t habitually repeat stuff from R.C. – everyone committed to the Classics should get a feed from it. But for those who haven’t yet set up RSS, here is a story that may be useful in class.

For as long as there have been wars, there have been warriors who survive — and yet become as much casualties of battle as those who died.

In fact, some think that the Greek playwright Sophocles was writing, in military dramas like Ajax and Philoctetes, about what today we call post-traumatic stress disorder — and that his plays were performed by veterans, for veterans, in part to help them heal.

Now Sophocles is finding a military audience once again. The venue? A Marriott hotel ballroom, where 300 uniformed men and women sit watching, box lunches on their laps.

Onstage, a soldier’s wife weeps over the carnage caused by her husband — the crazed combat veteran Ajax, who in a rage has slaughtered dozens of farm animals, believing them to be his superior officers.


Read the rest and see video of an ‘Ajax’ scene

Hadrian’s Wall – new visitor centre planned.

Times and Star

Roman heritage development is one step closer

MARYPORT is one step closer this week to a multi-million-pound Roman heritage development that could create up to 120 jobs in the town.

Hadrian’s Wall Heritage Ltd has announced that it has bought part of Camp Farm, next to the Senhouse Roman Museum.

The land is one of Cumbria’s most important ancient sites.

Hadrian’s Wall Heritage can now start looking at plans to build a visitor centre.

Peter Greggains, chairman of the Senhouse Museum Trust, said that even before the development began, the museum would be celebrating with a three-week Roman festival next year.

He said: “Now that Camp Farm is owned by Hadrian’s Wall Heritage Limited, the people of Maryport and, we hope, increasing numbers of visitors to the town will be able to explore one of the most important ancient sites in Cumbria.

“We plan, in 2009, to organise a three-week Roman festival at the museum, showcasing the ambitious plans for further development of a world-class heritage attraction.”

He added: “With the co-operation of Harold and Dorothy Messenger, the site’s former owners, we have been able to establish, by geophysical survey, the extent of the Roman town. Undoubtedly much remains to be discovered.”

Jane Laskey, Senhouse museum curator, said it was early days and full plans had not been finalised.

Credit crunch in Rome, 88 B.C. but no solutions.

This is another bit of class-con from today’s Guardian.

Politicians searching for
historical precedents for the current financial turmoil should start
looking a bit further back after an Oxford University historian
discovered what he believes is the world’s first credit crunch in 88BC.

The
good news is that Philip Kay knows how the Romans got themselves into
financial bother. The bad news is no one knows how they got themselves
out of it.

“The essential similarity between what happened 21
centuries ago and what is happening in today’s UK economy is that a
massive increase in monetary liquidity culminated with problems in
another country causing a credit crisis at home. In both cases distance
and over-optimism obscured the risk,” said Kay, a supernumerary fellow
at Wolfson College.

The monetary historian is giving a lecture
today in which he will reveal how Cicero, the Roman orator, gave a
speech in 66BC in which he alluded to the credit crunch. Cicero was
arguing that Pompey the Great should be given military command against
Mithridates VI, king of Pontus on the Black sea coast of what is now
Turkey. He reminded his audience of events in 88BC, when the same
Mithridates invaded the Roman province of Asia, on the western coast of
Turkey. Cicero claimed the invasion caused the loss of so much Roman
money that credit was destroyed in Rome itself.

The orator told
his audience: “Defend the republic from this danger and believe me when
I tell you – what you see for yourselves – that this system of monies,
which operates at Rome in the Forum, is bound up in, and is linked
with, those Asian monies; the loss of one inevitably undermines the
other and causes its collapse.”

Kay said the words were
“remarkable” for their contemporary tone. “Substitute US sub-prime for
‘the Asian monies’ and the UK banking system for ‘the system of monies
which operates in the Roman Forum’ and it could have been written about
the current credit crisis,” said Kay.

