Huge & exciting news for the History program a & the Arts Faculty https://t.co/aJsrvPVoEj
— Prof Louise ‘Student Whisperer’ Hitchcock (@ashlarblocks) November 23, 2015
Roman villa TWICE the size of Lullingstone's unearthed in Otford | Sevenoaks Chronicle https://t.co/sr4vNICtt0 via @7OaksChronicle
— Jeffrey A. Becker (@servilius_ahala) November 23, 2015
Powerhouse panel on feminism and late antiquity. @kateantiquity starts us off with Thecla. #aarsbl15
— Eric C. Smith (@ECSmithPhD) November 22, 2015
Fab connections w/modern modesty in Middle East, slasher movies & women, and fan culture in @kateantiquity talk #aarsbl15
— Carrie (Caroline T.) Schroeder (@ctschroeder) November 22, 2015
Pantheon, 1929. A little less pedestrianised, but no McDonald's! https://t.co/8bBeG0utHS
— The Classics Library (@stephenjenkin) November 23, 2015
Informative doc. on Parthenon design & efforts to restore this magnificent building. #2p34 https://t.co/qIuu14Nw0y pic.twitter.com/2D5pfEA3c3
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) November 23, 2015
"Battling the Gods" argues that atheism isn’t a product of the modern age but reaches back to ancient Greece. https://t.co/cCfggudlzh
— New York Times Books (@nytimesbooks) November 23, 2015
also, "blogging" can mean a lot of different things. Sharing research in progress is a good thing, all boats rise https://t.co/V5CHQ1eWXI
— David Wacks (@davidwacks) November 23, 2015
Disagree. A) Regular writing is good; B) If you want to blog, you don't want to be in a dept that would view it -ly. https://t.co/wtMQkdue3X
— S.J. Pearce (@homophonous) November 22, 2015
‘The dangers surrounding the Syrian archaeological heritage are growing beyond our capabilities’ https://t.co/nUhod44WyT
— Apollo Magazine (@Apollo_magazine) November 23, 2015
This statue torso was found in the Headquarters building in Caerleon. The statue represented the spirit of LEGIIAVG. pic.twitter.com/JTa0GPs1Nr
— Roman Legion Museum (@RomanCaerleon) November 23, 2015
Delighted Casa del Frutteto, #Pompeii will be open to the public – I recorded all its walls!https://t.co/AKi65PHIdg pic.twitter.com/VORLjQC3EG
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 23, 2015
Classics Reading Competition March 2016: school students invited to read aloud in Greek, Latin or in translation! https://t.co/oEKI4ms2qc
— Classics and Ancient History at Leeds (@LeedsClassics) November 23, 2015
Heart-shaped bird and vine: 3rd century AD, Case Romane de Celio, Rome. pic.twitter.com/2AjZebA2Dm
— Pythika (@Pythika) November 22, 2015
There's a good short video on the Case Romane del Celio here:https://t.co/MM1pylsN81
— Pythika (@Pythika) November 23, 2015
@DorothyKing I hope Saint with #iPad is still on display? pic.twitter.com/gKvApaY4oO
— Pete Savin (@pete_savin) November 23, 2015
[Un jour, une œuvre]
"Exaleiptron" tripode à figures noires
☛https://t.co/6KXmiG2UV8#ArtGrec pic.twitter.com/pXpNPv76ue— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) November 23, 2015
Whoever thought of staging a Henry Moore exhibit in the Baths of Diocletian, Rome is a genius. pic.twitter.com/owCUwMNn4a
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 23, 2015
Curves of the Henry Moore sculpture beautifully echoed by the lines of the Roman sarcophagus in Baths of Diocletian. pic.twitter.com/jYYxCJisOQ
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 23, 2015
#Exposition #Astérix à #Alésia au @MuseoParcAlesia : Dernière ligne droite pour en profiter ! @asterixofficiel pic.twitter.com/3naupYf2O6
— Collectionnix.com (@collectionnix) November 23, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/668738208457433088
