The goal of Roman education was the same, but for the Romans a good citizen meant an effective speaker. The result was that they disregarded such nonutilitarian Greek studies as science, philosophy, music, dancing, and gymnastics, basing their education instead on literature and oratory.
history-world.org/history_of_education.htm history-world.org/history_of_education.htm
ing power "1 of the life of the Greek citizen, it is ... ability, but to train the young as citizens, and such ... grammar, music and gymnastics, and the foundation ... The gyvmnastic training consisted of games, or rather ...
www.jstor.org/stable/20518082
We turn now to the chief representative of the Greek spirit- the Athenian. ... ing the education of the citizen by the parents free, prescribed certain general rules. .... it that his son is instructed in gymnastic and music with grammar .... the young Athenian consist before secondary schools taughit by ...
www.jstor.org/stable/1074141
The usual education for the young Greek citizen consisted of gymnastics, music, and grammar. Gymnastics refers to the various aspects of physical training including preparation for fighting in battle.
www.san.beck.org/Socrates4-What.html
For the young Greek citizen education consisted of grammar, music and gymnastics. Grammar was the learning to read and write. Music was the different arts of the Muses such as playing the harp, flute, singing, dancing, poetry and sometimes painting and sculpturing.
nataliemarieperez.blogspot.com/
Nov 18, 2000 ... Boys learned grammar, rhetoric, dialectic - these were meant to help ... nor again like gymnastic, which gives health and strength; .... Some Greek women attended school. In these schools often music and dance were the only subjects. .... espically if they were not classed as greek citizens? ...
www.fjkluth.com/education.html www.fjkluth.com/education.html
In their place I have introduced a record of world events and forces, not included in the usual history of education, which to me seem important as having contributed materially to the shaping ... CHAPTER I. THE OLD GREEK EDUCATION; I. ... 44. THE MEDIAEVAL SYSTEM OF EDUCATION SUMMARIZED; 45. A SCHOOL: A LESSON IN GRAMMAR; 46.
www.fullbooks.com/THE-HISTORY-OF-EDUCATION1.html www.fullbooks.com/THE-HISTORY-OF-EDUCATION1.html
Though born a Jew, Paul had been trained in the schools of Tarsus, a city of Asia Minor which was a great center of Greek learning. He possessed a knowledge of Greek philosophy, and particularly of Stoicism. This broad education helped to make him an acceptable missionary to Greek-speaking peoples.
www.fullbooks.com/EARLY-EUROPEAN-HISTORY6.html
And thus the records proceed to chronicle faithfully each day's proceedings, until we find that, with exercises in reading, spelling, gymnastics, arithmetic, music, grammar, geography, diagraming, addresses, and lectures, we have reported the doings ... Education is yet in its infancy, ... Careful drill in Greek and Latin forms.
www.skyways.org/genweb/education/1893book/greenwood.htm... www.skyways.org/genweb/education/1893book/greenwood.html
One delegation consisted of five Alexandrian Jews, led by Philo; the other, of Greek Alexandrians led by Isidorus and Apion (made famous by Josephus). After the initial interviews, ... Such a concept would seem foreign to Philo, considering his Hellenistic education and his fundamental devotion to things Hellenistic.
ccat.sas.upenn.edu/psco/archives/psco17-min.txt