Education in Ancient Greece and Rome

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 233

  • @CarthagoMike
    @CarthagoMike 2 года назад +73

    The Pokemon of Smyrna was hard to catch, for his dogs were fierce and plentiful.

  • @Jaxxon123
    @Jaxxon123 Год назад +3

    "Pokemon of Smyrna..." That made me chuckle...Lol

  • @Jamezama
    @Jamezama 2 года назад +151

    This channel is the reason both RUclips and the internet were ever formulated - to spread knowledge and spark curiosity. I'm eternally grateful that people like you continue to make your genre of content. Much love Garrett I wish you every success x

    • @JHimminy
      @JHimminy Год назад

      The internet was created to disperse and secure state power.

  • @automaticmattywhack1470
    @automaticmattywhack1470 2 года назад +183

    If anyone is wondering what Bart Simpson wrote on the blackboard it was: "Romans, go home!" We know he got the syntax correct because of the scene from Monty Python's Life of Brian. I love your sense of humor, Dr Ryan!

    • @sugarnads
      @sugarnads 2 года назад

      These people called romans they go home?

    • @williamwolf2844
      @williamwolf2844 Год назад +3

      That's true, and thanks for bringing up "The Life of Bryan". Please forgive me for being a bit of a pedant, but it would be better to say that Bart got the morphology right (not that he got the syntax right). We could also use the rather archaic language of the teaching the classics and say that he got the accidence (inflections: verb conjugations and noun / adjective declensions) right.

    • @nerdporkspass1m1st78
      @nerdporkspass1m1st78 3 месяца назад

      Ah, I love that scene! Life of Brian is such a blast.

  • @techthumbs3559
    @techthumbs3559 2 года назад +28

    I studied under Pokemon of Smyrna.

  • @drdojo7295
    @drdojo7295 2 года назад +112

    Of course this comes out right after I finish my research outline for "an analysis of greco-roman pedagogy"

    • @vikrantsharma8249
      @vikrantsharma8249 2 года назад +1

      I think this is all contained in the toldinstine’s book naked statues and these videos are randomly transcribing chapters into videos

    • @toldinstone
      @toldinstone  2 года назад +40

      No, this is new stuff

    • @vikrantsharma8249
      @vikrantsharma8249 2 года назад +3

      @@toldinstone oop. My bad. You’re right. Guess I’m a confabulation

    • @BuriedFlame
      @BuriedFlame 2 года назад +2

      @@vikrantsharma8249 Faaab-ulation! *SHING*

  • @TetsuShima
    @TetsuShima 2 года назад +150

    -"I am tired of studying phylosophy. Let's study music now!"
    -"You will need philosophy much more than music."
    -"What for?"
    -"For any state office you're going to hold. You have to prepare for responsibility"
    -"What I want is to be a great actor, dancer, and singer. Can you talk about responsibility when it comes to art?
    -"Not of moral responsibility."
    -"You're an old fool, Seneca
    -"That's not appropriate at all. You are going to apologize in fifty lines of hendecasyllables that you will present to me tomorrow morning."
    -"What if I don't present them to you?"
    -"I'll tell your mother."
    -"Those Hendecasyllables...can they be sung?"
    *Argument between phylosopher Seneca and his pupil Nero during the last years of the Reign of Claudius*

    • @DanceNightAtDiscoFright
      @DanceNightAtDiscoFright Год назад +4

      Really? That's hilarious!

    • @TetsuShima
      @TetsuShima Год назад +7

      @@DanceNightAtDiscoFright It's fromthe Anthony Burguess' novel "The Kingdom of the Wicked"

    • @polyglot8
      @polyglot8 Год назад +3

      That reminds me of a scene from Moliêre's "Le Bourgois Gentilhomme" where the teachers are arguing which of their subjects are more important.

  • @brick6347
    @brick6347 2 года назад +152

    "My dog ate my wax tablet"

    • @jwilson544
      @jwilson544 Год назад +2

      In all honesty, I feel a dog is more likely to eat that then paper

    • @mreps4629
      @mreps4629 Год назад

      ​@jwilson544 yah its like a chew toys.