“In second-century and
early first-century BC Rome, increased inflows of bullion combined with
an expansion in the availability of credit to produce a massive growth
in Rome’s money supply. This increase in the supply and availability of
money in turn resulted both in a major increase in Roman economic
activity and, eventually, in the credit crisis which Cicero describes.”

So
how did they get themselves out of such a pickle? “There’s very little
information about what happened over the next 20 years I’m afraid,”
said Kay. “We just don’t know.”

Certainly historians know that
Sulla became dictator of the Roman republic after the credit crunch,
but Kay said the two events were unrelated.

Kay, who has a
background in investment banking and fund management, will deliver his
lecture in Oxford. The lecture is organised by the Oxford Roman Economy
Project.

Barack Obama’s debt to Cicero

Thanks to Kris Waite for this link.

The new Cicero
Barack Obama’s speeches are much admired and endlessly analysed, but, says Charlotte Higgins, one of their most interesting aspects is the enormous debt they owe to the oratory of the Romans

The Guardian, Wednesday November 26 2008

In the run-up to the US presidential election, the online magazine Slate ran a series of dictionary definitions of “Obamaisms”. One ran thus: “Barocrates (buh-ROH-cruh-teez) n. An obscure Greek philosopher who pioneered a method of teaching in which sensitive topics are first posed as questions then evaded.”

There were other digs at Barack Obama that alluded to ancient Greece and Rome. When he accepted the Democratic party nomination, he did so before a stagey backdrop of doric columns. Republicans said this betrayed delusions of grandeur: this was a temple out of which Obama would emerge like a self-styled Greek god. (Steve Bell also discerned a Romanness in the image, and drew Obama for this paper as a toga-ed emperor.) In fact, the resonance of those pillars was much more complicated than the Republicans would have it. They recalled the White House, which itself summoned up visual echoes of the Roman republic, on whose constitution that of the US is based. They recalled the Lincoln Memorial, before which Martin Luther King delivered his “I have a dream” speech. They recalled the building on which the Lincoln Memorial is based – the Parthenon. By drawing us symbolically to Athens, we were located at the very birthplace of democracy.

Here’s the thing: to understand the next four years of American politics, you are going to need to understand something of the politics of ancient Greece and Rome.

There have been many controversial aspects to this presidential election, but one thing is uncontroversial: that Obama’s skill as an orator has been one of the most important factors – perhaps the most important factor – in his victory. The sheer numbers of people who have heard him speak live set him apart from his rivals – and, indeed, recall the politics of ancient Athens, where the public speech given to ordinary voters was the motor of politics, and where the art of rhetoric matured alongside democracy.

Obama has bucked the trend of recent presidents – not excluding Bill Clinton – for dumbing down speeches. Elvin T Lim’s book The Anti-Intellectual Presidency: The Decline of Presidential Rhetoric from George Washington to George W Bush, submits presidential oratory to statistical analysis. He concludes that 100 years ago speeches were pitched at college reading level. Now they are at 8th grade. Obama’s speeches, by contrast, flatter their audience. His best speeches are adroit literary creations, rich, like those doric columns, with allusion, his turn of phrase consciously evoking lines by Lincoln and King, by Woody Guthrie and Sam Cooke. Though he has speechwriters, he does much of the work himself. (Jon Favreau, the 27-year-old who heads Obama’s speechwriting team, has said that his job is like being “Ted Williams’s batting coach.”) James Wood, professor of the practice of literary criticism at Harvard, has already performed a close-reading exercise on the victory speech for the New Yorker. Can you imagine the same being done of a George Bush speech?

More than once, the adjective that has been deployed to describe Obama’s oratorical skill is “Ciceronian”. Cicero, the outstanding Roman politician of the late republic, was certainly the greatest orator of his time, and one of the greatest in history. A fierce defender of the republican constitution, his criticism of Mark Antony got him murdered in 43BC.

