Latinitas
  

Pronuntiatus et res metrica



 

Sursum    De pronuntiatu

Atelier de phonologie latine   "Cet atelier de travail a été envisagé au 10ème Colloque de Linguistique latine d'Amsterdam, en vue de renouveler et de moderniser un peu la phonologie latine, en l’ouvrant à toutes les formes actuelles de phonologie, qu'il s'agisse de phonologie synchronique ou de phonologie diachronique, de phonologie structuraliste ou de phonologie générative, et même et surtout de ce qu’on appelle 'les nouvelles phonologies', c’est-à-dire notamment la phonologie autosegmentale ou la phonologie multilinéaire. Vous trouverez ici un Programme détaillé ainsi que le texte de certains exposés (au format pdf)..." (Cercle Linguistique d'Aix-en-Provence)

Canepari, L. - "La pronuncia 'neutra' del latino classico"   L.Canepari, Manuale di pronuncia italiana, Bologna, Zanichelli, 1999 2a ediz., 2004 [rist. emend.], cap. 18, pp. 539-546.

Harris, W. - Latin Studies and Background Essays   Inter alia : Phonemic Length In Latin, Latin Poetry and Reading Verse, The Correct Pronunciation?, Stress Accent and Pronunciation.

La pronunzia del latino   "Nella mia scuola, il Liceo del Convitto Nazionale Vittorio Emanuele II di Napoli, si è aperto un interessante dibattito su quale sia la più corretta pronunzia del latino da insegnare agli studenti. Riporto di seguito i caratteri generali della questione, attendendo opinioni e contributi da colleghi e studenti." (L. Cocci)

Latin 506 Correspondence: The Pronunciation of Latin   "The links below will allow you to hear me pronouncing Latin words so that will have a model for emulation. The sound files are in a format that most computers should be able to handle (WAV). I have used boldface type to indicate long vowels because macrons are difficult to represent over the web." (D. Cramer)

Williams, R. - De lingua Latina bene enuntianda   (Retiarius)

The History of Latin Pronunciation (bibliography)   (P. Jeffery).

 

Sursum    De re metrica

Annis, William S. - Introduction to Greek Meter   (Aoidoi.org)

Damon - Groupe de métriciens de la littérature antique gréco-romaine   "Le groupe DAMON se compose de métriciens de la littérature antique gréco-romaine. Bien que créé et basé en Suisse romande, DAMON regroupe des collaborateurs qui viennent non seulement de Suisse, mais aussi d'Italie et de France." (O. Bianchi)

Einführung in die Grundlagen der römischen Metrik   (Navicula Bacchi)

Hexametrica: An online introduction to Latin hexameter verse   "Hexametrica is a tutorial designed to provide a basic understanding of the most common poetic meter, the dactylic hexameter. Furthermore, the tutorial is geared toward intermediate Latin students who are reading Vergil. Nevertheless, readers of Ovid or Catullus, e.g., or even of Homer may use these pages to their advantage." (D. Curley, Skidmore College)

Quantity of Syllables (A Brief Guide to)   (The Later Latin Society in Tasmania)

Reading Latin Poetry aloud : metre and scansion   (A. Wilson).

 

Sursum    Versuum lectiones et emissiones audibiles

Aeneid - Book IV, read by Wilfried Stroh   "Valahfridus (Wilfried) Stroh has held the rank of professor of classical philology at the University of Munich since 1976. He is particularly interested in Roman love poetry, oratory, prosody, and in Neo-Latin. [...] Professor Stroh’s performance of Aeneid Book IV was recorded digitally on April 10, 2000 by musician Georg Spoettl. Wolfgang Wagner, a school teacher, provided technical assistance. Both Spoettl and Wagner live in Munich."

Greek/Latin New Testament Audio Readings   "Chapter-readings of the New Testament in koine Greek and vulgate Latin are being offered at this web site one-chapter-at-a-time for free download as soon as they are produced. Each new chapter replaces its preceding chapter as a free downloadable MP3 audio file."

Harvard Classics Prose and Poetry Recital Page   "This recital site was created for (and by) the classics teaching staff at Harvard to help students grasp the vital performative aspect of ancient literature. Selections were chosen because of their inclusion in various Harvard introductory-level language courses, as an aid to pronunciation and meter." (T. Jenkins, Department of the Classics at Harvard University)

KET Distance Learning   Latin 1 Class - Stories/Oral Latin; Latin 2 Class - Stories Front Page; Latin 3 Class - Stories Front Page.

Latin 202: Latin poetry   (wav files by W. Stevenson)

Latinitas recens vivaque Saravipontana - Emissiones audibiles  

Neo-Latin Colloquia   "Graduate students and faculty associated with the UK Institute for Latin Studies are creating a variety of materials for the renewed study and enjoyment of neo-Latin colloquia scholastica, texts that date primarily from the 16th and 17th centuries. This page will serve as a gateway to what we offer." (Stoa.org)

Neo-Latin Colloquia. A podcast powered by FeedBurner  

RealAudio Files for Optional Self-Tutorial Exercises   "My pronunciation is a disgrace. There are others who've made a more conscientious study of the matter, and who should be consulted if absolute fidelity to the original is your desire - but nobody likes these people. My objective is only to teach grammar; my method, if it can be called that, is to make the sentences sound like a foreign language." (D. A. Grote - UNC Charlotte)

Society for the Oral Reading of Greek and Latin Literature   "It is the aim or our Society to encourage students and teachers to listen to and to reproduce the sounds of Greek and Latin literature, thereby enriching the whole study process of these languages. Fortunately, linguistic and metrical research of the last century now permits us to acquire a close approximation of the pronunciation of classical Greek and Latin, a result which we call the "restored pronunciation" (basic bibliography below). Our Society feels that it is our professional duty to use the results of this research in our teaching of Greek and Latin as a means for achieving maximum authenticity and esthetic pleasure in the reading of Greek and Latin literary works." (S. Daitz)

Viva Voce - Roman Poetry Recited   "This selection of readings from classical Latin poetry is intended to be a reconstruction of what the language of the Romans may have sounded like. I have tried to put together what we positively know about phonetic and prosodic features of classical Latin, then work it out in practice as accurately as I could. But the way from knowledge to practice is a long one, and my reconstruction remains conjectural at more than one point. I also wanted this selection to be a sample of major classical metres; a short description of relevant structures will be found lower on this page." (V. Nedeljkovic, University of Belgrade)

 


Vide etiam:

Easton - Listen to Latin and Pronunciation  

LatinChat-L - Listen to Latin  

Mediensammlung zum altsprachlichen Unterricht  

On-line Survey of Audio-Visual Resources for the Teaching of Classics  

 

Sursum  




index   bibliotheca