| 10595679 | LATIN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE [L-FIL-LET/04] [ENG] | 1st | 1st | 12 |
| LATIN CULTURE AND LITERATURE [L-FIL-LET/04] [ENG] | 1st | 1st | 6 |
| 10595680 | ANCIENT GREEK LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE [L-FIL-LET/02, L-FIL-LET/02] [ENG] | 1st | 1st | 12 |
Educational objectives 1 Be able to read Ancient Greek with accuracy and confidence;
2 Develop good translation skills, involving an appreciation of the different linguistic structure of this inflected language;
3 Develop their abilities for analytical and logical analysis;
4 Manage a basic Greek vocabulary;
5 Demonstrate an informed understanding of and engagement with the main themes and genres of Greek literature (read in translation);
6 Demonstrate an understanding of some of the key issues relating to the development of genres in Greek literature.
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| ANCIENT GREEK CULTURE AND LITERATURE [L-FIL-LET/02] [ENG] | 1st | 1st | 6 |
Educational objectives 1 Be able to read Ancient Greek with accuracy and confidence;
2 Develop good translation skills, involving an appreciation of the different linguistic structure of this inflected language;
3 Develop their abilities for analytical and logical analysis;
4 Manage a basic Greek vocabulary;
5 Demonstrate an informed understanding of and engagement with the main themes and genres of Greek literature (read in translation);
6 Demonstrate an understanding of some of the key issues relating to the development of genres in Greek literature.
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| 10595681 | ANCIENT GREEK AND ROMAN HISTORY [L-ANT/03, L-ANT/02] [ENG] | 1st | 1st | 12 |
Educational objectives This course aims to highlight the geographical and chronological coordinates of Greek civilization and the main stages of ancient Greece’s historical development based especially on the literary and epigraphic evidence. Students will learn how to approach ancient sources and will develop the ability to formulate autonomous judgments. Knowledge of Greek historical and cultural context could be subsequently exploited by students to further deepen their training in Classics and the Humanities more at large.
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| ROMAN HISTORY [L-ANT/02] [ENG] | 1st | 1st | 6 |
Educational objectives This course aims to highlight the geographical and chronological coordinates of Greek civilization and the main stages of ancient Greece’s historical development based especially on the literary and epigraphic evidence. Students will learn how to approach ancient sources and will develop the ability to formulate autonomous judgments. Knowledge of Greek historical and cultural context could be subsequently exploited by students to further deepen their training in Classics and the Humanities more at large.
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| 10595152 | ITALIAN CULTURE AND LITERATURE [L-FIL-LET/10] [ENG] | 1st | 1st | 6 |
Educational objectives The course concerns an introduction to Italian Literature and Culture, from its birth and development, that is from the first decades of the 13th Century to the Age of Dante, Petrarca, and Boccaccio. Then times and concepts of Humanism and Renaissance will be considered, arriving up to the Early Modern, studying the further evolution of forms and genres.
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| 10595153 | CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY [L-ANT/07] [ENG] | 1st | 1st | 6 |
Educational objectives In consistency with the educational purposes of the whole teaching course, aim of the teaching unit is to give students a basic knowledge and comprehension skills in the field of ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORY OF ROMAN ART, with the help of advanced textbooks. Moreover, it will make the student able to apply the acquired knowledge in an expert and reflective way, making autonomous judgments, communicating ideas, problems and reflections in a clear and correct way,
and developing the knowledge required to go further in the studies.
The module provides a critical analysis of the modern debates and knowledge in Roman culture, art, and archaeology from the archaic to the imperial periods. The display of the major documents related to Roman civilization (Including art, architecture and town planning) will encompass major works and major monuments of Rome centre of political power through centuries to which these cultural expressions were structurally related. We will consider the character of the functional components of the ancient city, by discussing forms, functions and meanings of various types of documents, buildings and monuments of the public and private sphere; we will analyze themes, messages, and the figurative language of the various artistic expressions. The analysis will include
the analysis of the ideological, cultural and social contents expressed by the Roman civilization from its "origin" to its "dissolution".
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| 10595679 | LATIN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE [L-FIL-LET/04] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 12 |
| LATIN LANGUAGE [L-FIL-LET/04] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 6 |
| 10595680 | ANCIENT GREEK LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE [L-FIL-LET/02, L-FIL-LET/02] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 12 |
Educational objectives 1 Be able to read Ancient Greek with accuracy and confidence;
2 Develop good translation skills, involving an appreciation of the different linguistic structure of this inflected language;
3 Develop their abilities for analytical and logical analysis;
4 Manage a basic Greek vocabulary;
5 Demonstrate an informed understanding of and engagement with the main themes and genres of Greek literature (read in translation);
6 Demonstrate an understanding of some of the key issues relating to the development of genres in Greek literature.
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| ANCIENT GREEK LANGUAGE [L-FIL-LET/02] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 6 |
Educational objectives The Course aims at providing the basic notions of the grammar of Ancient Greek language and the fundamental skills to read, understand, and translate Ancient Greek texts
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| 10595681 | ANCIENT GREEK AND ROMAN HISTORY [L-ANT/03, L-ANT/02] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 12 |
Educational objectives This course aims to highlight the geographical and chronological coordinates of Greek civilization and the main stages of ancient Greece’s historical development based especially on the literary and epigraphic evidence. Students will learn how to approach ancient sources and will develop the ability to formulate autonomous judgments. Knowledge of Greek historical and cultural context could be subsequently exploited by students to further deepen their training in Classics and the Humanities more at large.