During the Roman republic (and in ancient Athens) politics was oratory. In Athens, questions such as whether or not to declare war on an enemy state were decided by the entire electorate (or however many bothered to turn up) in open debate. Oratory was the supreme political skill, on whose mastery power depended. Unsurprisingly, then, oratory was highly organised and rigorously analysed. The Greeks and Romans, in short, knew all the rhetorical tricks, and they put a name to most of them.

It turns out that Obama knows them, too. One of the best known of Cicero’s techniques is his use of series of three to emphasise points: the tricolon. (The most enduring example of a Latin tricolon is not Cicero’s, but Caesar’s “Veni, vidi, vici” – I came, I saw, I conquered.) Obama uses tricola freely. Here’s an example: “Tonight, we gather to affirm the greatness of our nation, not because of the height of our skyscrapers, or the power of our military, or the size of our economy …” In this passage, from the 2004 Democratic convention speech, Obama is also using the technique of “praeteritio” – drawing attention to a subject by not discussing it. (He is discounting the height of America’s skyscrapers etc, but in so doing reminds us of their importance.)

One of my favourites among Obama’s tricks was his use of the phrase “a young preacher from Georgia”, when accepting the Democratic nomination this August; he did not name Martin Luther King. The term for the technique is “antonomasia”. One example from Cicero is the way he refers to Phoenix, Achilles’ mentor in the Iliad, as “senior magister” – “the aged teacher”. In both cases, it sets up an intimacy between speaker and audience, the flattering idea that we all know what we are talking about without need for further exposition. It humanises the character – King was just an ordinary young man, once. Referring to Georgia by name localises the reference – Obama likes to use the specifics to American place to ground the winged sweep of his rhetoric – just as in his November 4 speech: “Our campaign … began in the backyards of Des Moines and the living rooms of Concord and the front porches of Charleston”, which, of course, is also another tricolon.

Obama’s favourite tricks of the trade, it appears, are the related anaphora and epiphora. Anaphora is the repetition of a phrase at the start of a sentence. Again, from November 4: “It’s the answer told by lines that stretched around schools … It’s the answer spoken by young and old … It’s the answer …” Epiphora does the same, but at the end of a sentence. From the same speech (yet another tricolon): “She lives to see them stand out and speak up and reach for the ballot. Yes we can.” The phrase “Yes we can” completes the next five paragraphs.

That “Yes we can” refrain might more readily summon up the call-and-response preaching of the American church than classical rhetoric. And, of course, Obama has been influenced by his time in the congregations of powerfully effective preachers. But James Davidson, reader in ancient history at the University of Warwick, points out that preaching itself originates in ancient Greece. “The tradition of classical oratory was central to the early church, when rhetoric was one of the most important parts of education. Through sermons, the church captured the rhetorical tradition of the ancients. America has preserved that, particularly in the black church.”

It is not just in the intricacies of speechifying that Obama recalls Cicero. Like Cicero, Obama is a lawyer. Like Cicero, Obama is a writer of enormous accomplishment – Dreams From My Father, Obama’s first book, will surely enter the American literary canon. Like Cicero, Obama is a “novus homo” – the Latin phrase means “new man” in the sense of self-made. Like Cicero, Obama entered politics without family backing (compare Clinton) or a military record (compare John McCain). Roman tradition dictated you had both. The compensatory talent Obama shares with Cicero, says Catherine Steel, professor of classics at the University of Glasgow, is a skill at “setting up a genealogy of forebears – not biological forebears but intellectual forebears. For Cicero it was Licinius Crassus, Scipio Aemilianus and Cato the Elder. For Obama it is Lincoln, Roosevelt and King.”

