@ClassAssocNI @Curculiunculus daylight saving year…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
If you love something, let it go. If it comes back to you, revise it quickly before the reviewers change their minds.
— Shit Academics Say (@AcademicsSay) November 4, 2015
2015.11.02: Kevin F. Daly, Lee Ann Riccardi (ed.), Cities Called Athens: Studies Honoring… https://t.co/ttuUFCWmks
— BMCR (@BMCReview) November 4, 2015
2015.11.03: Loredana Mantovanelli, Scribonio Largo: Ricette mediche. Traduzione e commento… https://t.co/fye1h9cCpJ
— BMCR (@BMCReview) November 4, 2015
2015.11.04: Gustav Adolf Lehmann, Alexander der Große und die « Freiheit der Hellenen… https://t.co/NFcku4x0IP
— BMCR (@BMCReview) November 4, 2015
“Do Arrows Kill People Or Does Hercules Kill People?” by Michael Goyette = fascinating, even for me 🎉🎉 %%r https://t.co/RtsCb1sKlU
— robert phillips (@chopin_slut) November 4, 2015
@adreinhard I couldn't finish it even trapped on a plane…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/661848294184910848
Intricate #mosaic portrait from the ruins of #pompeii @romtoronto https://t.co/ZiXqmLWlRv
— Jeanne Beker (@Jeanne_Beker) November 4, 2015
Have you seen my author page on Amazon? Take a look: https://t.co/Ksi0TpM95K https://t.co/AfuQAPSrg1
— Lindsay Powell (@Lindsay_Powell) November 4, 2015
The Aqua Virgo flows once again in the Trevi Fountain.https://t.co/z5COH8KynS
— The Classics Library (@stephenjenkin) November 4, 2015
Nothing like a barely-drinkable £3 airport espresso to make me feel better about importing my regular coffee beans from Lower Bavaria.
— Neville Morley (@NevilleMorley) November 4, 2015
#exhibition "The Women of Rome" at the CaixaForum in Madrid, from November 5 2015 to February 12, 2016. https://t.co/INDSJkmVyt
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/661849763105669120
Drinking cup depicting Apollo holding a lyre and pouring a libation as a black bird looks on 480-470 BCE #Delphi pic.twitter.com/TWXv2D7VEs
— Dr Paula Lock (@PaulaLock5) November 4, 2015
Chariot racing when you've lost your licence…
Boy 'hoop rolling' in a mock circus.
Great Palace of Constantinople pic.twitter.com/4goWTO1PDA— The Classics Library (@stephenjenkin) November 4, 2015
Ancient Roman John Lewis ad. pic.twitter.com/ir1yuCzul8
— The Classics Library (@stephenjenkin) November 4, 2015
Inaugural #lecture, today "Oros: Mountains in Ancient Greek and Roman Culture" (Jason König) https://t.co/VnrFFpd35v https://t.co/xyw6Xwozaf
— St Andrews Classics (@StA_Classics) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/661851028950802432
Preparing lecture on Roman "power walks" for Bergen tomorrow. Includes Brutus coin of consul & attendants on move. pic.twitter.com/FZEgsF9Ye6
— Ida Östenberg (@IdaOstenberg) November 4, 2015
New in our webstore: Sicily and the Sea from Wbooks https://t.co/iCu6Ax5MHL
— Ancient History Mag (@AncientHistMag) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/661851406798888960
Attis in Trier. The hood and bare stomach appear to distinguish him from Mithras https://t.co/KYdeIPDoxM
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) November 4, 2015
School Students of Classics: compete in our annual Reading Competition, now including an 'in translation' category! https://t.co/6Iupgwz7pO
— Classics and Ancient History at Leeds (@LeedsClassics) November 4, 2015
Murdoch takes over NatGeo. The first thing that happens? 180 staff sacked, mostly fact-checkers! #CouldntMakeItUp pic.twitter.com/vFz8cgDxp6
— Alex Andreou (@sturdyAlex) November 4, 2015
The camelopard (giraffe), first seen in Rome during Caesar's victory games in 46 BCE. https://t.co/qitQYzlGBc
— Ida Östenberg (@IdaOstenberg) November 4, 2015
