Latin

Latin:or, the Empire of a Sign

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Acclaimed cultural history of Latin’s rise and fall

Though not without its rivals, Latin stood at the apex of Western culture from the Renaissance until relatively recently. Françoise Waquet offers an enthralling, original history of the language's uses, its detractors and defenders, and the social hierarchies its practitioners inscribed.

Granted a new lease of life by the Humanists and the Catholic Church, Latin was the form in which generations of schoolchildren were taught to read, millions of people worshipped, and an international community of scholars communicated with one another. It conveyed sacredness, but also obscenity; learning, as well as pedantry; science, but also trickery and mumbo-jumbo. Few individuals even among the clergy or the most learned scholars have ever managed to speak it with any degree of correctness or fluency, let alone elegance.

Why, despite rationalist criticisms that Latin was inaccessible to the great majority of people, and inconvenient and time-consuming for the rest, did it maintain such a strong presence - some would say a tyranny - for so long?

Reviews

  • A splendid book: original in method, suggestive in argument, and a pleasure to read.

    Anthony GraftonLondon Review of Books
  • ... [a] fascinating and lively survey of the place of Latin western culture during the past 400 years.

    Independent
  • ... richly researched and delightful ... with scholars of Waquet’s generosity and ability, the old language might yet have a future.

    New Criterion