• 25°
Hartselle Enquirer

Ancient history: Latin class scrubbing its way through centuries of grime

By Staff
Tracy B. Cieniewicz, Hartselle Enquirer
A group of Hartselle High School students is using elbow grease and research skills to unearth pieces of Roman history.
Beth Chittam's Latin II classes are currently participating in the Ancient Coins for Education (ACE) project to attribute and study 50 ancient Roman coins. Students have scrubbed, soaked and polished away more than 1,600 years of grime to be able to identify their coins and begin the research phase of the project.
"This is a very valuable project," Chittam explained. "This is our first year to work with ACE and the kids have lots of questions. I'm learning with them."
According to ACE, the coins come from a period of the Roman Empire when inflation was rampant and emperors resorted to mass production of small bronze coins. The coins were an affordable means for students to experience a direct connection to an ancient civilization.
"By identifying their coins, students are studying Roman grammar, culture and history," Chittam said. "This is such a good way to bring history to the students from somewhere other than a textbook."
Students use a resource CD and online discussion groups to aid in their research of the emperor, inscriptions and reverse images on their coins. All data is recorded and sent to ACE at the end of the project.
Sophomore Leah Craft was the first student in Chittam's class to identify her coin.
"It's the Falling Horseman and its date is 348 A.D.," Craft explained. "The inscription means 'A restoration of happy times.' I was excited to identify it."
ACE, a non-profit charitable organization, is supported by dealers and private numismatists who were concerned about the future of classical education. Last year, ACE distributed coins and study materials to more than 100 schools across the U.S., Canada and England.

Breaking News

Hartselle woman charged with capital murder in stabbing death of 8-year-old son

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

UPDATE: 8-year-old boy killed, man injured in Hartselle stabbing

Breaking News

Hartselle stabbing leaves one dead, one injured

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Vote now through April 17 for Hartselle’s Best of the Best

Hartselle

Historical society to present ‘Lost Treasures’ event  

Hartselle

Hartselle Historical Society receives grant for video campaign 

Falkville

Double-homicide defendant ‘heard voices in his head’ 

Hartselle

Riding for a reason: Hartselle man takes 611-mile journey to raise awareness of friend’s kidney disease  

Morgan County

Veteran journalist new Morgan communications director 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle man sentenced to 10 years behind bars after killing dog  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

All in a name: Group wants to rename Hartselle street for local war hero instead of disgraced French official

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Small town, big pride: Priceville supports Bulldogs through record-breaking year

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Raising queen bees becomes business for Hartselle father-daughter duo

Falkville

Area schools participate in Read Across America

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Escaped rape suspect back in jail

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle man arrested on sex charges 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

HPD adds two, promotes officer  

Hartselle

Five Questions for Eve Cheatham: Hartselle City Schools Secondary Teacher of the Year

Hartselle

J.C. Jones heads family-run farm in Hartselle

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Morgan co-op serves farmers with advice, supplies

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Morgan commissioners plan to focus on traffic

News

In preparation  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Legion has successful first Cars and Coffee event

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Ashley Thompson rises to top as a homebuilder in Hartselle 

x