Repititiationes ~ 11/3/15 https://t.co/2O3gjzK6k5
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
This Day in Ancient History ~ pridie nonas novembres | rogueclassicism
https://t.co/0VX5iKCI3F— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
[yes, national geographic headlines suddenly change too] Stunned Archaeologists Find 22 Ancient Greek Shipwrecks
https://t.co/ZSgs7ScMto— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
so with the changes @NatGeo it seems their archaeologists suddenly join the ranks of the puzzled, stunned, stumbling types elsewhere?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
I see that nyt has made a few changes to their kazakhstan geoglyph article, I'm glad to see this
— Owen Jarus (@ojarus) November 3, 2015
Experts Believe Hobby Lobby Stole Biblical Antiquities From Iraq. Here's Why. | ThinkProgress
https://t.co/psyfvFXqBL— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
@electricarchaeo it changed in the sense they had a fox-style headline…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
@electricarchaeo never saw ng use the portray-archaeologists-as-buffoon headline before
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 4, 2015
Ancient Greeks wrote that #Celts wore horned helmets in battle. This is the only one found! https://t.co/nUT5RiwD1z pic.twitter.com/KVqTQAYieu
— British Museum (@britishmuseum) November 4, 2015
Thanks to all who attended Dr Slootjes' talk on Digital Rome. We hope you went away intrigued by the possibilities! pic.twitter.com/mbHcfnMjew
— CANI (@ClassAssocNI) November 4, 2015
5 Nov 2-4pm Guildford CA, 6th Form Class Civ/Latin Conf inc Katherine Clarke: 'Cicero's de imperio' & Lucy Jackson: 'Women in Greek Tragedy'
— The Classical Assoc. (@Classical_Assoc) November 4, 2015
For a flavour of what digital imaging can do for the study of ancient cities, https://t.co/fORCDoakyR Rome of 320CE https://t.co/FDvKFg98Mh
— CANI (@ClassAssocNI) November 4, 2015
This is a denarius of Vespasian 69-79 AD. The Capricorn was the Emperors' conception sign! pic.twitter.com/Hccm5Re5sP
— Roman Legion Museum (@RomanCaerleon) November 4, 2015
Students rise to the challenge of new Latin assessments this year, show greater mastery w/o translating #latinteach pic.twitter.com/A5JqQfMmjx
— Edward Zarrow (@drzarrow) November 4, 2015
School Teacher Fellowship 2015/2016: The British School at Athens invites applications, apply here: https://t.co/Ltg1PbUpEQ
— Oxford Classics (@oxfordclassics) November 4, 2015
TWO #Classics competitions for school age pupils in Wales: one on ancient heroes (incl translation), & blog writing https://t.co/Mu3r8V9HTf
— Evelien Bracke (@Evelien_Bracke) November 4, 2015
RT @NorthumberlndNP: Tickets for the #HadriansWall #Archaeology Forum on the 28th November- https://t.co/NuiNijn0d0 pic.twitter.com/pYsYCAynmF
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) November 4, 2015
I just bought Greek imperial coins and their values @AbeBooks https://t.co/vwMHk8HQVM
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) November 4, 2015
Happy to discover another unfinished fresco in #Pompeii that was interrupted by the eruption (with a reconstruction) pic.twitter.com/BW7T1eHUXN
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 4, 2015
.@splate1 on religion and facial recognition. Making me think of those 'faceless' classical sculptures #OU_MatRelig pic.twitter.com/LXmgeCBwFQ
— Jessica Hughes 🎧 🌱🏺 (@jesshughes61) November 4, 2015
It's Comedy Today in my Athens class! Acharnians, Rough Music, Eva Gabor, & more. (with a Melian Dialogue chaser)
— Bret Mulligan (@bretmulligan) November 4, 2015
Rome's very own equivalent to Pompeii, amazing #archaeology https://t.co/pKLp8HQgrr
— Matthew Ward (@HistoryNeedsYou) November 4, 2015
