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  2. Education in ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_ancient_Greece

    Education for Greek people was vastly "democratized" in the 5th century B.C., influenced by the Sophists, Plato, and Isocrates. Later, in the Hellenistic period of Ancient Greece, education in a gymn school was considered essential for participation in Greek culture. The value of physical education to the ancient Greeks and Romans has been ...

  3. Paideia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paideia

    The School of Aristotle, by Gustav Adolph Spangenberg The German-American classicist Werner Jaeger used the concept of paideia to trace the development of Greek thought and education from Homer to Demosthenes in Paideia: The Ideals of Greek Culture , [ 4 ] Aristotelian philosopher Mortimer Adler gives a paideia proposal in his criticism of ...

  4. Education in Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Greece

    This constitutional provision, which applies to all Greek children, was established in Law 309/1976, which also replaced classical Greek (katharevousa) with modern Greek as the official language for teaching at all levels of education, and ceased to be a one-tier non-compulsory six years lower and upper secondary school, middle schools (pupils ...

  5. Ancient higher-learning institutions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_higher-learning...

    The earliest evidence of a European episcopal school is that established in Visigothic Spain at the Second Council of Toledo in 527. [40] These early episcopal schools, with a focus on an apprenticeship in religious learning under a scholarly bishop, have been identified in Spain and in about twenty towns in Gaul during the sixth and seventh ...

  6. Platonic Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platonic_Academy

    The school has been seen as the first institution of higher learning in the west, with subjects as diverse as mathematics, politics, ethics, biology, geography, astronomy, history, and much more were taught and investigated. [1] [20] [2] Diogenes Laërtius divided the history of the Academy into three: the Old, the Middle, and the New.

  7. Alexandrian school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandrian_school

    This school ended under Damascius when Justinian closed the Athenian schools (529). [4] Neoplatonism had a considerable effect on certain Christian thinkers at the beginning of the 3rd century. Among these the most important were Clement of Alexandria and Origen. Clement, as a scholar and a theologian, proposed to unite the mysticism of ...

  8. Peripatetic school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peripatetic_school

    The Peripatetic school (Ancient Greek: Περίπατος lit. ' walkway ' ) was a philosophical school founded in 335 BC by Aristotle in the Lyceum in ancient Athens . It was an informal institution whose members conducted philosophical and scientific inquiries.

  9. Education in ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_ancient_Rome

    Education in ancient Rome progressed from an informal, familial system of education in the early Republic to a tuition-based system during the late Republic and the Empire. The Roman education system was based on the Greek system – and many of the private tutors in the Roman system were enslaved Greeks or freedmen.