The Supersyllabogram PU in Knossos Tablet KN 424 R q 12. Cloth for whom? | Linear B, Knossos & Mycenaehttps://t.co/7tjxyY3NY2
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
The Supersyllabogram PU in Knossos Tablet KN 424 R q 12. Cloth for whom? | Linear B, Knossos & Mycenaehttps://t.co/i4Qx9S0vrC
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Dorothy King's PhDiva: Ajax and Achilles Play Dicehttp://t.co/M4WVTxoCXT
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
BREAKING NEWS! Film on the Return of the famous “Idalion Tablet” Decree… | Linear B, Knossos & Mycenaehttps://t.co/k2ZpXXwD7m
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
“A type of cloth” – the Supersyllabogram PU in Mycenaean Linear B… | Linear B, Knossos & Mycenaehttp://t.co/yO3SjEj8m9
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
The Philadelphia Classical Society’s Norma Goldman Classical World Fashion and Design Show… | CAAS-CWhttp://t.co/Rr3IANVXMZ
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
2015 Annual Meeting | CAAS-CWhttp://t.co/78j35KKXZT
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Augustus’ own reason for attacking Anthony, and an 18th century forgery at Roger Pearsehttp://t.co/DGe6uIA42x
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
How To Say “Happy Birthday” in Ancient Greek | Sententiae Antiquaehttp://t.co/nMWzc9Qmea
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Where Katniss, Wonder Woman and Marvel's new Thor come from – LA Timeshttp://t.co/6w4b26OvGq
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
The Stoa Consortium » Blog Archive » Humanités numériques: l’exemple de l’Antiquité (Grenoble, Sept 2-4, 2015)http://t.co/W9H4WfN6tQ
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
German media investigation does not disprove Islamic State antiquities trafficking, may corroborate it and its $36m https://t.co/nlulVRBBZS
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
A New Historical Grammar of Demotic Greek: Reflections on the Κοινή Ελληνική in the 19th and..| CHS Research Bulletinhttp://t.co/ChGoH47HSQ
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Portable Antiquity Collecting and Heritage Issues: German Media Corroborate $36M Islamic State Antiquities Traffickinhttp://t.co/kCNNwURI8x
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Dorothy King's PhDiva: Amphipolishttp://t.co/jIS7S0tLZv
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Pure Indulgence | Sphinxhttp://t.co/UdDHCxRyuC
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Before You Shop for Christmas, Read Some More Lucretius | Sententiae Antiquaehttp://t.co/Zu1YXUFhFr
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Nuntii Latini mensis Novembris 2014 – Latein-Monatsnachrichten – Radio Bremenhttp://t.co/Q0UbJb0unr
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Lateinische Wörterbücher- Eine illustrierte Bibliographie von Richard Wolfhttp://t.co/AEeQMF4b2S
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
From the missing century to the shadow of Alexander the Great | The Second Achilleshttp://t.co/dl4j6TdFTg
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Selected Search Enquiries (2) | The Second Achilleshttp://t.co/DQGn9hQ5jc
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Laudator Temporis Acti: The Latin Dictionary of Lewis and Shorthttp://t.co/1MXORoebbZ
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
What's New in Papyrology: Elsewhere at the SBLhttp://t.co/DcZg3OrPRv
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Looting Matters: Steinhardt Sardinian Figure Withdrawn From Salehttp://t.co/za0UMP0UR0
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Pie (charts), speeches, and music: Thanksgiving Day Links | Classical Association of New Englandhttp://t.co/KTR7jY3B2G
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Happy Thanksgiving–If You Bring the Food, Drink and Company (Catullus 13) | Sententiae Antiquaehttp://t.co/gQfqUYcQiy
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
‘Peninsular’ comes from Latin ‘paeninsula’, literally meaning ‘almost an island’.
— The OED (@OED) November 28, 2014
“Perhaps the only doo-wop song sung in Latin” http://t.co/WsWnFJ7HAA @rocking_bob
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) November 28, 2014
How the mosquito shaped Ancient Rome: http://t.co/M32taGzzQl
— Latin Language (@latinlanguage) November 28, 2014
Lucius now just over 2 years old on YouTube with 806,462 views on YouTube: http://t.co/OwniPlVI1m via @YouTube.