On our way to 'votive heaven' #OU_MatRelig https://t.co/8GxQi1LvJb pic.twitter.com/5QXHtKlNeQ
— Jessica Hughes 🎧 🌱🏺 (@jesshughes61) November 4, 2015
Bad hair day. All two of them.#ancientgraffito from Rome, San Sebastiano @MedievalG pic.twitter.com/afD6fLha4B
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662046696071929856
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662046805954338817
Thinking about temples for tomorrow: reminded of Amphictyonic League #coin @britishmuseum https://t.co/bGeXO6yXmM pic.twitter.com/eL5bHf3V5I
— Amelia Dowler (@amelia_dowler) November 4, 2015
'Best slide of the day' prize goes to Marion for her 'religious barbies' #OU_MatRelig pic.twitter.com/D58AAsE1kO
— Jessica Hughes 🎧 🌱🏺 (@jesshughes61) November 4, 2015
#Expo #MujeresdeRoma en @CaixaForum #Madrid @FundlaCaixa, del 4 de noviembre al 14 de febrero pic.twitter.com/avdxtN6gBx
— Mediterráneo Antiguo. Legado griego (@meditantiguo) November 4, 2015
#Athens was "the only polis that knows how to pity," according to Callimachus οὕνεκεν οἰκτείρειν οἶδε μόνη πολίων https://t.co/aNsNyr05zC
— DCCommentaries (@DCComm) November 4, 2015
#Tonight we have @abzmab lecturing on smell and the senses in Ancient Rome!
Doors open at 18.00 pic.twitter.com/36AxZaPZAG
— British School at Rome (@the_bsr) November 4, 2015
Classics alumni & teachers of Classics! We invite you to our annual Christmas event @UniofOxford Faculty of Classics https://t.co/DqrNNdi0vj
— Oxford Classics (@oxfordclassics) November 4, 2015
Live-tweeting at conferences? Know the etiquette so you don't tweet like a twit: https://t.co/WnrZYt7TyV pic.twitter.com/Uc3GApP1gM
— Nature News & Comment (@NatureNews) November 2, 2015
New addition highlight: Graeco-Roman Marble Equestrian Fragment, c. 1st Century B.C. / A.D. – Remnants of paint… https://t.co/5qwnNh6Sbj
— Artemission.com Ancient Art🏺 (@ArtemissionArt) November 4, 2015
. @SamHayez Reception after lecture on some of Catullus' dirtier poems Friday included plate of crudités with radishes. No mullet, though.
— Michael Hendry (@Curculiunculus) November 4, 2015
tempus neminen manet
time waits for no one#Latintattoo pic.twitter.com/LtfVIQXdGE
— The Latin Programme (@LatinProgramme) November 4, 2015
@Biagio960 Mosaico con combattimento tra gladiatori nell'arena di Augusta Treverorum,-Treviri- II-III sec Part. pic.twitter.com/2Zx2PJZAMq
— Tommaso Iorio (@TommasoIorio) November 2, 2015
We have received more comments on Ancient History Magazine 1. Of course, Pericles knows… https://t.co/8ITuOTrLTF pic.twitter.com/OAOiBZRRPF
— Ancient History Mag (@AncientHistMag) November 4, 2015
@VindolandaTrust You made the list! –> 5 Open Historical Collections that Make Us Swoon https://t.co/ejqaCKiIz2 pic.twitter.com/552Dth4HUt
— HistoryBuff (@historybuffcom) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662052469984378880
Now Hiring: Art Historian: Art of the Ancient Mediterranean (Assistant Professor) | Old Dominion Universit | https://t.co/7lbg9czpNl #jobs
— AIA (@archaeology_aia) November 4, 2015
A post of relevance to "Sex & the Body in the Ancient World" students; do you agree that Rome was 'sex-positive'? https://t.co/epJVU7SkRr
— Dr Aven McMaster (@AvenMcMaster) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662052848260227072
Great opening image for @abzmab's 'Smell and the senses in ancient Rome' talk @the_bsr tonight #wallporn pic.twitter.com/SSLbj4BlrH
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662053320626987008
What about Rome? @sapphicapuella on #LGBThistory and #Roman #histsex https://t.co/YAgYu4hqSc pic.twitter.com/4cbTePUcw2
— Justin Bengry (@JustinBengry) November 4, 2015
Where's a bowdlerized Catullus when you really need one??
