A bit of catching up …
A Map of Rome. Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry, Folio 141. Limbourg brothers, between 1411 and 1416. pic.twitter.com/AYaZK0P4Gd
— Bibliophilia (@Libroantiguo) November 9, 2015
2015.11.11: Étienne Helmer, Le dernier des hommes: figures du mendiant en Grèce ancienne… https://t.co/jGg8GCLFpO
— BMCR (@BMCReview) November 9, 2015
2015.11.12: Brad Inwood (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Vol. XLVII, Winter 2014… https://t.co/JIzcu9Y602
— BMCR (@BMCReview) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663660553529901056
@NevilleMorley bingo! The exact thought I had throughout Italy
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 9, 2015
Mummy Portrait of a Priest of Serapis
AD 160
From the British Museum Exhibition
Egypt: Faith after the Pharaohs pic.twitter.com/TMKvKA8E8z— William Dalrymple (@DalrympleWill) November 9, 2015
Tomorrow, I'm giving a talk in London for @TheRomanSoc: blonde wigs, gilded nipples & the Julio-Claudians #Dynasty https://t.co/L7NjHcxVu0
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) November 9, 2015
Al Fayum Portrait of an Alexandrian society woman
AD 50-70
From the BM Exhibition
Egypt: Faith after the Pharaohs pic.twitter.com/60hYDZip5f— William Dalrymple (@DalrympleWill) November 9, 2015
Awesome review of our Catullus translations from Julia Bouwsma:
https://t.co/4Ez2ITGT3icc: @Literature_CUP
— HALF/LIFE — Jeffrey Thomson (@jeffreyThomson) November 2, 2015
#Classics #History Edith Hall @edithmayhall the challenges of conflict resolution in classical Athens Getty Museumhttps://t.co/dNpVIQmMWN
— B&W Thornton (@bwthornton) November 8, 2015
So proud of my doctoral student Linnea Åshede who just finished this PhD gem. pic.twitter.com/M2KNJAzysY
— Ida Östenberg (@IdaOstenberg) November 9, 2015
RT @IcsDirector: Want to learn Greek and Latin in Cork this summer? 17th annual course programme now available at https://t.co/9rqzL86Oc9
— St Andrews Classics (@StA_Classics) November 9, 2015
I especially liked this fresco of a ruin from Villa Arianna at Stabiae. Itself now a ruin. A sort of mise en abyme. pic.twitter.com/T9Uwi7TtQW
— Agnes Crawford (@understandrome) November 6, 2015
UPDATED Call for Papers: Imagining the Afterlife (details on abstract/papers added) https://t.co/06OyNxDZFq via @wordpressdotcom
— Juliette Harrisson (@ClassicalJG) November 9, 2015
Stoic Week 2015 – Day 7: Reflections From Stoic Week https://t.co/andfMOzGyU via @YouTube #stoicweek #stoicism #philosophy
— Gregory B. Sadler (@philosopher70) November 9, 2015
"The world’s greatest Latinist's" approach to teaching–sounds dauntinghttps://t.co/Vb4Gm8Wkd1#Latin
— The Latin Programme (@LatinProgramme) November 9, 2015
Archaeologists, concerned citizens and their families are harassed and threatened by metal detectorists in the UK https://t.co/AJeS0kSbDZ
— Conflict Antiquities (@conflictantiq) November 9, 2015
A Roman coin, as owned by @holland_tom pic.twitter.com/ea8ehu4o97
— Chris Deerin (@chrisdeerin) November 9, 2015
@NevilleMorley I think you nailed it with the quality of beans… Doesn't even smell quite the same
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 9, 2015
Repititiationes ~ 11/08/15 https://t.co/eW9CmluHx1
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 9, 2015
This Day in Ancient History ~ ante diem v idus novembres https://t.co/wuNA0Jx1v3
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 9, 2015
@emmabridges declares #Odyssey week, so here's Soulfinity (last seen 2013): a scifi Odysseus and his suicidal clones https://t.co/U8Ggjx4Ak2
— Dunstan Lowe🏺🎮 (@AncientPlay) November 9, 2015
So if it's #Odyssey week, how about sharing your favourite receptions of my favourite epic?