Steel also points out how Obama’s oratory conforms to the tripartite ideal laid down by Aristotle, who stated that good rhetoric should consist of pathos, logos and ethos – emotion, argument and character. It is in the projection of ethos that Obama particularly excels. Take this resounding passage: “I am the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas. I was raised with the help of a white grandfather who survived a Depression to serve in Patton’s army during World War II and a white grandmother who worked on a bomber assembly line at Fort Leavenworth while he was overseas. I’ve gone to some of the best schools in America and lived in one of the world’s poorest nations.” He manages to convey the sense that not only can he revive the American dream, but that he personally embodies – actually, in some sense, is – the American dream.

In English, when we use the word “rhetoric”, it is generally preceded by the word “empty”. Rhetoric has a bad reputation. McCain warned lest an electorate be “deceived by an eloquent but empty call for change”. Waspishly, Clinton noted, “You campaign in poetry, you govern in prose.” The Athenians, too, knew the dangers of a populace’s being swept along by a persuasive but unscrupulous demagogue (and they invented the word). And it was the Roman politician Cato – though it could have been McCain – who said “Rem tene, verba sequentur”. If you hold on to the facts, the words will follow.

Cicero was well aware of the problem. In his book On The Orator, he argues that real eloquence can be acquired only if the speaker has attained the highest state of knowledge – “otherwise what he says is just an empty and ridiculous swirl of verbiage”. The true orator is one whose practice of citizenship embodies a civic ideal – whose rhetoric, far from empty, is the deliberate, rational, careful organiser of ideas and argument that propels the state forward safely and wisely. This is clearly what Obama, too, is aiming to embody: his project is to unite rhetoric, thought and action in a new politics that eschews narrow bipartisanship. Can Obama’s words translate into deeds? The presidency of George Bush provided plenty of evidence that a man who has problems with his prepositions may also struggle to govern well. We can only hope that Obama’s presidency proves that opposite.

• Charlotte Higgins is the author of It’s All Greek To Me: From Homer to the Hippocratic Oath, How Ancient Greece Has Shaped Our World (Short Books).

Find the Romans in France

Ever since I first discovered the area round Arles I’ve hoped that one day this part of France will catch on with Classics teachers.

Rome in France
4:00AM Friday Nov 28, 2008
By Jim Eagles

If you want to see the world’s best preserved Roman amphitheatre, temple and aqueduct bridge then, surprisingly enough, you head not for Rome but for Provence.

Which is why, despite having been in Rome a few days earlier, we decided to take a Roman Sites Tour out of Avignon.

The focal point of the tour – and one of France’s top five tourist attractions – was the extraordinary 2000-year-old Pont du Gard.

This is a stone bridge, 275m long and 49m high, which carries both a roadway and an aqueduct across the River Gardon.

It is a remarkable piece of work, both magnificent to look at, with its three tiers of stone arches, and an exceptionally clever example of construction, having been built entirely without cement.

It is also, of course, part of one of the typically amazing pieces of infrastructure built by the Romans, an aqueduct 50km long to carry water from a spring near the town of Uzes to the city of Nimes.

Uzes, which our tour also visited, doesn’t have much Roman significance but it is a gloriously untouched medieval town and home to the premier dukes and hereditary champions of France. The ducal palace, in the centre of town, looks fascinating but sadly we couldn’t get inside because we hadn’t – in the words of the marvellously superior custodian – “made an appointment in advance”.

Nimes, on the other hand, is full of 2000-year-old Roman buildings still in remarkably good condition.

The amphitheatre, for instance, with its seating for 24,000 spectators, is still used regularly for concerts, in fact they were setting up the sound equipment for one as we wandered around.

And the temple built by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, and dedicated to his two sons, is still in good enough condition to be used for a remarkable multimedia presentation about the turbulent history of Nimes.

Seeing all of this I couldn’t help wondering how many of today’s bridges, watermains, sports stadiums and churches will still be going strong in 2000 years time.

