AWOL – The Ancient World Online: The Parthenon Frieze Repositoryhttp://t.co/g0xL6zxxVP
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Hmmm…
Metalli conficcati nelle rocce, scassi e crolli: anfiteatro devastato dalla legnaia, Cagliari – Notiziehttp://t.co/yI0iqtkzyH
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Alexander: January / Winter Chronology | The Second Achilleshttp://t.co/PdrJbRZfJy
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Plutarch’s Life of Alexander (50 – 56) | The Second Achilleshttp://t.co/YZOzzJKkEB
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Looting Matters: Market demands for archaeological objectshttp://t.co/xeEgZEPxHt
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Dorothy King's PhDiva: Today In 193: Pertinax (briefly) Became Emperorhttp://t.co/NAJ1HdkpWb
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Happy New Year! | FOLLOWING HADRIANhttp://t.co/35ezF0tEZv
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Philogelos 55 | Curculio – Michael Hendryhttp://t.co/SB8hqq1Js4
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
An ancient Olympic tradition that Fifa would love »Peter Jones in The Spectatorhttp://t.co/RZOUUlkXDr
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Looting Matters: US returns antiquities to Turkeyhttp://t.co/qgAPKjwaRP
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Ancient hangover cures to get you through the new yearhttp://t.co/Ze7NyvgE99
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Why didn't the Greeks and/or Romans figure out to use the winter solstice as the end of the year?
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Annum novum faustum felicem mihi/vobis! http://t.co/rg2QPFK8oR pic.twitter.com/L7pb1b0ILL
— Caroline Wazer (@CarolineWazer) January 1, 2015
Καλή Χρονιά σε όλους σας με διαχρονικές αξίες.
Happy new year with wishes that goes through the years pic.twitter.com/7kfFANlovH— Morpheas (@Morpheas78) December 31, 2014
διενιαυτίζω (dieniautizō)
—live out the year— Henry George Liddell (@LiddellAndScott) January 1, 2015
7 Tips for Learning Multiple Languages Simultaneously: http://t.co/MiZ5vdTm39 pic.twitter.com/KkKgW64zpw via @TLILanguages & @latinlanguage
— St Andrews Classics (@StA_Classics) January 1, 2015
@DorothyKing Happy New Year! Fireworks over Acropolis!!! https://t.co/dWBZVtnA2H
— marinakarlou (@marinakarlou) January 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/550668933100232704
Exploring our classical foundations at 'LSElitfest w/ @BarbaraGraziosi @holland_tom @llewelyn_morgan & @TheTLS 28 Feb http://t.co/A4Rn6QYdor
— LSE Events (@LSEpublicevents) January 1, 2015
Pantheon, Roma, 2014@museiincomune
photo @GrassiMarcello pic.twitter.com/3hU3IOk5yD— Marcello Grassi (@GrassiMarcello) January 1, 2015
Classics For All! Want to get Latin/Greek onto your curriculum? £200000 of grants for classics. Apply by Jan 16. http://t.co/EAs9r5vuhB
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) January 1, 2015
Some thoughts on Nero and the Domus Aurea http://t.co/ycPPv1tEwG
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) January 1, 2015
One highlight of the day is that I get to put up my Greek Mythology 2015 calendar. Yeah. pic.twitter.com/QDRMgjGaEt
— David Allsop (@da11sop) January 1, 2015
Had to share this beautiful photo of snow at #Pompeii, taken today by @ArcheoMario. Felice anno nuovo a tutti!! pic.twitter.com/4C9m37qR7t
— Amanda Pavlick (@akpavlick) December 31, 2014
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/550670653230424066
@holland_tom #CrowdSourcing common slave name I first century Rome… 100 or so inscriptions… Cil vi
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Just out of interest, when hoards are discovered is there ever any archaeological excavation to put finds in context? http://t.co/M3w3qmleH5
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) January 1, 2015
Jan 1 44 BC #Rome's new consuls take office: #Caesar and #MarkAntony, beginning one of history’s most fatal years. pic.twitter.com/dpzyAMRjqb
— Barry Strauss (@barrystrauss) January 1, 2015
@holland_tom lost to history… Jews were frequently expelled for reasons unknown
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
@holland_tom I'm not saying it isn't a ref to Jesus, but there is another possible explanation
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
@holland_tom Coin toss…
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
@holland_tom I've never seen one mention cil vi
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
speaking of cil Vi, it's interesting to note that folks born in the year this came out might be graduating c ba pic.twitter.com/pRfmh8ipi9
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
January is named after the Roman god Janus. He had two faces to see the future and the past http://t.co/EwKo7G0ZIV pic.twitter.com/BqumAcI6Pa
— British Museum (@britishmuseum) January 1, 2015
One of my first searches with the epigraph cd was for chrestus…
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Happy New Year! Learn how ancient Jews dated years http://t.co/rF9R2wI4XK
— Biblical Archaeology Review (@BibArch) January 1, 2015
Here is January. The Trojan horse. Unfortunately calendar does not say where the photo is from. Any ideas people? pic.twitter.com/VK6LfGqeOA
— David Allsop (@da11sop) January 1, 2015
@da11sop it's on the neck of a Cycladic Vase
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
@da11sop some deets http://t.co/09iVMcFE5i
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Greek New Year tradition to smash pomegranates=symbol of abundance, fertility & good luck #HappyNewYear! pic.twitter.com/idQnA6Y1Jm
— Getty (@GettyMuseum) January 1, 2015
This publication brilliantly illustrates the history of papal patronage & collecting. http://t.co/qeAdyC4eiA #MetPubs pic.twitter.com/XG2cgK9pbU
— The Metropolitan Museum of Art (@metmuseum) January 1, 2015
#onthisday 45 BC New Year's Day is celebrated on January 1 for the first time as the Julian calendar takes effect. pic.twitter.com/JFaMqtjeSc
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) January 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/550699066683043840
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/550699094206070784
Today 404AD in Rome took place the last known Gladiatorial Fight. pic.twitter.com/ljHDQxCXjV
— Roman History (@romanhistory1) January 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/550707103724490752
Can you translate 12 famous Latin phrases? Brush up on your mottos! http://t.co/HbjFOpAYjD
— Cressida Ryan (@CressidaRyan) January 1, 2015
Online latin tutorials, simple but useful?! https://t.co/rJZMQ19LLd
— Cressida Ryan (@CressidaRyan) January 1, 2015
Greek Barbarism: Ocellus Lucanus, 3.5 | Sententiae Antiquaehttp://t.co/RV2fI3kNoy
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
New Year’s Special: Ancient Time Travel | res gerendaehttp://t.co/JtmyCU4pId
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Grèce en vogue: A New Wave of American Philhellenism in the 1920s | From the Archivist's Notebookhttp://t.co/QFgXtzr87P
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) January 1, 2015
Head of Hadrian wearing a wreath of laurel leaves, discovered in 1988 to the South of the Roman Agora in Athens. pic.twitter.com/BOmBJZWEuy
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) January 1, 2015