— Dr Emma Bridges (@emmabridges) November 9, 2015
For #Odyssey week, a recent favourite of mine, @carolineplays Penelope RETOLD. Here's our @pvcrs interview: https://t.co/S4A38ZEWrh
— Dr Emma Bridges (@emmabridges) November 9, 2015
The Cynic-Stoic succession: Socrates, Antisthenes, and Chrysippus. #Stoicweek pic.twitter.com/71brZXdpNh
— Modern Stoicism (@StoicWeek) November 9, 2015
Here's what started me off with Classics: Latin with Laughter and then I, Claudius #itsaclassic pic.twitter.com/tgO1G8rUoD
— Helen Forte (@minimus_latin) November 9, 2015
Technically #prehistory, but close enough! @adelegeras' "Troy" had a big effect. Now I'm an Aegeanist! #itsaclassic pic.twitter.com/Zj0afxz2I2
— Rachel Dewan (@racheldewan) November 9, 2015
Over the last month, I devoted twelve blog posts to the ancient Greek hero Perseus. You can read the recap here: https://t.co/8jj6guj1U5
— Dr Josho Brouwers (@JoshoBrouwers) November 9, 2015
Robert Harris has written his last Roman novel.https://t.co/7VtVhO09pm
— The Classics Library (@stephenjenkin) November 9, 2015
Herculaneum Papyri @BrentSeales in today's New Yorker. The Invisible Library https://t.co/LvmonSFlPg via @jmseabrook
— Roger Macfarlane (@RogerMacfarlane) November 9, 2015
When someone claims "Jet fuel can't melt steel beams." pic.twitter.com/TU4EZ2PAkk
— ClassicalReactions (@ClassicalReacts) November 9, 2015
Cupid rides a lion in House of the Faun mosaic, Pompeii (IMAGO pic. 3361) https://t.co/NqzrQ8lKR1 #mewseummonday pic.twitter.com/slyP3i3mWp
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) November 9, 2015
Over the top-iary? Rome's she-wolf with Romulus and Remus. pic.twitter.com/25nLjLYLOW
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
Brilliant! https://t.co/4dn6ezYKWY
— Dr Emma Bridges (@emmabridges) November 9, 2015
Using these class texts (plus Loeb dio) to write a paper how Claudius killed caligula (pre levick) #itsaclassic pic.twitter.com/3mWQVUcF92
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663859699150888960
I Musei in Comune visti da parisianinrome: https://t.co/XffaO2cqjd. #MiCRoma Art is the proper task of life. Friedr… pic.twitter.com/79w0MUTzeF
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) November 9, 2015
Want to know what we're up to in Rome? Check out our updated landing page https://t.co/V3y75KaCs8 @AIRomanCulture Dig-Discover-Preserve
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663860847467450369
The Lower Danube Roman Limes (1st – 6th c. AD): http://t.co/puB8nJewaI pic.twitter.com/15hgcJannX
— Bibliophilia (@Bibliophilia_eu) April 30, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663861916432015360
|REPLAY| I'm standing where Julius Caesar died- let's talk about why th… #katch #Periscope https://t.co/FVBKOGRk3J pic.twitter.com/LWqdLVCFE1
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) November 9, 2015
Largo cats – history still lives in in Largo pic.twitter.com/QREeon2fIj
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663862613575647232
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663862836645470209
@farciminis yep.. Chairman was a puppet
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 9, 2015
Martial: still kind of an ass even after 2000 years. https://t.co/Xt8h708L1a
— Dr. Virginia L. Campbell (@campbell798) November 9, 2015
I'm speaking at Philadelphia Classical Soc. 11/21 about the Dickinson Classics Online project https://t.co/b3HpmNo9wC Hope to see you there!
— DCCommentaries (@DCComm) November 9, 2015
Roman weaning cup from Caistor Roman Town. One of the exciting things I will be talking about at the CRP AGM tonight pic.twitter.com/OOitQtTC4S
— Will Bowden (@WillBowden1) November 9, 2015
Read about our @UoNClassics undergraduate degrees so you can join us #itsaclassic https://t.co/cWs5XV8PFH pic.twitter.com/pAU18Yx844
— UoN Humanities (@UoNHumanities) November 9, 2015
@DrDonnaYates @peterbcampbell It's lucky you didn't call out my use of the subjunctive or I would've had to call it a moody review. 😉
— Conflict Antiquities (@conflictantiq) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663864338739015681
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663865015129239552
More photos just in from our Roman funeral @AshmoleanMuseum! https://t.co/R7WSfa1R1e
— Ashmolean Latin (@AshmoleanLatin) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663865215717646336
New at DCC: Cicero, In Verrem 2.1.53-86, notes by Ingo Gildenhard, audio by Jonathan Rockey. http://t.co/qek7OuSid1 pic.twitter.com/BB5oF84u68
— DCCommentaries (@DCComm) October 19, 2015
'The papyrus scrolls of Herculaneum have long fascinated and frustrated lovers of antiquity.' https://t.co/9z4UCd8JDy
— Classics For All (@classicsforall) November 9, 2015
Outrageously cool "Gladiator Jug" from Kellis, Egypt as discussed by Hope & Whitehouse in https://t.co/0x98UJOdds pic.twitter.com/LOvMgw2TgF
— Sebastian Heath (@sebhth) November 9, 2015
Catch him if you can – @SaveRome & his "Best of" #Periscope broadcasts are here: https://t.co/PGXvvV67zV pic.twitter.com/mfP3g5IiWs
— IMP CAE DIV FIV AVG (@Divus_Augustus) November 9, 2015
Recent article in Archeo on #ruts in #Pompei #road enthusiasts @Pompeiana79 @raylaurence1 @pompei79 @StevenEllis74 pic.twitter.com/iOeNWct74s
— Stephen Kay (@stephenjohnkay) November 9, 2015
We'll be livestreaming the full #Odyssey reading at https://t.co/9yAxnblAMM – don't forget to follow @AlmeidaOdyssey for live commentary!