    • @JR-zi9vj
      @JR-zi9vj Год назад

      ​@jwilson544 u say that but my dogs would 100% chew on any notebook and rip it up if left on the floor or couch

    • @chelebelle2223
      @chelebelle2223 Год назад +1

      "A likely story young man..." 🤨
      --ancient Greco-Roman professor

  • @TetsuShima
    @TetsuShima 2 года назад +184

    For those interested in Roman-era education, the Robert Graves' book "I, Claudius" recounts in great detail from Emperor Claudius' point of view what it was like to be educated among the great elites of the Roman Empire. It's quite funny that Claudius went from being bullied for his disabilities to being respected by his classmates thanks to the influence of his brother Germanicus and his cousin Postumus Agrippa, who were very popular during his school years

    • @thessop9439
      @thessop9439 2 года назад +8

      Ohhh my dad is reading it. He likes it

    • @brianaguila6925
      @brianaguila6925 2 года назад +4

      Claudius according to accounts: historian, a good orator but still stutter when doing casual conversation. Good administrator who knew propaganda

    • @Gorgondantess
      @Gorgondantess 2 года назад +1

      I, Claudius is mostly fictional...

    • @TetsuShima
      @TetsuShima 2 года назад +7

      @@Gorgondantess The book is fictional, but it tells with great detail and accuracy how roman society was back then

  • @thessop9439
    @thessop9439 2 года назад +9

    Your videos make me feel tingles in my insides

  • @DiederikCA
    @DiederikCA 2 года назад +38

    I bought your audiobook on Audible but was very disappointed to find out that it is narrated by someone else. You an excellent narrator! If in the future you could do the narration itself, that would be amazing

  • @jamietie
    @jamietie 2 года назад +48

    If you add Caesar's Commentary on the Gallic Wars, the texts you mention are pretty much the ones I learned taking four years of Latin in high school. With the Romans as hidebound as they often were about curriculum it tickled my sense of humor we were basically still following it 2000 years later

    • @Reziac
      @Reziac 2 года назад +1

      Likewise... alas, I had but one year of Latin, but we learned it in the Roman way!

    • @rickden8362
      @rickden8362 2 года назад

      Those catholic hs like teaching that shit. They have a rationale but the real reason is any lie if there's a 1 in 100,000 chance of getting some to become a priest.

    • @williamwolf2844
      @williamwolf2844 Год назад +2

      @@Reziac You should try to read Ecce Romani. So much fun! I read the first two volumes after I had already learned enough Latin to basically sight read the lessons (with occasional help from the chapter's glossary). So, although I didn't really need to study these two books, I wanted to because the stories were so interesting. This is true even in the first first stories which, of necessity, are short and told using very simple grammar and vocabulary. The authors of these books are great at making even low A1 level materials interesting.
      The JACT course "Reading Greek" is also very good. So, too, the Cambridge and Oxford books as well as "Reading Latin" by Jones and Sidwell. But I prefer "Ecce Romani" and "Reading Greek".

    • @Reziac
      @Reziac Год назад +1

      @@williamwolf2844 Thank you! I'll give that a try!

    • @Lusa_Iceheart
      @Lusa_Iceheart Месяц назад

      Yeah, taking a Latin class myself this semester and it is still indeed basically all Cicero, Horace, Senaca, and Martial. Altho, to be fair to modern curriculum, we only have so much written material from the Late Republic/ Early Empire. A sizable percentage of it is just from Cicero alone, lol. A whole ton of his writings where found on palimpsests (parchments that where reused so had older texts visible just behind the newer text) and where an important source of ancient writing that helped sparked the Renaissance. Back in the Early Empire, they would have had a lot larger volume of material to teach from. The Herculaneum scrolls and the modern efforts to read the fried lumps of charcoal they've been turned into could give us a similar cache of written work like the Cicero texts did in the middle ages. I've personally been liking the Cicero speeches, altho I will admit it would be fun to add some Catullus into the curriculum. Martial just isn't spicy enough.

