Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Roman Education
Roman Education
Roman Education
Education in the early centuries of the Roman Republic consisted primarily of fathers
passing on family traditions and skills to their sons. After reaching adulthood at the
age of sixteen, the young man came under the guidance of an older man who
groomed him in public speaking and other useful skills for a career as a member of a
republic. He also served in the army because he would in time be expected to
command troops. By the middle of the second century B.C.E., when Rome ruled a
far-flung empire, formal education had developed. Greek educational ideas and
practices influenced Rome, as they did the rest of the Mediterranean world. The
education of upper-class Romans was Greek schooling that later became Latin. The
conquest of Greece aided this process by producing Greek slaves, some much
better educated than their Roman masters. A Greek slave tutored the child in simple
reading until he went to elementary school at six or seven to be taught reading,
writing, and arithmetic. At twelve or thirteen the boy went to a secondary school,
where he studied mostly Greek literature until the middle of the first
century B.C.E. Upper-class Romans were bilingual at this time. Then, after the
lifetime of Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 B.C.E.), who had popularized Greek
pedagogical and philosophical ideas in his many works, Roman schools became
Latin. Students read the great Roman poets Virgil (70–19 B.C.E.) and Horace
(65–8 B.C.E.), the historians Livy (59 B.C.E.–17 C.E.) and Sallust (86–35 or
34B.C.E.), the comic dramatist Terence (186 or 185–?159 B.C.E.) and, of course,
Cicero, whose treatises systematized Greek rhetorical instruction. While Greek
remained part of the curriculum, bilingualism declined.
The highest level of Roman education began at about the age of sixteen and
focused on rhetoric. As in Greek education, the goal was to learn to speak and write
effectively as needed in public life and the law courts. If anything, the emphasis on
oratory in Roman schools was stronger than in Greek schools because other parts of
the Greek curriculum, such as music and athletics, were eliminated, and the Romans
had little interest in science and philosophy. Roman schools used rhetoric manuals
that systematized Greek rhetorical instruction.