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| ANCIENT GREEK HISTORY [L-ANT/03] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 6 |
| AAF2015 | APPRENTICESHIPS [N/D] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 6 |
Educational objectives APPRENTICESHIPS
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| AAF2014 | FOR KNOWLEDGE OF EUROPEAN LANGUAGE OTHER THAN ENGLISH AND STUDENT'S NATIVE LANGUAGE [N/D] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 4 |
Educational objectives FOR KNOWLEDGE OF EUROPEAN LANGUAGE OTHER THAN ENGLISH AND STUDENT'S NATIVE LANGUAGE
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| AAF2016 | IT SKILLS [N/D] [ENG] | 1st | 2nd | 2 |
Educational objectives Computer Science test
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| 10595155 | LATIN LITERATURE [L-FIL-LET/04] [ENG] | 2nd | 1st | 6 |
Educational objectives The class aims to consolidate the students’ skills in Latin language by dealing with a literary text, and to offer the tools for critical analysis of the text itself.
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| 10595154 | CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY [L-FIL-LET/05] [ENG] | 2nd | 1st | 12 |
| 10595682 | ANCIENT GREEK AND ROMAN HISTORY II [L-ANT/03, L-ANT/02] [ENG] | 2nd | 2nd | 12 |
Educational objectives This course aims at consolidating the skills of defining and describing history by means of interpretation of the literary and epigraphic sources and of correlating causes and consequences of historical events. Students will learn to identify the major processes, events and figures in Hellenistic history and to analyze the Hellenistic kingdoms in their broad historical and cultural context. They will develop the skill to formulate an argument and appropriately express their ideas focusing on crucial aspects and thoroughly using sources in historical research.
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| ANCIENT GREEK HISTORY II [L-ANT/03] [ENG] | 2nd | 2nd | 6 |
| ROMAN HISTORY II [L-ANT/02] [ENG] | 2nd | 2nd | 6 |
Educational objectives This course aims at consolidating the skills of defining and describing history by means of interpretation of the literary and epigraphic sources and of correlating causes and consequences of historical events. Students will learn to identify the major processes, events and figures in Hellenistic history and to analyze the Hellenistic kingdoms in their broad historical and cultural context. They will develop the skill to formulate an argument and appropriately express their ideas focusing on crucial aspects and thoroughly using sources in historical research.
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| 10595157 | CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY II [L-ANT/07] [ENG] | 2nd | 2nd | 6 |
Educational objectives The course aims to deepen relevant topics connected to the world of Classical Archeology, considering some emblematic places of the Greek and Roman world and examining the existing interactions between man and the space where he lives and works, both in relation to the private and public spheres. Through the examination of a wide range of case studies, students will learn the main method tools used - thanks to the comparative analysis of archaeological, epigraphic and literary sources - to reconstruct the social or sometimes "more intimate"; dimension of different places (houses, public spaces, places of worship, necropolis, places related to production, exchange and trade). Places where the peoples who have alternated in the Mediterranean between Archaism and the end of Antiquity have built some of the features determinants of their historical and cultural parable.
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| 10595160 | PALAEOGRAPHY [M-STO/09] [ENG] | 2nd | 2nd | 6 |
| Elective course [N/D] [ENG] | 2nd | 2nd | 12 |
Educational objectives Exams chosen by the student
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| 10611916 | LATIN PHILOLOGY [L-FIL-LET/05] [ENG] | 2nd | 2nd | 6 |
Educational objectives In consistency with the educational purposes of the whole teaching course, aim of the teaching unit is to give students a basic knowledge and comprehension skills in the field of Latin Philology, with the help of advanced textbooks. Moreover, it will make the student able to apply the acquired knowledge in an expert and reflective way, making autonomous judgments, communicating ideas, problems and reflections in a clear and correct way, and developing the knowledge required to go further in the studies. In particular, students are expected to be familiar with the problems related to the manuscript tradition of Latin authors as well as with the history of the transmission of texts in Roman antiquity. They will be able to read and understand the critical apparatus to the text of a Roman author.
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| 10595161 | CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY II [L-FIL-LET/05] [ENG] | 3rd | 1st | 12 |
| 10595171 | ROMAN HISTORY III [L-ANT/03] [ENG] | 3rd | 2nd | 6 |
| AAF2017 | FOR FINAL EXAM [N/D] [ENG] | 3rd | 2nd | 6 |
Educational objectives FINAL EXAM
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| Optional group: Modern Philology | | | |
| Optional group: SIMILAR | | | |