  • @TetsuShima
    @TetsuShima 2 года назад +38

    It is pretty funny how most of the ancient rulers who had the privilege of being educated by the greatest minds of the time ended up simply ignoring their teachings. For example:
    -Alexander the Great consolidated his conquests mainly through the mixture of Greek, Syrian and Indian cultures and races despite the fact that Aristotle taught him as a child that the Syrians and other Eastern peoples were barbarians with whom the Greeks could not mix.
    -Nero was obsessed with being more of an artist and chariot racer than being an Emperor, despite the fact that his tutor Seneca told him all the time to mature and behave like a great ruler. The only attention Neron gave Seneca was asking him to kill himself.
    -Commodus was the son of Marcus Aurelius himself, who instilled in him his stoic teachings from a young age, but the only thing that mattered to the boy was becoming Hercules

    • @Fantabiscuit
      @Fantabiscuit Год назад

      You mention violent conquerors…who didn’t care about human life, why would they care about their educations?

    • @JR-zi9vj
      @JR-zi9vj Год назад +1

      Can lead a horse to water but u cant make him drink

  • @jimc.goodfellas
    @jimc.goodfellas 2 года назад +9

    "perished from studying too hard".....wow. I don't even have a joke for that

  • @Game_Hero
    @Game_Hero 2 года назад +9

    The humour and pictures are on point with this one :D

  • @jonassss10
    @jonassss10 2 года назад +5

    Thank you for being wonderful❤

  • @mrs6968
    @mrs6968 2 года назад +3

    2 new channels Christmas came early!!!!!!

  • @gabe1ist
    @gabe1ist 2 года назад +12

    Hi Doc, unless I missed it it might be a good idea to link those other channels in the description. Happy to find them on my own though!

  • @vclue846
    @vclue846 2 года назад +11

    you are the best. I hope you make a spotify podcast based on stories and experiences. i loved the pompeii series

    • @toldinstone
      @toldinstone  2 года назад +6

      My new travel channel "Scenic Routes to the Past" will hopefully bring more and more of my travel stories to RUclips. Stay tuned...

  • @jeremybamber5729
    @jeremybamber5729 2 года назад +11

    Very interesting, thank you. I found it particularly interesting how oration and philosophical thought were "taught" in such prescriptive ways. How that parallels today and speaks of human nature across the ages.

  • @joshuaharper372
    @joshuaharper372 2 года назад +4

    Very timely, as I am just preparing for lecturing on literacy and education in the Greco-Roman world.

  • @LukaMargaretich
    @LukaMargaretich 2 года назад +9

    this guy: researching ancient history
    Google: “did you mean *Pokémon* ??”

  • @paulkoza8652
    @paulkoza8652 2 года назад +3

    Thanks Garrett. I have often wondered about this topic. I enjoy your posts. Keep up the good work.

  • @_ipsissimus_
    @_ipsissimus_ 2 года назад +6

    13:00 Laesus? Sordida dives fieri potes. Voca nunc.
    Quintus, Quintus et filii

  • @theeccentrictripper3863
    @theeccentrictripper3863 2 года назад +5

    Damn fine work as always, love me some toldinstone. I was wondering if you would ever do more conversational interviews or long-form podcasts? You've had some really bright people on and those back-and-forths were nice but the questions seemed pre-written and often it felt like interesting doors the answers opened were left entirely unexplored to continue on to the next question at hand. I see the value in doing that but it'd be great to also have something less formal, just a couple historians shooting the shit as equals and letting the magic of all that knowledge unfold itself organically.

  • @ashleypenn7845
    @ashleypenn7845 Год назад

    This is absolutely perfect for our homeschool unit! Thanks so much!

  • @helllooooo9353
    @helllooooo9353 2 года назад +3

    Do a video about greek and roman working culture pleaseee

  • @drew-horst
    @drew-horst 2 года назад +512

    Man it's crazy to think teachers have always been underpaid

    • @paulkoza8652
      @paulkoza8652 2 года назад +14

      Are you surprised?

