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- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) abstract "In ancient Roman culture, the Latin word ludus (plural ludi) has several meanings within the semantic field of \"play, game, sport, training\" (see also ludic).An elementary or primary school attended by boys and girls up to the age of 11 was a ludus. Ludi were to be found throughout the city, and were run by a ludi magister (schoolmaster) who was often an educated slave or freedman. School started around six o'clock each morning and finished just after midday. Students were taught math, reading, writing, poetry, geometry and sometimes rhetoric.Ludus was also the word for a board game, examples of which include ludus latrunculorum and ludus duodecim scriptorum, or a game played with knucklebones (astragali).Latin poetry often explores the concept of ludus as playfulness, both in the writing of poetry as a kind of play and as a field for erotic role-playing. \"Poetic play (ludus, ludere, iocum, etc.),\" Michèle Lowrie observes, \"denotes two related things: stylistic elegance of the Alexandrian variety and erotic poetry.\"Ludi, always plural, were the games held in conjunction with Roman religious festivals.".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) thumbnail Roman_statue_of_girl_playing_astragaloi_14_aC.jpg?width=300.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageID "11801157".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageLength "2066".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageRevisionID "665077250".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Alexandrian_school.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Roman_culture.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Culture_of_ancient_Rome.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Elementary_school.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Freedman.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Knucklebones.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Ludi.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Ludi_magister.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Ludus_duodecim_scriptorum.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Ludus_latrunculorum.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Lusus_Troiae.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Primary_school.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Roman_festivals.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Schoolmaster.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Semantic_field.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Slavery_in_ancient_Rome.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:ludic.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink File:Roman_statue_of_girl_playing_astragaloi_14_aC.jpg.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLink File:Xii_scripta_ephesus.jpg.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ludus (ancient Rome)".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLinkText "literary game".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLinkText "ludi".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLinkText "ludus".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLinkText "play".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageWikiLinkText "public primary school".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:AncientRome-stub.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) subject Category:Ancient_Roman_culture.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) comment "In ancient Roman culture, the Latin word ludus (plural ludi) has several meanings within the semantic field of \"play, game, sport, training\" (see also ludic).An elementary or primary school attended by boys and girls up to the age of 11 was a ludus. Ludi were to be found throughout the city, and were run by a ludi magister (schoolmaster) who was often an educated slave or freedman. School started around six o'clock each morning and finished just after midday.".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) label "Ludus (ancient Rome)".
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) sameAs Q6699052.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) sameAs m.02rs_80.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) sameAs Q6699052.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) wasDerivedFrom Ludus_(ancient_Rome)?oldid=665077250.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) depiction Roman_statue_of_girl_playing_astragaloi_14_aC.jpg.
- Ludus_(ancient_Rome) isPrimaryTopicOf Ludus_(ancient_Rome).