— ray laurence (@raylaurence1) November 28, 2014
Four sisters in Ancient Rome – 283,142 views on YouTube: http://t.co/GBGDnJGmIy via @YouTube
— ray laurence (@raylaurence1) November 28, 2014
Saturn's Temple. On the slope of the Capitoline, overlooking forum, last phase- 4C AD Late! http://t.co/Yvw6lv8HiL pic.twitter.com/Dap1Z5y9RI
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) November 28, 2014
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/538713562097938432
#Amphipolis Peristeri – There are testimonies from history that great Tomb intended for Alexander Amphipolis was a significant city……
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Peristeri- No grave goods in main chamber. Other places pottery+coins found Coins range from 2nd CenturyBC Macedonian + Roman
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Peristeri -Yard in front of stairs initially open. Tomb was at one period visited. Heroon use confirmed it seems
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Peristeri – Coins found in grave that were from the time of Alexander the Great !!
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Lefantzis – Tomb was looted during Roman era and before sand filling.
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/538714575521447937
#Amphipolis Lefantzis- The septal sealing walls and sand infill occurred synchronously. The first sealing wall sits on top of soil.
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Lefantzis- Sealing wall blocks had been re-purposed from elsewhere
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Lefantzis – Inscriptions are masonic symbols and do not give evidence to the identity of the deceased.
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
Katerina Peristeri (lead Archaeologist): "The excavation is not over yet, at the moment we have the completion of… http://t.co/syoCwiLCbQ
— Amphipolis Tomb (@amphipolistomb) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Re: architrave paintings Early stages of research, laser and ultraviolet methods required. Initial observations indicate colours
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Englezos – Trench in Forth Chamber had been constructed BEFORE the Tomb
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis Lefantzis – Christians, unlike other ancient monuments, had no contact with the grave. Also established that Lion face southeast
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/538715199063478272
#Amphipolis Peristeri – For certain there are other constructions (regarding geophysical scans of hill)
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
In theory, a pile of tweets below this recount the Amphipolis archaeologists' press conference… Interesting stuff
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Please read. My friends are staging the play Antigone in Beirut with a cast of Syrian refugees http://t.co/0KoMkDtdM5 via @TheEconomist
— Greg Jenner: 'DEAD FAMOUS OUT MARCH 19TH!' (@greg_jenner) November 29, 2014
Pubblicato su Instagram da davxz: http://t.co/VLrA5fIKGy. #roma #museicapitolini pic.twitter.com/tgKbjhlbTy
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) November 29, 2014
#Amphipolis In 1916 WW1 British soldiers prepared to loot 1,000 pieces of Tomb including Lion. Bulgarian and Austrian attacks thwarted theft
— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 29, 2014
@tronchin @SarahEBond I've been pondering this for a few days… Can you find an ancient source for this?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Guess what? The tradition of pulling apart a wishbone for luck has its roots in classical antiquity! http://t.co/lsvhKD0YPq
— Francesca Tronchin, PhD (@tronchin) November 24, 2014
@SarahEBond @tronchin I definitely think this is 'don't eat that, elmer' material
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
How to read your Professor's door: http://t.co/OQhkdifuLr pic.twitter.com/hM8wr918hG
— PHD Comics (@PHDcomics) November 29, 2014
Topix > Amphipolis was plundered, says excavation leader: The archaeologist leading the dig at the ancient tom… http://t.co/x6m5IhsOJx
— david meadows (@exploratorraw) November 29, 2014
Derived from Latin 'explere' meaning 'fill out', ‘expletive’ originally denoted a ‘word used merely to fill out a sentence’.
— The OED (@OED) November 29, 2014
"Questions at the heart of _Antigone_ may equally be asked of Syria": Sophocles' play acted by refugees in Lebanon.http://t.co/WhdUKavgZO
— CAC SCEC (@cac_scec) November 29, 2014
@SarahEBond @tronchin The 1st instance of the word /wishbone/ in the OED is in a mid‑19c Dictionary of Americanisms; etym. uncertain.