    • @drew-horst
      @drew-horst 2 года назад +34

      @@paulkoza8652 I wish I was surprised

    • @theeccentrictripper3863
      @theeccentrictripper3863 2 года назад +47

      Eh when it's specifically primary school teachers that actually makes a ton of sense. We can and should respect and value teachers, but frankly nearly anyone can offer a child a primary education, it's a collection of knowledge possessed by anyone who themselves had a primary education and therefor not as valuable in the market as the services of a rhetorician, lawyer, or philosopher would be. You could say that's unfair or not right or impress upon it any other value judgment but the market doesn't care all that much and neither do the parents educating their children.

    • @vortigan9068
      @vortigan9068 2 года назад +13

      most should be fired tbh

    • @danieldalessandro96
      @danieldalessandro96 2 года назад +27

      Underpaid? Questionable. Alot of them don't even deserve their job.

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ 2 года назад +3

    Wonderful stuff!

  • @jp_ribeiropena
    @jp_ribeiropena Год назад

    4:00 has got to be one of the greatest frames I ever saw studying History on RUclips

  • @maxcasteel2141
    @maxcasteel2141 2 года назад +7

    Great video! I would party with Ancient Greek college students

  • @NomeDeArte
    @NomeDeArte 2 года назад +3

    Thank you!

  • @keithslayer0099slayer
    @keithslayer0099slayer 2 года назад +3

    I like your videos and ancient roman history :)

  • @asheland_numismatics
    @asheland_numismatics 2 года назад +2

    This video is awesome like all of them!

  • @mattweiman5144
    @mattweiman5144 Год назад +1

    We studied some greek mythology/writing in my senior language arts class in high school. Absolutely crazy how even in the 2020s United States we still study classical Greek writing.

    • @JR-zi9vj
      @JR-zi9vj Год назад

      Roman numerals in grade school lol

  • @MCKevin289
    @MCKevin289 2 года назад

    It’s really cool how I literally just wrote a lesson plan that has an activity that is a Model UN Style crisis Mod about the Bolivarian Revolution but also incorporates paradox style grand strategy elements.

  • @redheat66
    @redheat66 2 года назад

    I am so thankful for your hard and interesting presentation. It keeps my ghosts away

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 9 месяцев назад +1

    I find it fascinating someone in the 2020’s can so ardently believe that someone who lived thousands of years ago and had no framework of the modern psyche or world could so brazenly claim that those contemporaries of an author “misinterpreted” them.

  • @usergiodmsilva1983PT
    @usergiodmsilva1983PT 2 года назад +3

    Got your book on Halloween, made it through the first 4 chapters, it's a very fun read! If anything I wish there were even more references (for some anedoctes that are aluded to in the text) all in all a great book! Thank you.

    • @toldinstone
      @toldinstone  2 года назад +1

      I'm glad you're enjoying it! You should find references for almost every anecdote - including those in the footnotes - in the endnotes. (The format makes them more difficult to find than I would have liked.)

    • @usergiodmsilva1983PT
      @usergiodmsilva1983PT 2 года назад +1

      @@toldinstone Yes, I've checked them, might have a second read, maybe I missed some. Also, was expecting a word on Julian's Misopogon in the Beard chapter! XD I guess there is plenty of material for a second volume ;)

  • @ianian4162
    @ianian4162 Год назад +3

    Crazy how radically things have changed. Here I am, a 4th year English and Philosophy major, with only a passing familiarity of antiquity. Everything I've studied so far seems so...insignificant in the face of these great classics---of Homer, Cicero, Ovid, or even Plato and Aristotle. I suppose, in today's day, I can call myself "educated," yet I know nothing of the very foundation that predicates the Western world.
    I lament the decline of the classical education.

    • @christinebutler7630
      @christinebutler7630 2 месяца назад +1

      Check out St. John's College, Annapolis, MD, USA. You might be interested in their Graduate Institute.

  • @speederscout
    @speederscout 2 года назад +2

    The narrator of this video is so cool and handsome.
    And clever.

  • @denizalgazi
    @denizalgazi 2 года назад +5

    C is for Constantine LOL! 👍

  • @juanfervalencia
    @juanfervalencia 2 года назад

    I love all you do, thank you very much, it is priceless, greetings from the mountains of Colombia.

