The Plutarch Podcast

A podcast by Tom Cox - grammaticus

Categories:

42 Episodes

  1. Aemilius Paullus

    Published: 6/12/2024
  2. Titus Flamininus

    Published: 4/11/2024
  3. Philopoemen - The Last of the Greeks

    Published: 3/12/2024
  4. Cleomenes

    Published: 2/15/2024
  5. Agis

    Published: 1/11/2024
  6. Marcellus and Pelopidas Compared

    Published: 12/22/2023
  7. Marcellus

    Published: 12/11/2023
  8. Comparison - Fabius and Pericles

    Published: 11/22/2023
  9. Fabius Maximus

    Published: 11/11/2023
  10. Camillus

    Published: 10/11/2023
  11. Comparison - Coriolanus and Alcibiades

    Published: 9/22/2023
  12. Coriolanus

    Published: 9/11/2023
  13. Pyrrhus - Episode 2

    Published: 2/11/2023
  14. Pyrrhus

    Published: 1/11/2023
  15. Demetrius

    Published: 12/11/2022
  16. Phocion

    Published: 11/11/2022
  17. Eumenes

    Published: 10/11/2022
  18. Alexander the Great Part 2

    Published: 9/11/2022
  19. Alexander

    Published: 8/11/2022
  20. Timoleon

    Published: 7/11/2022

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Tom Cox from grammaticus.co explores Plutarch’s Parallel Lives to introduce you to antiquity, encourage you in your education, or refresh your perspective on people and politics by stepping outside the news cycle. Biography invigorates the study of history by bringing it to life. Plutarch was the first master of this form, examining in a person the relationship between fortune, virtue, and excellence. Whether you just want to study antiquity from your armchair, sit at the feet of the greatest teachers of the West, or expand your own classical education, Plutarch’s Parallel Lives and the podcast are here to serve. Plutarch wrote almost 50 lives exploring the greatest leaders of the Greek and Roman world before Christ. His lives have been foundational to education for centuries, but they are often wrapped in the obscurity of older translations or bog the reader down with specific political and social terms from Athens or Rome. Let Tom translate the jargon and enliven the journey by outlining and explaining each essay encouraging you to dive in and learn from the teacher himself, or guide your students through his essays. Whether you learn or teach in a classroom or at home, join Plutarch—and Tom—in examining what it means to live well, by considering those who have lived before us.