Classics/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Classics, or pages that link to Classics or to this page or whose text contains "Classics".
Parent topics
Subtopics
- Ancient Greece [r]: The loose collection of Greek-speaking city-states centered on the Aegean Sea which flourished from the end of the Mycenaean age to the Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BC. [e]
- Ancient Rome [r]: The most powerful empire of the ancient world. [e]
Bot-suggested topics
Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Classics. Needs checking by a human.
- Art [r]: The expression or application of human imagination and creative skill, usually presented in a visual form. [e]
- Asclepiodotus (disambiguation) [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Charles Darwin [r]: (1809 – 1882) English natural scientist, most famous for proposing the theory of natural selection. [e]
- Charles Lyell [r]: Scottish geologist (1797-1875) credited with having popularized uniformitarianism as well as his belief that science and religion should be kept separate. [e]
- Common Era [r]: The period of measured time beginning with the year 1 on the Gregorian calendar. [e]
- Culture area [r]: A region, in anthropology, in which the environment and cultures are very similar. [e]
- George Croom Robertson [r]: (1842–1892) Scottish philosopher; editor of Mind. [e]
- History [r]: Study of past human events based on evidence such as written documents. [e]
- Humanities [r]: Academic disciplines which deal with the human condition and what it is to be human. [e]
- Ivy Compton-Burnett [r]: (pronounced 'Cumpton-Burnit', 5 June 1884 – 27 August 1969) An English novelist whose work is propelled by almost perpetual dialogue, and concentrates on family (and sometimes school) life in roughly the Edwardian era. [e]
- Neoconservatism [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Pembroke College, Oxford [r]: A college of the University of Oxford in England; its main buildings are on Pembroke Square. [e]
- Petrarch [r]: (1304–74) Italian poet, humanist and essayist, and one of the most important intellectual figures of the early Renaissance. [e]
- Publishing [r]: The process of production and dissemination of literature or information - the activity of making information available for public view. [e]
- René Girard [r]: French literary scholar, anthropologist and theologian, wrote on mimetic desire and sacrifice. [e]
- Sri Aurobindo [r]: (1872–1950) Influential Indian philosopher, yogin and nationalist, developer of Integral consciousness theory and the Integral movement. [e]
- Ulster Cycle [r]: A body of early Irish heroic sagas set in prehistory during the reign of Conchobar mac Nessa over the Ulaid. [e]
- Victor Davis Hanson [r]: Add brief definition or description