— Joseph A. Howley (@hashtagoras) November 4, 2015
A journey through #smell and #senses with @abzmab this evening @the_bsr with mention of the cloaca maxima #Rome pic.twitter.com/gCUzJtbFOI
— Stephen Kay (@stephenjohnkay) November 4, 2015
Roman Noses was a really super talk @the_bsr from @abzmab about smell. Here's a rude poem and pic. Prego. pic.twitter.com/TgZGKxI2JZ
— Agnes Crawford (@understandrome) November 4, 2015
Ancient drama festival for schools @warwickuni with @drmichaelcscott on 25th Jan 2016 https://t.co/CHcuHHrOZt
— Oxford Classics (@oxfordclassics) November 4, 2015
For those following along at home, that's 53 objects, one of which was known prior to Hunt purchase #ART463 @arenikira @Sothebys
— Justin Walsh (@jstpwalsh) November 4, 2015
Tickets now on sale for @warwickuni @warwickarts @WarwickClassics Aristophanes Lysistrata on 24th January 2016 https://t.co/IHBhLgW1xP
— Prof. Michael Scott (@profmcscott) November 4, 2015
New issue of Classica Revista Brasileria de estudos classicos v. 27, n. 1 (2014) https://t.co/GfKWgA3d3D
— Yale Classics Lib (@YaleClassicsLib) November 4, 2015
Those 53 objects, none with known findspots, sold for $11,397,150 on a high estimate of $7,575,000 #ART463 @arenikira @Sothebys
— Justin Walsh (@jstpwalsh) November 4, 2015
Hercules resting, Roman copies of a bronze statue by Lysippos. The tired hero leans on his club after his 12 labours pic.twitter.com/oHi5Uw7Taz
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) November 4, 2015
>@Kayt_MB Lots of finds in for our FLO @findsorguk These Roman clawed feet are rather gorgeous @RomanFindsGrp pic.twitter.com/yoRwXrgpnQ
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) November 4, 2015
Thank you to the gentle reader who has put my Trojan War: A New History next on his reading list. https://t.co/Ga1fsmDQzP
— Barry Strauss (@barrystrauss) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662058621195460608
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662058828402413568
Students of "Great Hoaxes and Fantasies in Archaeology" study Vinland Map @BeineckeLibrary https://t.co/kMmNAPSCPt pic.twitter.com/k1V13dN2tL
— Beinecke Library (@BeineckeLibrary) November 4, 2015
There are millions of items in storage and @ROMtoronto has dedicated preparators who take care of them #KidsToWork pic.twitter.com/BoK75LCLSM
— Yvonne (@yveleung) November 4, 2015
Attis, from the Wikipedia article (which is full of rubbish) pic.twitter.com/x8MCubukhH
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) November 4, 2015
Attis again. The profuse locks of hair seem characteristic. pic.twitter.com/PmtS7apILg
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) November 4, 2015
"Hail, Caesar!" by the Coen Brothers… Possibly more excited for this than for Star Wars VII https://t.co/ShYAF7ZMsI @filmspotting
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) November 4, 2015
Mosaic panel with a rare depiction of the madness of Hercules (Hercules furens), 3rd-4th century AD, from Portugal. pic.twitter.com/R35lH2sddy
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) November 4, 2015
Guess who @StoicWeek spotted in the Rubenshaus Antwerp? pic.twitter.com/4qa62tFEiA
— John Dean (@RealJohnDean) November 4, 2015
Attis at Ostia with inscription Numini Attis C. Caecilius Ephus … Plaster cast on site, w/o inscription. pic.twitter.com/2E2HVf4vkY
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) November 4, 2015
Altar of Cybele / Attis 374 AD online at Vatican. But useless image. #TooSmallToRead https://t.co/jUbX5l7jhh pic.twitter.com/TCC4OUV51L