— Bill Thayer 🎗️ LacusCurtius (@LacusCurtius) November 29, 2014
@SarahEBond @tronchin The L&S entry /furcula/ does not include the meaning of wishbone. That term may be early modern medical. ▸
— Bill Thayer 🎗️ LacusCurtius (@LacusCurtius) November 29, 2014
@SarahEBond @tronchin Searched the books on the Etruscans in my library (about 10), lots of divination of course & not a word about bones.
— Bill Thayer 🎗️ LacusCurtius (@LacusCurtius) November 29, 2014
Ad #Agrigento nella splendida sala del Telamone per la presentazione dei risultati del progetto italo-tunisino Aper pic.twitter.com/PhQGAwBB8v
— Giuliano Volpe (@Giuliano__Volpe) November 28, 2014
'Picturing Homeric Weaving': super article by Susan T Edmonds http://t.co/KjAHyvJzPP pic.twitter.com/EqE4ljREUj
— Pythika (@Pythika) November 29, 2014
The Ancient Origins of High Heels—Once an Essential Accessory for Men – The Epoch Timeshttp://t.co/FdjRseZn78
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
Lecturer in Classics – HigherEdJobshttp://t.co/evYGHWcChQ
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
The Edithorial: Lloyd George, Roman Britain, and Wales in WW1http://t.co/PtbwnwCCUg
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
University Theatre's Helen shows the depth of the woman whose face launched a thousand ships – Isthmushttp://t.co/Of8vVzF56V
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/538790240832741377
#Amphipolis #Anfipoli Parte dello #scheletro sotto i crolli della copertura. pic.twitter.com/UFL84EDCxW
— Roma Fuit (@RomaFuit) November 29, 2014
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/538810859796316160
Montreal wins the #VanierCup by a score of 20-19. Late blocked field goal shattered a golden chance for Mac to take the lead late.
— The Silhouette (@theSilhouette) November 29, 2014
@cpdickenson @DioPerix standard greekreporter
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
A Marble Cinerary Urn, Roman Imperial, reign of Otho, Galba, or Vitellius, circa A.D. 69… http://t.co/lnRNhpqztk pic.twitter.com/Oe17dx8J8g
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
A Marble Portrait Head of a Philosopher, Roman Imperial, circa 2nd/3rd Century A.D. | http://t.co/DNDd9UYDux pic.twitter.com/2JtZYtvPup
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
A Gallo-Roman Bronze Head of Ares or Athena, circa 2nd Century A.D. | lot | Sotheby'shttp://t.co/Hg91JGGEC2 pic.twitter.com/IuFvtWStdF
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
A Marble Head of Aphrodite, also known as Sappho, Roman Imperial, circa late 1st/early 2ndhttp://t.co/0bjJ8QePrO pic.twitter.com/GZMbqRpHBb
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
A Hellenistic Marble Torso of Aphrodite, circa 1st Century B.C., or earlier | lot | Sotheby'shttp://t.co/c3HaAppr3u pic.twitter.com/n9adunOf1X
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
A Hellenistic Marble Group of a God and Goddess, probably Rhodian, circa late 2nd/early 1sthttp://t.co/hlsRACrrZJ pic.twitter.com/xy0vut2U2z
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
An Attic Red-figured Calyx Krater, attributed to the Phiale Painter, circa 440-430 B.C. | http://t.co/uji1HgTwJb pic.twitter.com/aMd3ppMpqQ
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
@Phyllida1234 @GuyChamberland sounds reasonable to me
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
@Phyllida1234 @GuyChamberland go to the Sotheby's page… There's a thumbnail link
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
@GuyChamberland @Phyllida1234 two stories of silenos being entrusted with something?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
@GuyChamberland @Phyllida1234 taken together, maybe the ancient equivalent of 'you had one job' … lost baby dio
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
@GuyChamberland @Phyllida1234 I think it's the remains of the thyrsus from side one
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 29, 2014
I'm assuming female centaurs are quite rare in antiquity so here's one for centaur connoisseur @stephenjenkin pic.twitter.com/20ceMoYwjt
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 29, 2014
I love that there are people who phrase their google queries like this pic.twitter.com/a61CpEfafn
— Neil Cicierega (@neilcic) November 29, 2014
Roman Bronze statue of a runner, Herculaneum #Herculaneum #Pompeii pic.twitter.com/0nrVS6dTIp
— Maarit J. Hellsten (@MaaritJohanna) November 30, 2014