- vituperation October 14, 2011 (Wordsmith)
- omphalos, n. October 14, 2011 Oxford English Dictionary
- hendiadys October 14, 2011 (Merriam-Webster)
- cosmogony: October 14, 2011 (Dictionary.com)
Month: October 2011
Circumundique ~ Past Couple of Days
I may have missed a few things (or they may be duplicates here):
- Celebrating a Triumph for Victory in Persia October 12, 2011
- Guess What October 12, 2011 (N,S, Gill)
- APA Blog : CFP: Flavian Literature and its Greek Past October 12, 2011
- Gissing and Greek October 12, 2011 Michael Gilleland
- John the Lydian, “On the Roman Months 4″: October October 12, 2011 Roger Pearse
- Excellent princes, ridiculous sophists or jealous tyrants? Gibbon’s take on some of Rome’s good emperors October 12, 2011 mharrsch
- 10/12/11 PHD comic: ‘Junk’ October 12, 2011
- Vespasian Augustus: Imperial Power in the First Century CE October 13, 2011 History of the Ancient World
- Famous Latin Students October 13, 2011
- Vitruvius on Trees October 13, 2011 Geoff Carter
- Detecting Under the Microscope 3: “Detecting Finds Up For Grabs” October 10, 2011 Paul Barford
- Experimenting with Google Scholar alerts October 11, 2011 lizgloyn
- “Spartacus: Blood and Sand” – word of caution regarding the “Fugitivus” tattoo October 11, 2011
- Cremation Sites in the Roman Empire October 11, 2011 Katy Meyers
- The Origins of Roman Li-chien October 10, 2011 History of the Ancient World
This Day in Ancient History: pridie idus octobres
- rites in honour of the Penates Dei — the Penates Dei were originally the penates who watched over the storehouse of the king (when Rome had such, obviously); at some point, the Penates Dei came to be identified with Castor and Pollux, but they still had a temple under their own name on the Velian hill which was apparently restored by Augustus.
- 223 A.D. — martyrdom of Calixtus

Major Shoe Find at Camelon Fort Dig
This is one I’ve been sitting on in hopes of getting something with a few more details, but to no avail (so far) … we first mentioned this dig (and the shoe find) a week or so ago (see: https://rogueclassicism.com/2011/10/03/roman-fort-in-scotland/). This week, National Geographic (quite rightly, I think) picked up the story and is focussing on the shoes … some excerpts:
About 60 pairs of sandals and shoes that once belonged to Roman soldiers have been unearthed at a supermarket construction site in Camelon, Scotland, archaeologists say.
The 2,000-year-old leather footwear was discovered along with Roman jewelry, coins, pottery, and animal bones at the site, which is located at the northern frontier of the Roman Empire.
[…]
The cache of Roman shoes and sandals—one of the largest ever found in Scotland—was uncovered recently in a ditch at the gateway to a second century A.D. fort built along the Antonine Wall. The wall is a massive defensive barrier that the Romans built across central Scotland during their brief occupation of the region.
The find likely represents the accumulated throwaways of Roman centurions and soldiers garrisoned at the fort, said dig coordinator Martin Cook, an archaeologist with AOC Archaeology Group, an independent contractor in Britain.
“I think they dumped the shoes over the side of the road leading into the fort,” he said.
“Subsequently the ditch silted up with organic material, which preserved the shoes.”
Despite being discards, the hobnailed shoes are in relatively good condition, Cook added.
Newfound Fort One of Decade’s Biggest Finds
While the new supermarket site also includes the remains of a first century Roman fort and ancient field systems, excavations have centered on the area of the younger Antonine fort.
“We’ve got evidence of a really substantial structure,” Cook said. “You would have had a square fort with stone walls and three or four ditches around them.” […]
Other finds include a Roman axe and spearhead, three or four brooches, French Samian ware—which is a high-prestige ceramic—glass, and standard pots, he said.
- 120 Roman Shoes Found in U.K.; “Substantial” Fort Find (National Geographic)
… what I want to know is whether the shoes have all been definitely identified as male shoes. Women’s (and children’s) shoes have been found in Roman fort contexts in the UK and I’m very curious whether there might not be evidence of a female presence to be found in this cache
Classical Words of the Day ~ 10/13/11
Past couple of days, actually:
- facinorous, adj. October 13, 2011 (OED)
- sop October 13, 2011 (… sort of … Merriam-Webster)
- venal October 12, 2011 (Wordsmith)
- languid October 12, 2011 (Merriam-Webster)
- etiology: Dictionary.com Word of the Day October 12, 2011 (Dictionary.com)