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Summer-classics.com is maintained by Debra Hamel (read more), whose online universe also includes the following sites:



List of schools offering: Art

Istituto Internazionale di Studi Classici di Orvieto

LATIN 413/513 -Virgil, Bucolics and Aeneid
LATIN 426/526 - Livy, Ab urbe condita, Book I
Classics 300 - Art and the Classical Ideal
Classics 340b - Roman Art and Archaeology
Classics 452 - Etruscan Art and Culture

Click here for a listing of our classes in the summer session at the University of Arizona.

CONTACT INFORMATION

web site

Cynthia White
e-mail: ckwhite@u.arizona.edu
phone: 520-626-8296

Department of Classics
Learning Services Building 203
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 85721

University of Georgia, Athens

AP Cicero
Latin Didactic Poetry
Roman Art and Architecture
Classical Mythology
Intensive Elementary Greek I and II
Greek Culture
Roman Culture
Elementary Latin II

Each year the Classics Summer Institute offers a variety of undergraduate and graduate Latin and Classics courses, including, in odd-numbered years, Intensive Beginning Greek and, in even-numbered years, Intensive Beginning Latin. The Institute curriculum is supplemented by workshops and guest lectures by visiting Master Teachers and other scholars. The program is designed especially for Latin teachers who wish to continue their education or earn a Master's degree in Latin on a summers-only basis. Classes are held from mid-June to late July; some courses are offered in intense four-week short sessions. Please consult our website (www.classics.uga.edu) for up-to-date details. Fifteen faculty members from the Department of Classics share in a tradition of cooperation with high school teachers and programs which culminates each summer in an exciting and challenging curriculum.

CONTACT INFORMATION

Sandra C. Phillips (gradinq@uga.edu)
706-542-9264

Dr. Naomi J. Norman (nnorman@uga.edu)
706-542-9264

http://www.classics.uga.edu

University of Georgia
Department of Classics
223 Park Hall
Athens, GA 30602-6203

University of Alberta

Introduction to Greek & Roman Mythology (CLASS 102)
Religions of Greece and Rome (CLASS 303)
Introduction to Early Christian Writings (RELIG 211)
The Pre-Modern World (HIST 110)
Koine Greek (GREEK 479)
Beginners Latin II (LATIN 102)
Intermediate Latin I (LATIN 301)
Introduction to Sanskrit I (RELIG 239)
Medieval Scotland (HIST 300)
Roman Palaeography and Epigraphy (CLASS 399 B3)

Summer School in Ancient and Medieval Studies, July 10 - August 4, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Thirteen three-credit courses, from introductory to senior level. Classes meet for two full hours per day, Monday through Thursday. Students may enroll in no more than two courses. Students from other universities are welcome. Friday afternoons will be devoted to a special colloquium series on the theme "Cult in Word and Image". Students are encouraged to attend the colloquia and the informal gatherings that follow, as a way to meet instructors and fellow students in an informal setting. In addition to the ten courses listed above, the following courses will be offered:

Researching Archaeological Artifacts (CLASS 399 B2)
Pseudo-Archaeology (CLASS 399 B1)
Medieval European Palaeography (Latin, French, German)(HIST 403).

CONTACT INFORMATION

Andrew Gow
Andrew.Gow@ualberta.ca
780 492 0853

Louise Jenkins
louise.jenkins@ualberta.ca
780 492 9125

http://www.registrar.ualberta.ca/ro.cfm?id=469
http://www.uofaweb.ualberta.ca/historyandclassics/

Department of History and Classics
University of Alberta
Tory 2-28
Edmonton AB T6G 2H4
Canada

Rare Book School

Introduction to Illuminated Manuscripts
The Book in the Manuscript Era
Introduction to Latin Paleography
Introduction to Codicology
The History of European Handwriting

RARE BOOK SCHOOL (RBS) is pleased to announce its Spring and Summer Sessions 2004, a collection of five-day, non-credit courses on topics concerning rare books, manuscripts, the history of books and printing, and special collections to be held at the University of Virginia.