Scavi di Pompei, cane dei carabinieri a caccia di esplosivo https://t.co/rrfgPkHOxW
— Blogging Pompeii (@BloggingPompeii) November 23, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/668740740596547584
Visitors @AshmoleanMuseum translating Latin tombstones for themselves after Dr Jane Masséglia's 20 min crash course. pic.twitter.com/ZsagQtlQo3
— Ashmolean Latin (@AshmoleanLatin) November 23, 2015
Repititiationes ~ 11/22/15 https://t.co/ptn4Bwu4aI
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
This Day in Ancient History ~ ante diem ix kalendas decembres https://t.co/ETywESluUQ
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
The Final Blogger Session #AARSBL15 – https://t.co/mEJRnb1pVN
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
Famous #Pompeii cast of the 'Muleteer' was found leaning forward not upright as he's now presented @rogueclassicist pic.twitter.com/PFyow6cwpz
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 23, 2015
Prominent Israeli Archaeologist Yoram Tsafrir Dies – Israel News – Israel News – Haaretz Israeli News Source – https://t.co/fpONNezp8G
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
Three arms, a leg and two hands – https://t.co/qrrZXUuRwD
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
1,700-Year-Old Ring Depicts Nude Cupid, the Homewrecking God – https://t.co/fj8BfRO1CS
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
Ancient alliteration @AshmoleanMuseum: it takes two to tie Tim in a toga #AshmoRomans pic.twitter.com/PbSWTg84ME
— Ashmolean Latin (@AshmoleanLatin) November 23, 2015
New @OU_Classics blog post by @johncpc about the recent conference "Classical Influences on Georgian Stourhead" https://t.co/z0xryHjlev
— OU_Classics (@OU_Classics) November 23, 2015
When you're going clubbing. pic.twitter.com/lQOZJhEUng
— ClassicalReactions (@ClassicalReacts) November 23, 2015
Columbanus is said to have founded Annegray within ruins of an old Roman fort https://t.co/o9LxCj7zYs Cue: geophys. pic.twitter.com/9tFWP1lTFf
— Vox Hiberionacum (@VoxHib) November 23, 2015
Mabillon, inventor of paleography, the art of dating manuscripts and charters from the type of handwriting used. https://t.co/O0iWCUDciF
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) November 23, 2015
#Classics #Drama Professor Edith Hall @edithmayhall the Greek Tragic Chorus Tom Mackenzie a series of video clips… https://t.co/XgMyiMO36f
— B&W Thornton (@bwthornton) November 21, 2015
More images of that fabulous Roman mosaic recently discovered in Lod in Science News, thanks to my pal Mara… https://t.co/IPE8qWfgh6
— Kris Hirst (@archaeology) November 23, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/668898241900126212
Case of the #Mondays #amirite? (125-75 BC Hellenistic copy of Ptolemaic bronze original
Pentelic marble) pic.twitter.com/WnNTciuRPv— Royal Ontario Museum (@ROMtoronto) November 23, 2015
Using more active Latin has transformed both my practice & assessments: students showing greater mastery earlier 🙂 pic.twitter.com/lITPzR2MAs
— Edward Zarrow (@drzarrow) November 23, 2015
#culture
L.Lagrénee
Baño de Venus@mariagonzalezf5 @margaquiros @amparofashion @elamigojavi @Amyperuana @Rem040 BG pic.twitter.com/8tpqdOEOuc— Rita Cóbix (@RitaCobix) November 23, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/668899158661574657
Watch @ECA_AS EvanRyan talk about illicit antiquities https://t.co/kR5nE6AjHN pic.twitter.com/snF5HMiJUC
— Heritage at State (@HeritageAtState) November 23, 2015
#MuseumMonday #atROM!! Exploring Ancient Greece @ROMtoronto! https://t.co/1tIjHOeBP5 #Toronto pic.twitter.com/KdIXAF1ydw
— Cheryl Nichols (@CherylNicholsTO) November 23, 2015