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) November 4, 2015
.@wmarybeard is this week's @StylistMagazine 5 min* philosopher! *ours for life #SPQR https://t.co/GUCY2c1v1q pic.twitter.com/xffJFCDMqD
— Profile Books (@ProfileBooks) November 4, 2015
New photos further detailing finds unearthed in #Pylos
Grave of Ancient Greek Warrior or Priest#AncientGreece pic.twitter.com/tnKADRkxov— Zito E (@Zito__77) November 4, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662060575741095936
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/662060763369066496
#Mithology
Aurora and Tithonus
Jean Baptiste Marie Pierre1747
B'sera❤@Asamsakti @Rossy__RORO @N2312Neagoe @Milutta pic.twitter.com/BCMTms0I9g— Lucia Tassan Mangina🇪🇺 #FBPE (@LuciaTassan) November 4, 2015
Showing off the Votives Project website, thanks for the photo Urmila. … https://t.co/uXpml6mVaB pic.twitter.com/UeDbON9bQm
— Jessica Hughes 🎧 🌱🏺 (@jesshughes61) November 4, 2015
Word of the Day: hyperbole – exaggerated statements not meant to be taken literally… https://t.co/om0ur5ZYh1 pic.twitter.com/DP30dJbEVS
— Oxford Languages (@OxLanguages) November 4, 2015
@DrDonnaYates We were expecting/would have been happy with 2-3 wrecks. We were definately stunned. @rogueclassicist @electricarchaeo
— Peter Campbell (@peterbcampbell) November 4, 2015
@peterbcampbell @DrDonnaYates @electricarchaeo but you were stunned *after*.. You weren't a *stunned archaeologist* before the find
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 5, 2015
@DrDonnaYates There's a reason no one had ever surveyed there- was no reason to expect much was there. @rogueclassicist @electricarchaeo
— Peter Campbell (@peterbcampbell) November 4, 2015
@DrDonnaYates The journalist was a good guy. Murdoch takeover is in 2 weeks, even if layoff happening now @rogueclassicist @electricarchaeo
— Peter Campbell (@peterbcampbell) November 4, 2015
@DrDonnaYates @peterbcampbell @electricarchaeo 'stunned archaeologist' and 'archaeologist stunned after finding' are different animals
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 5, 2015
'#Nero's Golden House.' (The Domus Aurea) https://t.co/sNgwOqSprw #History #Rome pic.twitter.com/WMOpUJd7q3
— Ancient History Encyclopedia (@ahencyclopedia) November 5, 2015
@DrDonnaYates @peterbcampbell @electricarchaeo or a bunch of folks getting together in a tent, smacking each other with shovels…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 5, 2015
@DrDonnaYates @peterbcampbell @electricarchaeo… And walking vaguely over a field where they stumble over a temple… Then they're puzzled
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 5, 2015
Angelica Kauffmann
'Papirius Praetextatus Entreated by his Mother to Disclose
the Secrets of the … Roman Senate' pic.twitter.com/AcEsPlBgLs— marisabel loyo (@marisabeloyo) November 4, 2015
@peterbcampbell @DrDonnaYates @electricarchaeo journos don't usually write their own headlines
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 5, 2015
"Imagine for a moment that you are a nineteenth-century satyr who is into calisthenics." https://t.co/emzDjxiXYv pic.twitter.com/3JCr5zJZOI
— John Overholt (@john_overholt) November 5, 2015
Interested in gaining more Roman coin identification skills? Sam Moorhead of @findsorguk will be running a training day… #numismatics
— Money & Medals Net (@Moneymedalsnet) November 3, 2015
#AuctionUpdate: Aristide Maillol’s 'Vénus' sells for $2.7m, above the high est #TaubmanAtSothebys pic.twitter.com/l1xmcCPqaS
— Sotheby's (@Sothebys) November 5, 2015