As with years one and two, you can choose to study either Latin or Classical Greek through optional modules in year three. The level you study at will depend on your existing knowledge and experience.
Beginners level
For complete beginners and anyone who has done some study of Latin or Classical Greek before (anything up to GCSE).
You’ll be introduced to the grammar and vocabulary of your chosen language - and you’ll be supported to analyse and understand basic sentences and to translate short passages.
You may find it reassuring that, unlike modern language study, there is no speaking and listening element. The main focus is on developing your reading skills so you can read almost unadapted passages from Latin or Classical Greek texts.
Intermediate level
For students who have successfully completed their introduction to the language in our Beginners’ level modules.
You will consolidate your knowledge of the vocabulary and grammar of your chosen language. You’ll also begin the detailed linguistic and literary study of unadapted Latin or Greek texts, developing your ability and confidence to read, appreciate and analyse texts in an ancient language.
- In Latin, you will typically read a text such as Cicero’s Pro Archia or a book of Virgil or Ovid.
- In Greek, the text might be a speech by Lysias or selections from a longer work such as Homer's Odyssey or a Greek tragedy.
Advanced level
For students who have successfully completed our Intermediate level modules for the relevant language.
You will study prose and verse texts in your chosen language, building on the skills you have already learned. You’ll undertake in-depth study of either a single text or a group of texts representative of an author, genre, period or theme, combining literary and linguistic discussion with consideration of the historical and social background.
The texts covered change each year. In Latin, recent modules have focused on the following topics:
- Flavian personal poetry (Martial and Statius)
- The emperor Claudius (Suetonius and Tacitus)
- The Cupid and Psyche story from Apuleius’ novel Metamorphoses
- Ethnicity and Empire in Latin Epic (Virgil and Silius Italicus)
- The Power of Love (Ovid and Propertius)
In Greek, recent topics have included:
- Tragedy (Euripides’ Antigone)
- Selections from Homer’s Iliad
- Longus’ novel Daphnis and Chloe
- Plutarch’s Life of Antony
- Paradoxography (a range of texts exploring the weird and marvellous)
Higher level
This is our most advanced level of language study for those who have already developed a good level of language learning through our Intermediate and Advanced level language modules.
You will:
- improve reading fluency in your chosen language
- gain deeper insights and appreciation of the language and its literature
- discuss texts at greater length and use more sophisticated skills of literacy and linguistic analysis that are valued by employers
As at the Advanced level, modules will involve in-depth study of either a single text or a group of texts representative of an author, genre, period or theme of Latin or Classical Greek literature. These modules will allow you to make further connections between the texts you are reading and their literary, social and historical contexts.