Ancient Greek Language and Literature
The study of the ancient Greek language across its dialects and history together with the corpus of Greek literature from Homer through the Hellenistic and Imperial periods.
Definition
The philological study of the ancient Greek language and of the literary works composed in it, from Mycenaean and Homeric Greek through Classical, Hellenistic, and Imperial periods.
Scope
This area covers the ancient Greek language in its phonology, morphology, syntax, and dialectal and diachronic variation, alongside the major genres of Greek literature: epic and archaic lyric, tragedy and comedy, and the prose of history, oratory, and philosophy. It includes the linguistic tools and literary-critical methods used to read, interpret, and edit Greek texts.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- How is the ancient Greek language structured, and how did it vary across dialects and over time?
- What are the major genres of Greek literature and their formal conventions?
- How do linguistic and literary analysis illuminate the meaning of Greek texts?
- How was Greek literature transmitted, edited, and interpreted in antiquity and after?
Key theories
- Oral-formulaic composition
- The Parry-Lord theory that Homeric epic was composed orally through traditional formulas and themes, transforming how the language and style of archaic Greek poetry are understood.
- Diachronic continuity of Greek
- Horrocks's account of Greek as a single continuously evolving language from Mycenaean through Koine to Byzantine and Modern Greek, framing dialectal variation within a long history.
History
Systematic study of Greek language and literature began with the Alexandrian scholars of the Hellenistic period, who edited texts, compiled lexica, and developed grammatical analysis. Revived in the Renaissance with the recovery of Greek learning in the West, classical Greek philology was professionalized in nineteenth-century German universities and remains central to the study of antiquity.
Debates
- Orality and the composition of Homer
- Scholars continue to debate how the oral-formulaic character of Homeric poetry relates to its written form and the so-called Homeric Question of authorship and unity.
Key figures
- Herbert Weir Smyth
- Geoffrey Horrocks
- Pat Easterling
- Bernard Knox
Related topics
Seminal works
- smyth1956
- easterlingknox1985
- horrocks2010
Frequently asked questions
- What dialects of ancient Greek are there?
- Ancient Greek includes several dialect groups, notably Ionic-Attic, Doric, Aeolic, and Arcado-Cypriot, with the Attic dialect of Athens becoming the basis of the later common Koine.
- Where does Greek literature begin?
- The extant Greek literary tradition begins with the Homeric epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey, products of an oral tradition fixed in writing by the archaic period.