  • @ake_lindblom
    @ake_lindblom 2 года назад +37

    What about more advanced mathematics? Where were the engineers created? Perhaps it was more of an apprenticeship type thing? Thank you for a great video as always!

    • @toldinstone
      @toldinstone  2 года назад +30

      There was no ancient equivalent of a modern engineering program or technical college. In the Roman period, many engineers seem to have been trained in the legions. As might be imagined, such training was practical rather than theoretical.

    • @cybair9341
      @cybair9341 2 года назад +4

      @@andrewcornelio6179 - Thanks !

    • @paulkoza8652
      @paulkoza8652 2 года назад +4

      Good question.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 2 года назад +1

      This video explains why the Romans aren't in a position to usher in an Industrial Revolution. As you see, the Romans didn't place much emphasis on STEM subjects, basing their entire curriculum to make lawyers and politicians...

    • @ualaelinlive
      @ualaelinlive 2 года назад +6

      @@andrewcornelio6179 great read!

  • @docloftis
    @docloftis 2 года назад +2

    Interesting! Perhaps a future topic might be a comparison of the Greek SophIsts versus Aristotle and the Trivium way of education

  • @stevejohnson3357
    @stevejohnson3357 2 года назад +3

    Pliny the younger saved his life by choosing to study rather than accompany his uncle on that 1 last investigation.

  • @jakesnakes5866
    @jakesnakes5866 2 года назад +4

    Seems like teachers in the ancient times also suffered with little pay

  • @Kourash
    @Kourash 2 года назад

    I love this channel!!

  • @Combinehuntsmanunit
    @Combinehuntsmanunit 3 месяца назад

    It really is sad that despite so much changing in education the story of children working themselves quite literally to death or to sickness is still a familiar one. I had multiple kids in my high school make attempts on thier life. Really does show how little humans have changed despite all our inventions and new technology we still are woefully unable to cope with the stresses of life.

  • @cybair9341
    @cybair9341 2 года назад +12

    In the 60's, I was partly educated in the classical system (element, syntaxe, méthode).
    It was so useless for the realities of that time. I can't believe I was exposed to the last remnants of the Roman empire. Makes me feel like a fossil !

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 2 года назад +1

      Studying the Greek and Roman classics in the original remained a major part of upper-class education in Britain until well into the 20th century. Plenty of it in Tom Browns Schooldays, Billy Bunter et al...

    • @ianian4162
      @ianian4162 Год назад +3

      And yet, here I am a college student with only a passing familiarity of antiquity. I lament the decline of the classical education.

    • @cybair9341
      @cybair9341 Год назад +2

      @@ianian4162 - Do you really want to learn two dead languages (Latin + Greek)? 😟
      Better listen to TOLDINSTONE. He kinda educates without the pain.🙂

    • @ianian4162
      @ianian4162 Год назад +4

      @@cybair9341 Yet it is that "pain" that encourages growth and confidence. I'm a college student, and, while my "education" was by no means "painless," I never really established a strong foundation to my field.
      Right now, I'm taking a class on Shakespeare that doesn't assign actual readings, a theory class that doesn't involve discussion, and an online logic class that is basically a string of multiple choice quizzes.
      Does that sound like an "education"? No. It's meaningless bullshit and a waste of time ( again, a damn Shakespeare class where we don't read Shakespeare). I'd rather memorize the Iliad or discuss Pre-socratic metaphysics in Ancient Greek, for at least that's a genuine education in something.

    • @Nadia1989
      @Nadia1989 Год назад +1

      My grandad had to choose between Latin and French. Pretty useless for an accounting assistant like him.

  • @evillyn7895
    @evillyn7895 2 года назад +1

    The hierarchy of educational availability and lack of respect for teachers sounds distressingly familiar.

  • @chelebelle2223
    @chelebelle2223 Год назад

    Now I know where the concept of _grammar school_ came from.

  • @AbdulManan-eo7yp
    @AbdulManan-eo7yp Год назад

    Hi, I completed my bachelor course in dentistry in 2005, and was a highschool graduate in 1995.