FOR AN APPLICATION FORM and electronic copies of the complete brochure and the RBS Expanded Course Descriptions, providing additional details about the courses offered and other information about RBS, visit our Web site at:

www.rarebookschool.org

CONTACT INFORMATION

Michael Kidd (bap-rbs@virginia.edu)
434-924-8851

www.rarebookschool.org
www.virginia.edu/oldbooks/rbs/schedule.html

Rare Book School
114 Alderman Library
PO Box 400103
Charlottesville, VA 22904-4103

Austin Peay State University

31 May-4 July

The APSU study abroad to Greece program combines ancient and modern. The goal is to demonstrate the importance of Greece in all of its historical periods. Students take two courses, Greek Art and Archaeology and Intensive Modern Greek, and earn seven hours of undergraduate credit. We begin with two weeks in Chania, Crete, where we meet twice a day in a seminar setting. In the morning we discuss the history of archaeology in Greece, in the afternoon, we do modern Greek. When we leave Chania, we spend three weeks on the road, visiting sites from Crete to Northern Greece, and from the neolithic to the modern. In addition to the ancient sanctuaries, palaces, healing centers, and pan-hellenic games sites, we also visit Byzantine, Medieval, and modern sites. Through the study of Modern Greek, we learn about contemporary Greek life, literature, music, and dance. The program includes a three-day stay in Greek homes, a hike, through the Samaria Gorge on Crete, and a few unexpected delights. We spend the final four days in and around Athens.

CONTACT INFORMATION

For more information and application forms, please visit:

www.apsu.edu/winterst

There is a link to the Study Abroad program. Interested students may e-mail inquiries to Timothy F. Winters: winterst@apsu.edu

Dept. of Lang. and Lit., P.O. 4487
Austin Peay State University
Clarksville, TN 37043

931-221-7118

Arcadia Center, Athens

Of Gods and the City: The Archaeology and History of Mainland Greece, explores ancient Greek history, art, religion, and culture through visits to sites and museums in Athens and the surrounding countryside of Attica as well as Delphi, Olympia, Corinth and Epidauros.

On the Trail of Alexander the Great: Greek Art and Architecture of the Hellenistic Age, explores the life and times of Alexander the Great. The program begins with site and museum visits in Athens before moving north to Thessalonike and Vergina. The Greek island of Samos is a stop before visiting the Turkish cities of Priene and Miletus.

Both courses are intensive, three-week programs of classroom-based seminars and a variety of field-study excursions to prominent, archaeological remains.

These intensive courses are ideal for students of the humanities who have an interest in ancient Greek history, art, religion, and culture. Additionally, life in contemporary Greece will also be discussed.

CONTACT INFORMATION

Julia Levy (levy@arcadia.edu)
1-866-927-2234

Jan Motyka Sanders (sanders@arcadia.edu)
+30 210 75 25 318

http://www.arcadia.edu/cea/greece

The Center for Education Abroad
Arcadia University
1601 Church Road
Glenside, PA 19038-3295

Arcadia Center for Hellenic, Mediterranean and Balkan Studies
Embedokleus 26B & Chrisafi
11636 Athens
Greece

University of Missouri, St. Louis

Fieldstudies in Greek Archaeology and Civilization
Travel course to Greece. Archaeological survey of a Mycenaean site near Pylos; classes on Greek archaeology, art, culture, and history; visits to the major sites and museums of the Peloponnese.

DATES: 26 May-15 June, 2002
CREDIT: 6 credits; also open to non-credit volunteers
COST: $1100 + airfare +tuition fees

CONTACT INFORMATION

http://www.iklaina.org

Prof. Michael Cosmopoulos (cosmopoulos@umsl.edu)
314-516-6241

Columbia University

Intensive elementary Greek
Intensive elementary Latin
Intensive intermediate Latin
Alexander the Great: archaeology and romance
The culture of ancient Egypt
Classical mythology
Euripides and the tragic theatre of Athens
Masterpieces of Western art

Columbia University invites you to make the most of summertime. We offer you fascinating, challenging courses taught by Columbia's distinguished faculty and eminent visiting professors; a tranquil thirty-two acre campus of handsome buildings surrounded by lawns, flower gardens, and shade trees; one of the largest library collections in the nation; recreational and training facilities in the Physical Fitness Center. All this is in the middle of the most vibrant, cosmopolitan city in the world. The campus is two blocks from Riverside Park and a short subway or bus ride from the restaurants, theaters, shops, and museums for which New York is famous. The Morningside Heights neighborhood, home to many Columbia students and faculty, includes among its pleasures numerous bookstores, coffee shops, and outdoor cafes. Columbia encourages students to take full advantage of attending Columbia University in the City of New York. Summer Session I begins May 24. Summer Session II begins July 6.

CONTACT INFORMATION

http://www.ce.columbia.edu/summer

Student Services Center
summersession@columbia.edu
(212) 854-2820

Columbia University Summer Session
Mail Code 4114, 2970 Broadway
New York, NY 10027