Not to ruin the surprise but here are more photos of a bedroom in Casa del Frutteto, #Pompeii & some reconstructions pic.twitter.com/FzWYnBApsO
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 23, 2015
Dining room with scene of Daedalus & Icarus & bedroom that gives house it's name:House of the Fruit Orchard #Pompeii pic.twitter.com/Db33T4H6AW
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 23, 2015
Evelyn De Morgan
Hero holding the beacon for Leander
1885@geminicat7 @Amyperuana @69quietgirl
Good Day Friends!💐🌿 pic.twitter.com/tKHtpg43TV— Adriana Evangelisti (@AdrianaCioci) November 16, 2015
Lecture @uniofgothenburg 26 Nov., Carrie Vout, Cambridge: Why the Romans got it wrong: error and the history of art. pic.twitter.com/f3MF57HR20
— Ida Östenberg (@IdaOstenberg) November 23, 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
#iphigenia section from book in last week's pic, 1912 myth-compendium by Guerber, painting by Nonnenbruch #iphi2016 pic.twitter.com/3Z2aoEWE0h
— CADRE was TVTragedy (@tv_tragedy) November 23, 2015
Odysseus is also holding a "leopard" that looks more like an octogenarian who hasn't shaved in a few days pic.twitter.com/ljznEMMBFi
— Jake Nabel (@JakeNabel) November 23, 2015
But this #iphigenia made the impression: #rogerlancelyngreen ill. #paulinebaynes https://t.co/7JpkwINPYx #iphi2016 pic.twitter.com/PtsTeSu6dP
— CADRE was TVTragedy (@tv_tragedy) November 23, 2015
La collection permanente du @MuseeLouvreLens restera gratuite jusqu'en décembre 2016 > https://t.co/0Oc57XnOUG pic.twitter.com/QCGiX3Pr26
— Ministère de la Culture (@MinistereCC) November 23, 2015
La muerte de Lucrecia,1871. Eduardo Rosales #painting #ArtLovers pic.twitter.com/QHgxiIhehF
— Mencía. (@menkareh) November 23, 2015
#Roman cult/ceremonial crocodile-skin armour, AD 3/4th century, Egypt @britishmuseum #archaeology pic.twitter.com/6hAsXaiVxi
— Love Archaeology (@LoveArchaeology) November 20, 2015
Fancy knowing more about exact dates given by eclipses in antiquity? https://t.co/vqHu5De5RK
— AncientBlogger (@ancientblogger) November 23, 2015
New issue of Classical World-Volume 109, Number 1, Fall 2015 https://t.co/BLHhbiYfOL @ProjectMuse @JHUPress
— Yale Classics Lib (@YaleClassicsLib) November 23, 2015
Un lingote de plomo del mayor pecio romano del Mediterráneo llega al MAN https://t.co/nU5hr2gevd #BouFerrer pic.twitter.com/NN7ZPxoCEG
— Museo Arqueológico Nacional (@MANArqueologico) November 23, 2015
A Roman Slave Market c1884 JL Gerome#culture #MuseoIdeale
@cobixreyes @Akjnuk @Biagio960 @artmajcar @artdielle pic.twitter.com/x4q12MffXV— BrindusaB (@BrindusaB1) November 23, 2015
"Aristophanes: Clouds, Women at the Thesmophoria, Frogs" (Stephen Halliwell) https://t.co/R9pdcIqkMw #newbook https://t.co/h1aomIJWBy
— St Andrews Classics (@StA_Classics) November 23, 2015
Oh dear, I really had hoped that Turnbull would be above the 'Thucydides Trap' nonsense… https://t.co/noP5NX7Tg9
— The Thucydides Bot (@Thucydiocy) November 23, 2015
New issue of Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology Vol 28, No 1 (2015) https://t.co/YnqPySzUyb @EQUINOXPUB
— Yale Classics Lib (@YaleClassicsLib) November 23, 2015
How the soon to be opened House of the Fruit Orchard, #Pompeii looked during its excavation in the 1950s. pic.twitter.com/xPqwbh5KrE
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 23, 2015
Today in #history: #Thespis of Icaria becomes the first recorded #actor to portray a character onstage. (534 BCE) pic.twitter.com/KuyeHhL8o0
— Ancient History Encyclopedia (@ahencyclopedia) November 23, 2015
So… A number of us has mentioned the Thespis thing today… Does anyone know how the date was established?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