  • @jerrybrush3859
    @jerrybrush3859 2 года назад

    Just subscribed to all your channels.

  • @marty49jm
    @marty49jm 2 года назад

    Hebrew is still taught by the method described in the first part of the video. Learn a consonant and the repeat it with all possible vowel combinations. The build shot words and progress onto two, three and four/five syllables. mish ka no tei kha .

  • @whattowatchrightnow
    @whattowatchrightnow 2 года назад

    this is awesome. thank you

  • @525Lines
    @525Lines 2 года назад

    So strange that the wax tablet and the slate used up to maybe 50 years ago are so similar.

  • @kenycharles8600
    @kenycharles8600 2 года назад +2

    Thank you very much for this presentation. It made me realise that one of the reasons there are so few tales of the exploits of the life of Jesus the Christ was the lack of education. I don't recall any of the texts in the New Testament being written in Latin; I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong but I recall that the languages used were Greek, Aramaic and Hebrew, and Rome had control over every piece of ground that Jesus ever trod. I find this interesting. Thanks again. P. S. (Septuagint might be added to the list but I could be thinking of something else there.)

  • @BFDT-4
    @BFDT-4 2 года назад +2

    Should have mentioned Quintilian!

  • @WYSKAtube
    @WYSKAtube 2 года назад +2

    Just finally bought your Kindle version ;-)

  • @xibear4341
    @xibear4341 2 года назад

    This is seriously one of the best youtube channels by far.
    Thank you so much for sharing the history of our (Western) civilization.
    History is one of the greatest gifts we can ever receive from our ancestors. I truly believe that.

  • @RickLowrance
    @RickLowrance 2 года назад

    Awesome. Great subject.

  • @spontaneousbootay
    @spontaneousbootay 2 года назад

    "And misinterpreted accordingly" nice

  • @ionutpaun9828
    @ionutpaun9828 2 года назад

    I liked your video. Can you recommend some books about this topic ?

  • @pandakicker1
    @pandakicker1 Год назад

    i would use the sponsored app if they had Greek and Latin. That is what I love and why I am here in the first place. (;
    Very few language learning apps actually have Greek, let alone Latin. Latin is rare in those. I only know of Duolingo having both Latin and Greek.

  • @dylanbrady5926
    @dylanbrady5926 2 года назад +5

    Just add the link to your secondary channels in the description so people can subscribe easier :)

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 2 года назад

    Quintus is a pretty great name.

  • @EMNstar
    @EMNstar Год назад +2

    Are there any education manuals (esp. bilingual) that have survived to today?

  • @EMNstar
    @EMNstar Год назад +1

    Has there been any evidence of smaller features of education meant for adults or foreigners?

  • @deciboo189
    @deciboo189 2 года назад +1

    Where is the video on the ancient cultures in the Balkans, toldinstone

  • @Denbo68
    @Denbo68 2 года назад +3

    but... how were the Engineers educated?

    • @SonofSethoitae
      @SonofSethoitae 2 года назад

      They weren't. Engineering was mostly learned in the legions, or by shadowing other engineers

    • @theuberman7170
      @theuberman7170 2 года назад

      Probably through apprenticeships.

  • @Mind2Travel
    @Mind2Travel 2 года назад +1

    Interesting !
    I work in history and education and came across Hypatia who was said to be a great teacher with students coming from all over. But this gets me confused : in +300, in roman empire, woman were ofter still confined to the Domus. How could a woman ever attend philosophy "school" or groups or teaching if it was the case ? Even more : how could a woman even become a renowned teacher if women in general were confined to a house ?

  • @hyun-shik7327
    @hyun-shik7327 Год назад

    We need to bring back debating fictional characters' decisions.

  • @alansnyder8448
    @alansnyder8448 Месяц назад

    This is outside of the scope of this channel, but I would like to know how the engineers of Rome and Athens were trained. Those are some large buildings and I cannot believe those buildings were built without at least geometry and a bunch or pragmatic experience.