Caesar and the pirates – lessons for Somalia today

Thought Leader (South Africa)

Combating Somali piracy … Roman style

In the year 75BC, Gaius Julius Caesar, citizen of the great Roman Empire was sailing on a Roman battle trireme in the Mediterranean when pirates attacked the ship. Caesar was captured and ransomed, as was the practice back then. Legend has it that the great man was not impressed when the pirates decided to bill his family in Rome only 20 gold talents, a massive fortune at that time. He felt his worth was at least double that and demanded that they increase the ransom. The pirates, being men of commerce, obliged and were duly paid 50 talents of gold for their skulduggery.

Upon being released after spending 40 days in the dark, damp underbelly of the pirates’ ship, Caesar warned the pirates that he would return, hunt them down and kill them all. One can presume that the pirates all broke out into merry, drunken laughter and probably dumped him rather unceremoniously on the deserted shoreline, leaving him with a fairly long distance to walk to the nearest town and an even longer voyage back to Rome and his home estate outside the city. To be fair, they probably had no idea who they were dealing with.

Unfortunately for these particular pirates, Caesar, being Caesar, raised a fleet, hunted down the men that took him captive and exacted his revenge in true Roman fashion; he boarded their vessel with his legionaries, cut down anyone who resisted and crucified anyone who was left. It was the beginning of a rout that Caesar’s great rival Pompey finished emphatically by crushing pirates across the Mediterranean and clearing the routes of trade for the Empire.

It is perhaps interesting to note how the Romans achieved this, particularly since the world is once again facing the vexing problems that Caesar, Pompey, Cicero and their piers faced over two millennia ago.

Firstly, they assembled a great fleet and sent them out with orders to engage and destroy pirates wherever they found them.

Secondly, and more importantly, the Romans knew that to remove the threat posed by pirates at sea, you have to cut them off from their home base on the land. With this principle in mind, Rome invaded Illiria in 68BC, home base of the most prolific and successful piracy in the Adriatic, and effectively stamped the problem out.

Two thousand years have passed and once again the ocean trade routes of the great empires of the world are increasingly threatened by piracy. The epicentre of the current plundering is Somalia where pirates all but control the Gulf of Aden. At least 12 ships are currently under the control of pirates. This year alone has seen 67 attacks with 26 successful hijackings so far in this area alone. In short, it is reaching epidemic proportions and shows no sign of letting up.

Read the rest

Veni Vidi Verulamium

I can’t envisage, from this account, exactly how the high-tech guided tour will work, but I’m all for new ways of bringing the ancient R. to life for the ‘virtual’ generation.

Herts Advertiser

How tourists will be able to conquer the Romans
15:00 – 25 November 2008

JULIUS Caesar came, saw and conquered – and now St Albans Museums are hoping that a new mobile guide can do the same for Roman Verulamium.

A grant of £50,000 has been secured from the Heritage Lottery Fund and other partners for the Veni Vidi Verulamium project which uses mobile multimedia information and educational tours to promote understanding of Roman Verulamium

Accessed using a hand-held device, Veni Vidi Verulamium will make the hidden remains of Rome visible using images, plans, oral histories and archaeological remains.

Visitors will be able to link the artefacts in Verulamium Museum to their original locations of excavation in the park.

The new mobile guide is due be launched in May next year to help celebrate the 70th anniversary of the opening of Verulamium Museum. Eight different tours will be available to cater for a range of audiences, each lasting up to 30 minutes, bringing Roman Britain to life through the eyes of Roman inhabitants and archaeologists.

Cllr Melvyn Teare, the council’s portfolio holder for culture and heritage, said: “For the first time, specialist information will be brought together to create a unique experience for the visitor who wants to step back in time and understand Roman Verulamium.”

And Robyn Llewellyn, the head of the Heritage Lottery Fund East of England, said: “This fantastic project will really bring the museum’s collections to life for everyone to explore.”

Local businesses are invited to be part of the project by helping with some final match funding. The museum is seeking a further £25,000 and anyone wishing to sponsor or donate to the project is asked to contact Mike Gray at the Verulamium Museum Trust on 01727 751816 or email Mike.Gray@stalbans.gov.uk