This past weekend at #ACTFL15 Ted Zarrow won the Teacher of the Year award. Congratulations Magister Zarrow! pic.twitter.com/beY7Q0PF82
— Bolchazy-Carducci (@BCPublishers) November 23, 2015
Check out "American Institute for Roman Culture Winter Benefit" https://t.co/VSSXlvQBgx via @Eventbrite
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) November 23, 2015
Around the obsidian mirror in the portico of the House of the Fruit Orchard, #Pompeii are some charming #graffiti… pic.twitter.com/jLgdwdtzFX
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) November 23, 2015
@pompei79 why?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
Book I am looking for missing in this mess. Unsurprisingly @UoMLibrary pic.twitter.com/JL8cKJnDw7
— Roberta Mazza (@papyrologyatman) November 23, 2015
#Medusa #mosaic from the apodyterium (heated changing room) in the baths at #Bignor #Roman Villa pic.twitter.com/i22v3uEPTi
— Dr Paula Lock (@PaulaLock5) November 23, 2015
#MondayBlogs Lots of great posts on the blog of @metmuseum Library https://t.co/kO9ElWDZRQ 🙂 pic.twitter.com/chy4jIVyoQ
— Annina Luck (@AnninaLuck) November 23, 2015
Glevum – A Roman Town Forming a Modern Cityhttps://t.co/418ZLg3yl6#Gloucester #Gloucestershire #RomanBritain pic.twitter.com/Cl9JJz7bJQ
— Rome Across Europe (@DontStopRomeing) November 18, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/668915976264634368
Coming Soon: Latina Mythica II gives students the chance to enjoy the Iliad and myths surrounding the Trojan Cycle. pic.twitter.com/yfP65yxa6F
— Bolchazy-Carducci (@BCPublishers) November 23, 2015
2015.11.24: Kate Wilkinson, Women and Modesty in Late Antiquity. Cambridge: Cambridge… https://t.co/MAQ7RFCa5K
— BMCR (@BMCReview) November 23, 2015
PENELOPE CO[N]IVNX SE[M]PER VLIXIS ERO
I, Penelope, will always be Odysseus' wife
Tapestry: https://t.co/ZuivRVjIpH pic.twitter.com/oQkDhNxUex— Jake Nabel (@JakeNabel) November 23, 2015
[Artwork of the day]
Attic black-figure tripod exaleiptron
☛ https://t.co/EgtcncKQf4#GreekArt pic.twitter.com/X4nZWEK2MR— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) November 23, 2015
2015.11.25: Richard Payne, Mehrnoush Soroush (ed.), The Archaeology of Sasanian Politics… https://t.co/cpbH2vSPxQ
— BMCR (@BMCReview) November 23, 2015
In Kensington at 7.00 tonight? Want to hear me talk Roman filth with @_paullay? Then come to Kensington Central Library!!!! #Phwaor #Dynasty
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) November 23, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/668917087537115137
John Cleese Touts the Value of Philosophy with 22 Public Service Announcements https://t.co/tqNrLLAj59 pic.twitter.com/WUTHtjbyuI
— Open Culture (@openculture) November 23, 2015
RT @ahencyclopedia: #Literature (from the Latin Littera) is the written work of…. https://t.co/jTxAZuJRjP #History pic.twitter.com/ZvWV9PX1PI
— Artemission.com Ancient Art🏺 (@ArtemissionArt) November 23, 2015
Sovereign remedy against academic totalitarians' abuse of children:read #Ovid to them, teach them a little #Greek https://t.co/UiOm6uvqHu
— Rasha Taus (@RashaTaus) November 23, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/668918000389636096
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/668918269554892800
Did some work on our Cherokee grammar today in #CLCV3244 (classicists, nb the dual!) pic.twitter.com/FRVNdLNl3p
— Joseph A. Howley (@hashtagoras) November 23, 2015
A British tiger from Woodchester #Roman villa! (IMAGO pic https://t.co/NqzrQ8lKR1) #mewseummonday pic.twitter.com/f99134TZn3
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) November 23, 2015
Apollo Citharoedus.