  • @MikeEnergy_
    @MikeEnergy_ 2 года назад +2

    🔥🔥

  • @Nobile-Cavaliere
    @Nobile-Cavaliere 2 года назад +2

    I heard they solved the underpaid teacher problem in the middle ages.
    A teacher wasn't actually paid more but since he had probably taken a vow of poverty it didn't really matter.

  • @Mulambdaline1
    @Mulambdaline1 2 года назад

    What I wouldn’t give to be a student of in one of those schools!

  • @Nadia1989
    @Nadia1989 Год назад

    It's sad that even in ancient Greek and Rome students had to memorize almost everything and a teacher sometimes had to work two of three jobs to make ends meet.

  • @annabellethedoll3764
    @annabellethedoll3764 2 года назад +1

    I have never been so early

  • @deltadom33
    @deltadom33 2 года назад +1

    I found slave letters in the London museum from the Roman time period

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero 2 года назад

      What did they say? Were they gaulish, brittonic, thracian, hispanic, egyptian?

    • @deltadom33
      @deltadom33 2 года назад

      @@Game_Hero I didn't get time to read them but it counteracted the idea that literacy was not common among slaves , I actually took a photo of them it would be finding it again

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 2 года назад +2

      Shadiversity has an interesting video about literacy in the medieval period. To be considered "literate" then, one had to know Latin and Greek and have memorised various classical works. It's likely ordinary people in England and France (the places for where we have the most data, apparently) could read and write their own languages to some degree. At the time there were no real rules for grammar and spelling (like strong regional accents, but in writing), so all they had to learn was the alphabet, and that's not hard.
      Of course, classical Latin and Greek did have (many!) rules, but there were also the vulgar forms for common people. I imagine if they learned the alphabet they could make a reasonable stab at shop signs and crude graffiti.

  • @raptor4916
    @raptor4916 Год назад

    How do we estimate literacy rates in ancient populations?

  • @laserbeam002
    @laserbeam002 Год назад

    Another axium about teaching....."Those who can DO....Those who can't TEACH"

  • @awaynekerr
    @awaynekerr 2 года назад +1

    f̷̩̜͚̤͇͔̿̋̓̐͜͝͝e̷̞͍̲̜̔̃́͝e̷̠̭͎̽̂̾̕d̷̛͈͓͉̮̦͔̼͈̳͔͙͊͌̌̊̔̏̊͂̔̚̚t̸̢̛̤̰̯͕͊̀̈́̈͛́̈̒̓͝͝h̴͖̠̱̝̣̼̩͕̥̭̜͊̍͗̋͛̾͋̌̍̒̓̍͝ę̴̛̯̮̰͖̝͎̼͎͙̼̻̻̺̈́͒̈́͐͂̔͒͘͠â̵̬̰͍̾̉ĺ̸̞͌̐͐̉̑̐̓͒̎̊̈͘͝g̸̛̩̥͌͋̌̊̑̌̈̓͝õ̴̡̯̥͔͓̙̪͓̫͓̞̞̣̜͓̅̀̑̉̒̋̇̄̐̋͝r̸̨̤̤̔̆̍͌̾̈́͆́̚͜į̶̨͓̗͚͚̳͉͕͚̝̪̳͍̲͌̈̊͗͛̎͌̌͒̏̒͋͘͝t̶̨̘͕̂̽̀̉͐̈́̎͌̌̿́̆̿h̴̡̥̺̤̳̘̳̜͈̝̤̱̾̐̽m̷͉͊̾̊̽̅́͋͋̍̂̋́̚̕͘

  • @annamchugh1202
    @annamchugh1202 Год назад +1

    This is a really great video, but the cadence of the speaker is really repetitive and becomes funny at about 5mins and infuriating at 7mins. My class of 12 year olds were all laughing and humming along with it, going up at every third word.

  • @s4098429
    @s4098429 2 года назад

    My how far we have fallen.

  • @mrusso4542
    @mrusso4542 2 года назад

    Is there a code for Speakly? Clicking on the link provides no discount.

  • @parrotraiser6541
    @parrotraiser6541 Год назад

    Meanwhile, the useful people were learning their trades by working for master craftsmen.

