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Luke Ranieri Video Courses, Zoom Classes, & Audiobooks
An Ephesian Tale Book 2, Zoom Class, Mon & Fri 12pm ET
An Ephesian Tale Book 2, Zoom Class, Mon & Fri 12pm ET
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Intermediate Ancient Greek Full Immersion Zoom Class!
Mon & Fri, 12pm ET (6pm CET)
10 lessons, 90 min each
Mon, February 2 to Fri, March 6
Class size limited to 10 students
(This is the section held Mon & Fri at 12p.m ET; for the same class held Mon & Thu at 9am ET, follow this link)
Welcome back to the Ancient Mediterranean! Will Habrocomes and Anthea escape their fate, or succumb to it? We will find out together, in Book 2 of the ancient novel and action thriller An Ephesian Tale!
The prerequisite for this course is either to have attended the first Zoom class for An Ephesian Tale Book 1, or to complete the equivalent on-demand video course, linked here)
Upon purchasing your registration for this course, you will receive a download link to the course syllabus. You will then be contacted via the email you use on checkout within 24 hours to confirm your registration. If you do not receive an email, please write to scorpiomartianus@gmail.com
If the course is sold-out, please send an email to scorpiomartianus@gmail.com, and you will be added to the waitlist.
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Additional information about An Ephesian Tale and this course:
An Ephesian Tale is one of the first novels in history, and is the shortest, easiest, and most ridiculous of the five complete Ancient Greek novels that have survived to us from antiquity. Written by Xenophon of Ephesus in the 2nd century AD, this action-adventure-romance is so over-the-top, its sincere star-crossed characters so wrought by plight, that to properly conceive of what this novel is like, imagine Romeo and Juliet meets Pirates of the Carribean.
It’s silly, shocking, unbelievable. Since this course will render the text entirely comprehensible for all participants, I strongly recommend you not spoil the story for yourself: don’t look up any plot summary or the like, as it will be far more enjoyable to experience the story entirely through the medium of Ancient Greek, and feel the same excitement they felt in the 2nd century AD when the novels first readers first thrilled readers couldn’t wait to read the next chapter.
The class will be conducted almost entirely in Ancient Greek, and will train every participant to begin think in Ancient Greek. (A few minutes at the end of every class will be reserved for questions or clarifications in English.)

A key part of each lesson will be in the recognition of idiomatic expressions in the text, such as:
Διέκειτο δὲ καὶ Ἄνθεια πονήρως.
Anthea though was in a bad way.
This type of formula, διακεῖσθαι + adverb, occurs frequently in the text and in Ancient Greek prose at large, and doesn’t pose a great challenge in comprehension. But have you ever uttered this phrase yourself? That’s what we will do in class! Based upon this formula, we will create our own phrases based on the formula and take turns speaking them aloud:
Τήμερον διακεῖμαι καλῶς!
Ἐυλαβοῦ! ἐκεῖνος ὁ κύων διακεῖται ἀγρίως.
Χθὲς μὲν διεκείμην πονήρως, νῦν δὲ εὐδαιμίνως πρά̄ττω.
κτλ.
The result is will not merely read Ancient Greek, but truly acquire it, making it our own, and thus render ourselves ever more proficient readers.

Ancient Greek literature is filled with some of the most important texts in history, such as Aeschylus’ tragedies, Plato’s philosophy, Josephus’ antiquities, Dio’s histories, Church Fathers’ letters — but on the way to the goal of reading those often difficult, advanced texts, we must build a strong foundation, and fall in love with the activity of reading and thinking in Ancient Greek, so that, once we arrive at those challenging texts, we will be well prepared: not only in your ability to read Greek, but in your understanding of common aspects of the world of the ancient Eastern Mediterranean which will further enrich your sense of the context of this vast body of literature. This course based on An Ephesian Tale will lay the next layer of brick in that foundation.
Instructor: Luke Amadeus Ranieri

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