The god is depicted half-draped or naked, with a large cithara in his left hand. pic.twitter.com/Z54RYOQF3R— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) November 23, 2015
Ancient Rome: What a strange lot https://t.co/dC8nC90UO3 via @TheEconomist
— Diane Cline (@DianeHCline) November 23, 2015
So far, overwhelming support for the over-the-top despair of Lucan. Happy folk, aren't we? https://t.co/tPdo7JPx5Y
— Aven (@AvenSarah) November 23, 2015
Just a thought to add in: is the Thebaid's surface elegance & prettiness a good analogue to the Hollywood/PR facade over today's brutality?
— Aven (@AvenSarah) November 23, 2015
Though I'll admit Lucan's wallowing in the gory details has strong parallels with the 24-hour-cable-news approach to misery.
— Aven (@AvenSarah) November 23, 2015
Centaurs were the intellectuals of ancient Roman mythology & symbol of Sagittarius. https://t.co/sHvbvEiDFH pic.twitter.com/WgySwCXEca
— Getty (@GettyMuseum) November 23, 2015
thanks @ctschroeder for tweeting "Provenance in an eBay World: Does the Provenance of Ancient Artifacts Matter?" #AARSBL15
— Morag M. Kersel (@mokersel) November 23, 2015
Statua di Marsia @ Musei Capitolini, copia romana da originale greco https://t.co/Vdl39B13NU#CapolavoriCapitolini pic.twitter.com/h79iPdjXws
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) November 23, 2015
Ruin of the day: The Temple of Apollo at #Pompeii with its colonnade composed of 48 columns. Built in the 2nd c. BC. pic.twitter.com/1tEa1p6XTq
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) November 23, 2015
Beautiful corner of Rome once on a sunny day: 'Portico of Octavia (Detail) Rome." "31" #lanternslide #Heirtagger pic.twitter.com/qCZ7Hz8RSH
— HEIR Oxford (@HeirOxford) November 23, 2015
"What did Socrates really think about the gods?" An excerpt from Battling the Gods https://t.co/xdkwm50wnY pic.twitter.com/lNt0VjjY5A
— Literary Hub (@lithub) November 19, 2015
Spain: It's a pretty bad idea to loot underwater archaeological sites & post about it online https://t.co/YZVFWwX1CP pic.twitter.com/1k9IGx7u9s
— Dr Donna Yates (@DrDonnaYates) November 23, 2015
Always nice to see questions on University Challenge about the Roman Republic, even if they were on its killers… pic.twitter.com/ujTKRQpDJK
— CANI (@ClassAssocNI) November 23, 2015
'A Roman Triumph' by Peter Paul Rubens includes elephants bearing fruit and incense burners: https://t.co/JxB8I3za5j pic.twitter.com/mJDXNtpPo3
— National Gallery (@NationalGallery) November 23, 2015
Exiled,betrayed,alone: until Euripides wrote
"Fiam Medea"
Anselm Feuerbach,1870 / Henri Klagmann,1868
💙 @Asamsakti pic.twitter.com/eWE9zY2hBr— Lucia Tassan Mangina🇪🇺 #FBPE (@LuciaTassan) November 23, 2015
Some oxygen isotope evidence for Africans in Britain, c. 1100 BC–AD 800—new post 🙂 https://t.co/QmmLBLQYSl pic.twitter.com/fUiIFCbj9r
— Dr Caitlin Green (@caitlinrgreen) October 24, 2015
Niobe, petrified from the feet up: Apulia 330BC @GettyMuseum https://t.co/gAlzVES8MN pic.twitter.com/m4Lv6jTKy1
— Pythika (@Pythika) November 23, 2015
Digital #archaeology and reconstruction – new developments https://t.co/1icuCoVLin The #Antoninus #Faustina pic.twitter.com/hn66fHdnYm
— Sarah Ward 🧜🏻⚓️💦 (@SarahWardAU) November 23, 2015
@pompei79 maybe the ianitor
