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CLAS
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The so-called "Dipylon
Head" from Athens, ca. 590 BCE |
| OTHER COURSE WEBSITES | DEPT. OF CLASSICS | UGA | | ||||||
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Welcome
to CLAS 4010/6010 |
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Welcome to the web site for CLAS 4010/6010: Archaic Greece. This web site is designed to serve as a basic reference tool for students enrolled in this course; it is not meant to serve as a substitute for class attendance, participation and homework. General Course Description: The expanding world of Greek culture in the period from 750 to 480 BCE, including consideration of the many new and influential developments in art, literature, history, political science, and philosophy, and their interrelationships. This course is not offered on a regular basis. The prerequisite for this course is CLAS 1000, CLAS 1020, or CLAS(ANTH) 2000. You may receive the permission of the department to take this course; but If you have not taken any of these prerequisite courses, you should not take this class. Academic Honesty Policy of UGA: "The University of Georgia seeks to promote and ensure academic honesty and personal integrity among students and other members of the University community. Academic honesty is defined broadly and simply as the performance of all academic work without cheating, lying, stealing, or receiving assistance from any other person or using any source of information not appropriately authorized or attributed. Academic honesty is vital to the very fabric and integrity of the University. All students must comply with an appropriate and sound academic honesty policy and code of honest behavior. All members of the University community are responsible for creating and maintaining an honest university, and all must work together to ensure the success of the policy and code of behavior. All members of the University community are responsible for knowing and understanding the policy on academic honesty. "
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"The historian who will accept archaeological data only where they
support a text is a phantom that still stalks the subject; as is the language
man who thinks that all pictures illustrate texts."
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