From white class walls to wax on tablets: image of school in Late Antique educational texts

A considerable number of teachers known to historians of education from the times of ancient Greece and Rome were, in fact, almost homeless. This happened not only because random premises, places in town squares, porticoes and groves used to be adapted for educational practices...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vitaly Bezrogov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hypothekai 2019-06-01
Series:Hypothekai
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.hypothekai.ru/images/223-249_Bezrogov-26.pdf
_version_ 1819026188499156992
author Vitaly Bezrogov
author_facet Vitaly Bezrogov
author_sort Vitaly Bezrogov
collection DOAJ
description A considerable number of teachers known to historians of education from the times of ancient Greece and Rome were, in fact, almost homeless. This happened not only because random premises, places in town squares, porticoes and groves used to be adapted for educational practices. The few detailed descriptions of what was happening at schools and almost complete archaeological silence on this subject contribute to this problem. Late antique text sources and artifacts allow us to lift the veil that separates us from the “places of education” as they had been formed by the end of the great era. This article describes the image of the school, as drawn by the Greco-Roman educational phrasebooks that belonged to Hermeneumata pseudodositheana, a literary monument formed be-tween the 2nd and 6th centuries AD. On the basis of its six main versions, it was demonstrated how, in order to socialize a student, the structure of the school and the educational process were pre-sented. The phrasebooks refer mainly to the training at the grammatist’s and grammarian’s and do not reflect home schooling. The school is shown as permanent premises with a lobby, where children leave their outdoor clothes, and one or two rooms for study. Functioning of the school is determined by the activity of the mentor, who is occasionally assisted by hypodidaskaloi. The teaching process goes through patterns, repetitions, imitations, analyses, which lead to comprehending the social roles in the ancient society, mastering the vocabulary of concepts and phrases, acquiring skills of reproduction, communication and self-presentation. The texts from phrasebooks on school subjects are compared with other kinds of texts and archaeological data.It is shown that of the two main lines indicated by Pseudo-Plutarch (“De liberis educandis”) and Pseudo-Lucian (“Erotes”), the works of Pseudo-Dositheus follow the second line (with the emphasis on institutional training). Of the three variants of the archaeologically studied school buildings (the philosophical schools in Athens, the classrooms in Alexandria, the school in the Egyptian Dakhla Oasis), the latter is the closest one typologically to the image presented in the phrasebooks.
first_indexed 2024-12-21T05:22:36Z
format Article
id doaj.art-102809b87216437b8278fb2f3efb4219
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2587-7127
2587-7127
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-21T05:22:36Z
publishDate 2019-06-01
publisher Hypothekai
record_format Article
series Hypothekai
spelling doaj.art-102809b87216437b8278fb2f3efb42192022-12-21T19:14:47ZengHypothekaiHypothekai2587-71272587-71272019-06-01322324910.32880/2587-7127-2018-3-3-223-249From white class walls to wax on tablets: image of school in Late Antique educational textsVitaly Bezrogov0Institute for Strategy of Education Development of the Russian Academy of EducationA considerable number of teachers known to historians of education from the times of ancient Greece and Rome were, in fact, almost homeless. This happened not only because random premises, places in town squares, porticoes and groves used to be adapted for educational practices. The few detailed descriptions of what was happening at schools and almost complete archaeological silence on this subject contribute to this problem. Late antique text sources and artifacts allow us to lift the veil that separates us from the “places of education” as they had been formed by the end of the great era. This article describes the image of the school, as drawn by the Greco-Roman educational phrasebooks that belonged to Hermeneumata pseudodositheana, a literary monument formed be-tween the 2nd and 6th centuries AD. On the basis of its six main versions, it was demonstrated how, in order to socialize a student, the structure of the school and the educational process were pre-sented. The phrasebooks refer mainly to the training at the grammatist’s and grammarian’s and do not reflect home schooling. The school is shown as permanent premises with a lobby, where children leave their outdoor clothes, and one or two rooms for study. Functioning of the school is determined by the activity of the mentor, who is occasionally assisted by hypodidaskaloi. The teaching process goes through patterns, repetitions, imitations, analyses, which lead to comprehending the social roles in the ancient society, mastering the vocabulary of concepts and phrases, acquiring skills of reproduction, communication and self-presentation. The texts from phrasebooks on school subjects are compared with other kinds of texts and archaeological data.It is shown that of the two main lines indicated by Pseudo-Plutarch (“De liberis educandis”) and Pseudo-Lucian (“Erotes”), the works of Pseudo-Dositheus follow the second line (with the emphasis on institutional training). Of the three variants of the archaeologically studied school buildings (the philosophical schools in Athens, the classrooms in Alexandria, the school in the Egyptian Dakhla Oasis), the latter is the closest one typologically to the image presented in the phrasebooks.http://www.hypothekai.ru/images/223-249_Bezrogov-26.pdfancient educationLate Antique educational texts
spellingShingle Vitaly Bezrogov
From white class walls to wax on tablets: image of school in Late Antique educational texts
Hypothekai
ancient education
Late Antique educational texts
title From white class walls to wax on tablets: image of school in Late Antique educational texts
title_full From white class walls to wax on tablets: image of school in Late Antique educational texts
title_fullStr From white class walls to wax on tablets: image of school in Late Antique educational texts
title_full_unstemmed From white class walls to wax on tablets: image of school in Late Antique educational texts
title_short From white class walls to wax on tablets: image of school in Late Antique educational texts
title_sort from white class walls to wax on tablets image of school in late antique educational texts
topic ancient education
Late Antique educational texts
url http://www.hypothekai.ru/images/223-249_Bezrogov-26.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT vitalybezrogov fromwhiteclasswallstowaxontabletsimageofschoolinlateantiqueeducationaltexts