Latin Carol Celebration
On Monday, December 7, 2009, the Department of Classics will present its sixty-second annual program of readings and songs in the spirit of the season, conducted entirely in Latin. (English translations of the readings will be provided for those whose spoken Latin may be a little rusty.) This popular event will be held at 8:00 p.m. in the historic First Baptist Church in America, 75 North Main Street, Providence. Admission is free; street parking is available; the event lasts a little more than an hour; all are welcome.
For high school Latin teachers and students: We are delighted that a number of high school Latin students attend this event. Students should be accompanied by an adequate number number of chaperones, and should know that this is a fairly "dressy" event held in an historic church.
Brief history of the Latin Carol Celebration
Variously named, the Latin Carol Celebration has been held in several locations, but the format has remained remarkably the same. The audience sings carols in Latin, while members of the Brown University family read passages from ancient texts, some from the Bible, in the original languages or in Latin translation. Originally labeled a "Service," more recently the term "Celebration" has been adopted, both because celebratio is more easily understood by the Latin-less and because the event was never intended primarily as a worship service.
The first Carol Service (Dec. 14, 1948, in Alumnae Hall on the Pembroke campus), set the tone for all succeeding celebrations. Music was provided by organist John Rowe Workman of the Classics Department and a chorus, directed by William Dinneen of the Department of Music. Herbert Newell Couch, chair of the Classics Department, was master of ceremonies, a term changed the next year to Magister Equitum. There were four readings that continue to this day: Isaiah 40:1-5; 9:6-7; Vergil (fourth Eclogue); Luke 2:1-14; and John 1:1-14.
Attendance in Alumnae Hall was always good, rising from an initial 300 to 400 to a reported 1,000 in 1967. In 1997, for its fiftieth anniversary, the Celebration moved to the First Baptist Church of America. In addition to Brown students and faculty, the event now attracts a large number of secondary school students, including some 100 annually from the Wahconah Regional High School in Dalton, Mass.