— Almeida Theatre (@AlmeidaTheatre) November 9, 2015
Just three days 'til we livestream the #Odyssey! Here are the locations audiences can join in person: https://t.co/VbYRfuBURL #AlmeidaGreeks
— Almeida Theatre (@AlmeidaTheatre) November 9, 2015
It's the final week of #AlmeidaGreeks! #Medea's on til Sat https://t.co/msloGwhEcJ & the #Odyssey starts 9am Thurs: https://t.co/VbYRfuBURL
— Almeida Theatre (@AlmeidaTheatre) November 9, 2015
Moschophoros. Aka "that guy with the cow, miss" pic.twitter.com/D4DSvbq8tU
— Charlotte Easton (@Astracallis) November 9, 2015
I know it's a famous image of Priapus, but I showed it in class today, & have to post it. https://t.co/vr0bZdDvLP pic.twitter.com/E6ITFpSXcs
— Aven (@AvenSarah) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663869893427765248
Liberal[itas] Aug[usta] – The generosity of the emperor.
Hadrian and attendants on platform giving money to citizens pic.twitter.com/iKi92hzzIJ— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) November 9, 2015
Lamuerte de Dido (The deathh of Dido) Andrea Sacchi 1599-1661 pic.twitter.com/3wpRqsdRGO
— marialo (@lovalh) November 8, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663871449153843201
Next week's sex & gender class: what to do when Theseus, your culture hero, is a serial predator of under-age girls. pic.twitter.com/0uE06hj2Ol
— Carol Atack (@carolatack) November 9, 2015
Classic paintings inserted into modern life are wonderfully stark https://t.co/fCd1cTqqVx via @Independent pic.twitter.com/8kcn1z523Y
— GcRap (@The_Georgios) November 9, 2015
#Augustus & the Romans would have loved texting: SPQR IMP CAE QVOD V M S EX EA P Q IS AD A DE huh?! #iloveepigraphy pic.twitter.com/XuQuaVlGWr
— Edward Zarrow (@drzarrow) March 25, 2014
The gang's all here! @SeminaryCoOp pic.twitter.com/VLzzm4mxcT
— Harvard University Press (@Harvard_Press) November 9, 2015
.@BrindusaB1 John William Waterhouse – Consulting the Oracle pic.twitter.com/vIURo2dsrF
— claudio borlotto (@claudioborlotto) November 9, 2015
New post: "The Joy of Roman Britain" @history_girls I praise @romanpalace & @CoriniumMuseum among others #NewSeries pic.twitter.com/kIp2k9C8yv
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) November 9, 2015
Symposium on Ancient Mosaics – 05/12/2015, London (England)
https://t.co/nsm7ABmE3V— Fasti Congressuum (@fasticongress) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663873145863077889
The ultimate Roman nose! My new denarius of Nerva… pic.twitter.com/XFS8a0Wmze
— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) November 9, 2015
[Artwork of the day]
Mercury Abducting Psyche
☛ https://t.co/eiTJPGOCGs#LouvreSculpturs pic.twitter.com/bDKyAl92md— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) November 9, 2015
What did the Serapeum in Alexandria actually look like? https://t.co/RQQnK8uW8f pic.twitter.com/UXkCmthELa
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) November 9, 2015
I get @Channel4News reporting IS has made $55m from antiquities, coz @TIME reported it, but there's no evidence. https://t.co/RijCXaVI16
— Conflict Antiquities (@conflictantiq) November 9, 2015
CALL. 11.12.2015: Cicero Across Genres, Celtic Conference in Classics – Dublin (Ireland)
https://t.co/T3dQ2ZJMGT— Fasti Congressuum (@fasticongress) November 9, 2015
@conflictantiq it's cognitive dissonance to deflect attention from their oil revenues…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 10, 2015
Misura per il vino nei Musei Capitolini: https://t.co/ijMjbwrpLo#CapolavoriCapitolini pic.twitter.com/erVvBxJYMg
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) November 9, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663874770019221504
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/663875088991801345
