TCDClassics
@TCDClassics
Trinity College Dublin, Department of Classics - connecting with our students, alumni and friends with news of all things Classical. 🏛
TCD Classics - a very happy Department today!
Trinity is ranked 13th in the world for Classics & Ancient History which is an outstanding achievement! @TCDClassics @tcddublin #LoveTrinityResearch #LoveIrishResearch
We are delighted to share our latest Hestia blog by our colleague Ashley Clements - he asks us ‘Why do you think you have potential? On living in the shadow of Aristotle, crises, and the events that define you’. Enjoy! hestia-blog.squarespace.com/blog/why-do-yo…
A great piece from our TCD Classics researcher Alastair Daly.
Why is there so much Latin in Ulysses? The language, the way it was taught and references to Latin literature are constants throughout James Joyce's work, writes Alastair Daly @TCDClassics @Researchirel rte.ie/brainstorm/202…
We are delighted to share our latest TCD Classics Hestia blog from Brian Cluyse, one of our Classics research students, on the topic "Preserving Purity: Atticism and the power of linguistic norms in antiquity". hestia-blog.squarespace.com/blog/preservin…
📣 Our last research seminar of this term in our very stimulating Subaltern Scripts series. April 9 2025 at 5.30 pm (by Zoom) Candida Moss (University of Birmingham) Stenographic Escape: Textual Accommodations and Shorthand Please register here to join: tcd-ie.zoom.us/meeting/regist…

📣 Our next TCD Classics research seminar 🗓️ March 26 2025 @ 5.30 pm (in person only in the Classics seminar room) Andrew Laird (Brown University) ‘From Roman Letters to Aztec Writing: Latin Grammar and Alphabetization in a Colonial World’ All welcome

📣TCD Classics Research Seminar 🗓️ Wednesday March 12, 2025 @ 17.30 (please note this in person only) Ella Kirch (Christ’s College, Cambridge University) ‘They Write Fast, but Have No Intellect’: Shorthand and Its Victims in the Later Roman World” All welcome!