  • @georgedoolittle9015
    @georgedoolittle9015 Год назад

    They were "tutors" not teachers although possibly later in Rome's History something more formalized did arise in having Romans travel to Ancient Greece itself to learn. There is no evidence of an ancient "University System" though of course more of a Roman "way" requiring one to know both Latin and Greek in order to govern which of course gave certain Greeks (though not Greece of course) a truly awesome amount of influence over Romans. This of course would never make Romans into Greeks but yes in some ways the Romans were more fanatical ancient Greeks than the Greeks themselves in a quest to become how a Greek might see there be become a kind of "ultimate Roman."

  • @OffOfTheCuff
    @OffOfTheCuff 5 месяцев назад

    Does anyone know some lf the sources where one can learn more about Roman education?

  • @lnchgj
    @lnchgj 2 года назад +1

    What about engineering?

  • @williamwolf2844
    @williamwolf2844 Год назад

    Is there any way to find a complete list of the images used? I recognize many, but I'd like to know where, for example, the image at 14:26 of three figures (Church fathers?) in black and white robes comes from.

    • @DanceNightAtDiscoFright
      @DanceNightAtDiscoFright Год назад +1

      Google has a ,image-search' function next to the searchbar. Not perfect, but good enough.

    • @williamwolf2844
      @williamwolf2844 Год назад +1

      @@DanceNightAtDiscoFright thank you. But not really good enough. I don't watch most RUclips videos on a browser. I watch them on the RUclips app, which means there is no Google search for. It's possible to do a screenshot, and then to do a Google lens search, but often that doesn't work. But for reasons of courtesy, as well as for legal reasons of copyright, it's really a much better idea for the creators of these videos to include information on images either in the video itself or in the description period that saves everybody lots of time.

  • @emmanuelbonapart6852
    @emmanuelbonapart6852 4 месяца назад

    How was math or engeneiring taught?

  • @mumsyxc
    @mumsyxc Год назад

    You forgot the universities that arose in Western Europe in the High Middle Ages.

  • @m33tballa
    @m33tballa Год назад

    You can never truly understand a book unless ur reading it in the native language. It would be very interesting if people who are fluent in old languages to annotate historic books and describe the meaning behind every line.

  • @lalababayaga
    @lalababayaga Год назад +1

    You’re telling me Hooked on Phonics was invented by the Romans.

  • @baystated
    @baystated 2 года назад

    Say what you want about how English is complex because it evolves and intersects with so many other languages, trying to learn Latin will make you want to stick to English. Engli, Englorum, Englis, Englos, Englis x20 in order to phrase things in unnecessary and extinct ways that no modern romantic language would imagine. And thank god for arabic numerals.

  • @reddykilowatt
    @reddykilowatt 2 года назад

    I bet the toga parties were great oras they called them, “parties.” 😉

  • @jameswells9403
    @jameswells9403 Год назад

    It makes sense, in a twisted way, that the most necessary jobs are the lowest paid. We require so many teachers, that governments are incentivized to keep ongoing costs, in the form of salaries, down. Taxpayers would rebel if they had to see their taxes go up year after year, eating away at their savings. Taxpayers and landowners, who have a larger stake in outcomes, are also those who tend to vote.
    I also know understand that proper reform and investment in public schools, tend to produce a decent return on investment on every dollar. If terrible teachers, whom we have all had the pleasure to encounter, lost their jobs, due to incompetence or malicious intent, maybe taxpayers would be willing to pay a higher tax burden. Other wise, its just throwing money into a roaring fire and pretending that because we all feel a little warmer, that everything is getting better.
    It must frustrate good and honest teachers who see their worthless collegues get the same pay regardless of performance. But if those bad apples, were removed from the bushel, maybe the rot would not spread, and education and teachers pay would rise, allowing good teachers to be better ones.

  • @Joe-po9xn
    @Joe-po9xn 2 месяца назад

    “Augustus composed a tragedy. Claudius wrote histories. Hadrian fancied himself a poet.”
    “Pffft! Amateurs! Uncultured swine!”
    - Nero probably

  • @scallopohare9431
    @scallopohare9431 2 года назад

    It wasn't college as we know it.