Op-ed writing is a responsibility academics owe to society, says #GradHacker @dscotthighered: https://t.co/cf7PAmAvaZ
— GradHacker (@GradHacker) November 9, 2015
Il #CraterediEufronio resterà a #Cerveteri, da dove proviene. L'Italia è un #Museodiffuso e va valorizzata tutta. pic.twitter.com/faJ6XX3YbF
— Dario Franceschini (@dariofrance) November 7, 2015
Blogged: Wandering along the colonnade of the Gymnasium of Salamis #Cyprus https://t.co/WgDrpvAAHC#archaeology pic.twitter.com/r30REhmrtw
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) November 9, 2015
Via Appia Nuova (1880 ca)
L'acquedotto Claudio sullo sfondo. 🙂 pic.twitter.com/UmQyaCgo0A
— Roma Ieri Oggi (@romaierioggi) November 9, 2015
What is the oldest-known song? @HistoryRevMag investigates… https://t.co/bsyEAxfCS7 pic.twitter.com/sTHMvzVAbg
— History Extra (@HistoryExtra) November 9, 2015
Dodwell on the 'spoliation of the Parthenon' & 'indignation of the Athenians' https://t.co/W4Fi8XaaMp @GettyMuseum pic.twitter.com/C5Pzcj4JII
— Pythika (@Pythika) November 9, 2015
@QueensClassics @DorothyKing @GettyMuseum As seen on the Euston Road pic.twitter.com/lfyaddcO1N
— Christopher Howse (@BeardyHowse) November 9, 2015
The Oslo papyrus with lyrics and melodies for songs about Neoptolemus, son of Achilles (Hall 2002:14; West 1992:312) pic.twitter.com/lxO8QhiTFK
— Dr Hannah Čulík-Baird (@opietasanimi) November 9, 2015
The vaulted corridor of the Tabularium (the records office of Ancient Rome) on the Capitoline Hill. pic.twitter.com/3LmOdkKlSB
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
There's something quite special about being at eye level with the capitals of the Temple of Vespasian & Titus, Rome pic.twitter.com/pSpKXPZxXH
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
The attention to architectural detail is astounding. Architraves of the Temple of Vespasian and Temple of Concordia. pic.twitter.com/xse2zl7QYi
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
Listen to Ben Witherington III talk about Reading in the Ancient World on @BibArch's youtube channel https://t.co/yXSBeDuCFm
— Jennifer Drummond (@DrummondJenn) November 9, 2015
Dedication to the Goddess Caelestis for a safe passage going & returning, hence the feet in two directions. pic.twitter.com/XuOIAJxSHp
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
'Hunters, we have chicken, fish, ham and peacock for lunch'… and a tiny board game*
*labelled as such @MedievalG pic.twitter.com/saCKx82e4h
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
The Dying Gaul.
'Consents to death, but conquers agony,
And his drooped head sinks gradually low'
— Byron pic.twitter.com/vCJO7k01lM— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
Part of what’s magical about #Rome is the recollections that develop—thinking back on Juturna’s place in the #Forum. pic.twitter.com/nuZjcBLBtQ
— Diana Spencer 🇪🇺🇮🇪 (@DianaJSpencer) November 9, 2015
Wonderful light casting long shadows of the sculpture in the Capitoline Museum, Rome. pic.twitter.com/F1VervN8MV
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
#Camel relief in the Capitoline Museum, Rome pic.twitter.com/9OMLscHbDU
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
Better than wallpaper. #wallporn in the Capitoline Museum, Rome. pic.twitter.com/NvOZo660fx
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
The incredible effect of opus vermiculatum mosaics (using tiny tesserae) from Rome and Tivoli in Capitoline Museum. pic.twitter.com/wDBpKpmfK5
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
You can see it on her face, she's obviously a huge fan of Roman brick stamps… Capitoline Museum @electricarchaeo pic.twitter.com/VQnSVszipw
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 9, 2015
@farciminis of course chairman was autocorrect ed chaerea
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 10, 2015