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
Tracking Stolen Gods. I’m excited to speak at @IPCH_Yale tomorrow. Sneak slides preview: https://t.co/Y16MjcbnYX pic.twitter.com/al9ys2ejmr
— Dr Donna Yates (@DrDonnaYates) November 23, 2015
@pompei79 that was one cartoon I somehow missed…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 23, 2015
Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, built for satrap of Persian Emp. & 1 of 7 fabled wonders of ancient world. #2p34 pic.twitter.com/5ChA4DjtJo
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) November 23, 2015
Mausolus, Carian satrap hired Greek sculptors = Greeks vs. Amazons theme = cultural blendings of Asia Minor. #2p34 pic.twitter.com/UOe9cyRv1D
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) November 23, 2015
Roman coin of the emperor Trajan, discovered by a metal detector in Nunney. pic.twitter.com/zQuJ6M5Hfd
— Visit Nunney (@VisitNunney) November 22, 2015
Archaeologists in Croatia discover sunken town 3,500 years old – Xinhua | https://t.co/oHp4jW5VMM – https://t.co/iK1nWlt8iV
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 24, 2015
@pompei79 tracked it down 😁
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 24, 2015
Hamas Seizes Chest of Ancient Gold Coins Accidentally Discovered in Gaza | Jewish & Israel News (cont) https://t.co/uglhLTWBLH
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 24, 2015
Hamas Seizes Chest of Ancient Gold Coins Accidentally Discovered in Gaza | https://t.co/otyrFkbfuE – https://t.co/NLH6RuhS03
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 24, 2015
So I wonder what hamas is doing with the antiquities it confiscates..
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 24, 2015
A colossal sculpture from the Mausoleum – usually id. as Mausolus – but likely an ancestor. c. 3 m tall! #2p34 pic.twitter.com/kZ2I95R0Xw
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) November 24, 2015
@pompei79 I trust you… I hate when that happens myself
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 24, 2015
On top of Mausoleum of Halicarnassus was a 4 horse chariot. 1 colossal horse survives. #2p34 pic.twitter.com/7S3O4yWrYy
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) November 24, 2015
Ancient underground city in Cappadocia will 'rewrite history' – ARCHAEOLOGY – https://t.co/sRJgJySPNb
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) November 24, 2015
Psyche Crowning Cupid – Jean-Baptiste Greuze. pic.twitter.com/EKCRHTIpJW
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) November 24, 2015
Good night all. Here is a #watercolor/pen&ink #sketch of the Temple of Apollo in Corinth. #Greece pic.twitter.com/Fwtf4IpTZA
— David D. Pearce (@daviddpearce) November 23, 2015
Jean-Baptiste Greuze- 1767, Votive Offering to Cupid. pic.twitter.com/xM679iD3l6
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) November 24, 2015
Jean-Baptiste Greuze – circa 1767-1769, Aegina Visited by Jupiter. pic.twitter.com/hw4pkAhE0U
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) November 24, 2015
Discipulus est prioris posterior dies.
–
The Dead Poet Borne by a Centaur.
Gustave Moreau
ca 1895 pic.twitter.com/x3KxxQEg1F— Beba Kron (@BebaKron) November 24, 2015