/script>
Are there more images to follow this one? Where do I go from here?
>>9195712
Resume with the romans
then commence with the christians
>>9196133
Wait I've got the Greek and Roman list but what's the christian one?
>>9195712
http://interleaves.org/~rteeter/grtbloom.html
>>9196179
Well were's the christian chart?
>>9195712
Do you want more Greeks or do you want to move on from the Greeks?
Either way you should by now at least be mostly prepared to gather materials for yourself; a huge significance of "the Greeks" is giving you practice with source material so that you can explore other nations/eras without needing another chart.
Want to study Rome? Well, how did you start studying Greece? National epics, right? So read the Aeneid. Then read the intro to the Aeneid and you'll be introduced to Augustus Caesar (ruled when Virgil wrote), and so probably Julius Caesar, etc. You can choose to branch out to some history, drama, more poetry, whatever.
Do your best to break away from charts; their purpose is to lead you away from actually needing them.
>>9195712
https://docs.google.com/document/u/1/d/1y8_RRaZW5X3xwztjZ4p0XeRplqebYwpmuNNpaN_TkgM/pub
>>9195712
>Where do I go from here?
You go get yourself a job, son.
>>9195712
>Lucretius missing
That chart is wrong
>>9196950
Lucretius is Roman, retard. Also wrote about 300 years later than anyone on that list.
If you think you're up to it, you can attempt to move up a few levels
>>9198581
>>9198581
>someone actually spent time making this