Literature
Philosophy
Art
Latin
Music
100

The blind Greek poet traditionally credited with writing The Iliad and The Odyssey.

Homer

100

The Greek philosopher sentenced to death for “corrupting the youth” of Athens.

Socrates

100

This Renaissance artist painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.

Michelangelo

100

The Latin phrase meaning “Light of the world,” used by Christ in John’s Gospel.

Lux Mundi

100

The traditional, monophonic chant of the Roman Catholic Church.

Gregorian Chant

200

This Roman epic poet wrote The Aeneid, which connects Rome’s founding to the Trojan War.

Virgil

200

Plato’s famous work describing an ideal city ruled by philosopher-kings.

The Republic

200

This painting depicts Christ revealing His Sacred Heart and was popularized by the Jesuits.

The Sacred Heart of Jesus

200

The Latin motto meaning “Always the same,” often associated with tradition.

Semper Idem

200

This Latin hymn is traditionally sung at Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament.

Tantum Ergo

300

This medieval Italian poet authored The Divine Comedy, guided by Virgil through Hell and Purgatory.

Dante Alighieri

300

Aristotle defined this as the ultimate end or goal of human life, often translated as “happiness” or “flourishing.”

Eudaimonia

300

This art style, common in medieval churches, uses gold backgrounds and flattened figures to convey heavenly reality.

Iconography

300

This Latin phrase means “through the ages,” often used in Church documents.

Per Saecula

300

This Renaissance composer is known for sacred polyphony and the Pope Marcellus Mass.

Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

400

This tragic flaw leads characters like Oedipus and Achilles to their downfall.

Hamartia

400

According to Aquinas, this is the participation of rational creatures in the eternal law.

Natural Law

400

This artist painted The School of Athens, featuring Plato and Aristotle at the center.

Raphael

400

This Latin term means “word” or “reason” and appears in John 1:1.

Verbum

400

This musical term means “many voices” sung simultaneously.

Polyphony

500

This 4th-century saint wrote Confessions, blending autobiography, philosophy, and theology.

Saint Augustine

500

This is the logical form of the Principle of Non-Contradiction.

~(P  Λ ~P) 

**('AND' or a dot are acceptable)**

500

This Baroque artist is known for dramatic use of light and shadow, especially in The Calling of St. Matthew.

Caravaggio

500

The Latin phrase meaning “faith seeking understanding,” associated with St. Anselm.

Fides quaerens intellectum

500

This Baroque composer wrote over 100 sacred cantatas and the Mass in B Minor.

Johann Sebastian Bach

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