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[[Image:B-Marti.jpg|right|thumb|Berthe Marti]]
'''Berthe Marti''' (1904-1995) was a 20th century scholar of [[Medieval]] [[Latin]]. Marti was a graduate of the [[University of Lausanne]], and went to [[Bryn Mawr College]] as a graduate student in 1925, where she wrote her dissertation with [[Lily Ross Taylor]], and received her Ph.D. in 1934. She began teaching in 1930 and remained at Bryn Mawr until 1963. Although most famous as a medievalist, she also taught classical Latin and sometimes French. After her retirement from Bryn Mawr, she taught at the [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]].
'''Berthe Marti''' (1904-1995) was a 20th century scholar of [[Medieval]] [[Latin]]. Marti was a graduate of the [[University of Lausanne]], and went to [[Bryn Mawr College]] as a graduate student in 1925, where she wrote her dissertation with [[Lily Ross Taylor]], and received her Ph.D. in 1934. She began teaching in 1930 and remained at Bryn Mawr until 1963. Although most famous as a medievalist, she also taught classical Latin and sometimes French. After her retirement from Bryn Mawr, she taught at the [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]].



Revision as of 16:01, 12 December 2005

Berthe Marti (1904-1995) was a 20th century scholar of Medieval Latin. Marti was a graduate of the University of Lausanne, and went to Bryn Mawr College as a graduate student in 1925, where she wrote her dissertation with Lily Ross Taylor, and received her Ph.D. in 1934. She began teaching in 1930 and remained at Bryn Mawr until 1963. Although most famous as a medievalist, she also taught classical Latin and sometimes French. After her retirement from Bryn Mawr, she taught at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Bibliography

  • an edition of Arnulfus, Glossulae super Lucanum (1958).
  • The Spanish College at Bologna (1963).
  • editor of Lucain in Fondation Hardt Entretiens (1970).