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Martin's High School Latin Courses
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AP Latin
Caesar
Book 1
Book 4
Book 5
Book 5, Chapter 24
Book 5, Chapter 25
Book 5, Chapter 26
Book 5, Chapter 27
Book 5, Chapter 28
Book 5, Chapter 29
Book 5, Chapter 30
Book 5, Chapter 31
Book 5, Chapter 32
Book 5, Chapter 33
Book 5, Chapter 34
Book 6
Book 6 Chapter 13
Book 6 Chapter 14
Book 6 Chapter 15
Book 6 Chapter 16
Book 6 Chapter 17
Book 6 Chapter 18
Book 6 Chapter 19
Book 6 Chapter 20
Vergil
Book 2
Book II, lines 40-56
Book 4
Dido and Aeneas take shelter in a cave
Iarbas is enraged
Swift Rumor rushes over the lands
Book 6
Book I
Aeneas and the men from seven of his ships land on the coast of North Africa and make preparations for a meal
As his comrades share the wine brought on their ships from Troy, Aeneas encourages them and reminds them of their destiny
Climbing a hill that overlooked Carthage, Aeneas and Achates marvel at the buildings and the flurry of activity, and then, still invisible, they descend into the city
Climbing a nearby hill to look for their lost ships, Aeneas and Achates spot a herd of deer; Aeneas shoots seven of them and the two men take the carcasses back to camp
Dido replies, not only offering assistance but even inviting the Trojans to settle in Carthage on equal terms with her citizens
Ilioneus, leader of the emissaries from the Trojan ships, introduces himself and his countrymen to Dido, and seeks permission to beach and repair their fleet
Juno entreats Aeolus to unleash the winds and scatter the Trojan fleet
Juno visits Aeolia, where king Aeolus rules the winds and keeps them imprisoned in a cave like wild horses
Like a powerful speaker subduing a violent mob, Neptune drives away the clouds and calms the sea
Neptune, god of the sea, is aroused by the tumult and chastises the winds for their insolence
Overcome with fear, Aeneas laments that he may be lost at sea rather than having died with honor on Troy's battlefields
Prologue: Vergil announces his subject
Setting the stage: Carthage and the wrath of Juno
Still unseen, Aeneas and Achates witness first Dido's arrival at the temple and then the approach of their Trojan comrades whose safety Venus had foretold
The lord of the winds agrees to Juno's request
The poet invokes his divine Muse
The storm rages and mountainous waves overwhelm the fleet
The story begins: as the Trojans depart from Sicily en route to their destined goal of Latium, Juno expresses her outrage
The winds rush forth and overwhelm the Trojans in a tumultuous thunderstorm, threatening their destruction
CLC Unit 4
Stage 35 epistulae
Stage 36 recitatio
Stage 37 consilium
amici principis
consilium Domitiani I
consilium Domitiani II
epistula
Stage 38 nuptiae
Stage 39 studia
Stage 40 iudicium
Stage 41 Bithynia
Stage 42 carmina
Stage 43 univira
Stage 44 Daedalus et Icarus
Stage 45 Lesbia
Stage 46 orator
Stage 47 Dido et Aeneas
Stage 48 Romulus et Remus
de carro Magistri Martini
Latin I
CLC
MLC
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter IX
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Nuntii Latini 1
The King's Storyteller, ll. 1-9
Chapter VIII
Stage 1 Caecilius
Stage 10 rhetor
Stage 11 candidati
Stage 12 Vesuvius
Stage 2 in villa
Stage 3 Pantagathus, Celer, Syphax
Stage 4 in foro
Stage 5 in theatro
Stage 6 Felix
Felix et fur
Stage 7 cena
fabula mirabilis
Stage 8 gladiatores
gladiatores
Stage 9 thermae
thermae
Latin II
CLC
MLC
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Stage 13 in Britannia
Stage 14 apud Salvium
Domitilla cubiculum parat I
Domitilla cubiculum parat II
in tablino
Quintus advenit
Rufilla
tripodes argentei
Stage 15 Rex Cogidubnus
Stage 16 in aula
Stage 17 Alexandria
Stage 18 Eutychus et Clemens
Stage 19 Isis
Stage 20 medicus
Latin III
Book 1
Book 4
Book 5
Book 6
Caesar
CLC
MLC
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Stage 21 Aquae Sulis
Stage 22 defixio
Stage 23 haruspex
Stage 24 fuga
Stage 25 milites
Stage 26 Agricola
adventus Agricoae
contentio
in principiis
tribunus
Stage 27 in castris
Modestus attonitus
Modestus prōmōtus
sub horreō
Stage 28 imperium
Belimicus rēx
cēna Salviī
in aulā Salviī
testāmentum
ultiō Rōmāna
Stage 29 Roma
arcus Titī I
arcus Titī II
Masada I
Masada II
nox
Stage 30 Haterius
dignitas
polyspaston
Stage 31 in urbe
adventus
Central Features of 1st Century Rome
salutatio I
salutatio II
Stage 32 Euphrosyne
cena Haterii
Euphrosyne revocata
philosophia
Stage 33 pantomimus
Stage 34 libertus
Latin IV
Caesar
Petronius
Chapter 1
An unexpected invitation, Pt. 1
An unexpected invitation, Pt. 2
An unexpected invitation, Pt. 3
An unexpected invitation, Pt. 4
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 2
Chapter 3 Trimalchio makes his entrance
Trimalchio makes his entrance, Pt. 1
Trimalchio makes his entrance, Pt. 2
Trimalchio makes his entrance, Pt. 3
Trimalchio makes his entrance, Pt. 4
Trimalchio makes his entrance, Pt. 5
Chapter 4 The guests gossip
Chapter 5 A practical joke
The guests gossip, Pt. 1
The guests gossip, Pt. 2
The guests gossip, Pt. 3
The guests gossip, Pt. 4
The guests gossip, Pt. 5
A practical joke, Pt. 1
A practical joke, Pt. 2
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 9, Part 1
Lingua Latina Inventa
Martin's High School Latin Courses
Chapter 9, Part 1
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