pridie nonas decembres
- ca. 235 — martyrdom of Barbara
… this has traditionally been a very slow day for Classics … must be connected with exams or something …
quidquid bene dictum est ab ullo, meum est
Hey, I'd appreciate shoutout/ RT 4 @AIRomanCulture #saverome benefit https://t.co/4osjlYzzkD @ahencyclopedia @carolemadge @rogueclassicist
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 3, 2015
SapphoFest: Friday, December 11, 2-4pm
Round table conversation about the latest
academic work on Sappho # CHS pic.twitter.com/ZjE84Ub8yw— Ancient Greek Hero (@AncGreekHero) December 3, 2015
No, the Siberian 'Ice Maiden' is not a man: https://t.co/kGJavbZGcs pic.twitter.com/Bhq8SWwdQy
— Forbes Science (@ForbesScience) December 3, 2015
An abandoned Roman villa: The Otford site which was systematically demolished in the 4th century.https://t.co/Z4c0gbqERj
— The Classics Library (@stephenjenkin) December 3, 2015
Vote #Vindolanda for Research Project of the year! *please* https://t.co/c2csWz2xLO
— Vindolanda Trust (@VindolandaTrust) December 3, 2015
Poem about Ostia Antica by #KarlKirchwey. https://t.co/R9HtFYF6Wr pic.twitter.com/iZ33dM9u89
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) December 3, 2015
Beautiful day to #takewalks with wonderful friends on the VIP Caesar's palace tour #Rome pic.twitter.com/Uc9ZSWzHjS
— Walks (@Walks) December 1, 2015
Suivez-moi samedi sur Twitter.
Nous visiterons l'exposition #FlorencePortraits du musée @jacquemartandre #Médicis pic.twitter.com/sPtRrt6gvx— Scribe Accroupi (@scribeaccroupi) December 3, 2015
The sound of music: A woman with harp & lyre gears up for a performance as her curious companions look on #Pompeii pic.twitter.com/IfvG5eUYPf
— Dr Paula Lock (@PaulaLock5) December 3, 2015
Seminar today (Thurs). D. Frisby, 'Tigers, representation & repetition in Statius’ Thebaid'. 16.55, Roscoe 1.009. pic.twitter.com/Am3bkIeE92
— Manchester Classics (@Clah_Mcr) December 3, 2015
Mounting of Time: Forms and Functions of Intentionally Used Anachronisms – #Dresden #Germany #callforpapers
https://t.co/1y933LK080— Fasti Congressuum (@fasticongress) December 3, 2015
Museo dell'Ara Pacis 2006 / Richard Meier / #Roma #JuevesDeArquitectura #Fotografia #MRevilla #arquitectura pic.twitter.com/DLfWlmfgrX
— Manuel Revilla (@ManuelRevilla57) December 3, 2015
Discover the hidden history of ancient Britain in a new free display on #hoards, open today! https://t.co/e80k89oWU1 pic.twitter.com/EGWqxcHRZB
— British Museum (@britishmuseum) December 3, 2015
Russia calls for Hagia Sophia to be returned to Orthodox Church https://t.co/RZTe3f0AHh #RomanMiddleEast #Byzantine pic.twitter.com/tWfyxWVX2G
— Roman Middle East (@RomanMiddleEast) December 3, 2015
backstage activity, underhand dealings …
Venus Induces Helen to Fall in Love with Paris (1790)
A. Kauffmann
— Biagio Angrisani (@Biagio960) December 2, 2015
@HdaleClassics thanks!
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 3, 2015
#conledonnexledonne #DonneinArte
Angelica Kauffmann
Tragedy and Comedy, 1791https://t.co/W7gQettciS@alecoscino 🌹💞 pic.twitter.com/w00FFHx3lb— Lucia Tassan Mangina🇪🇺 #FBPE (@LuciaTassan) November 29, 2015
Best time to visit #Pompeii is November…will have it to yourself pic.twitter.com/TT6lwoUc9i
— Stephen Kay (@stephenjohnkay) December 3, 2015
RT @HistoryTime_: 3 December 311 – Diocletian, Roman Emperor (284-305), dies at 66. https://t.co/u51mJnj7yw
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) December 3, 2015
Universities in England spend £20m on art work in past 5 years https://t.co/yMrBjqLHM8 pic.twitter.com/2fposJvmKf
— Dr Donna Yates (@DrDonnaYates) December 3, 2015
Bored at work? Here’s a Google-style digital map of the Roman Empire to play with https://t.co/poQP4ZONlH pic.twitter.com/McnqDr295s
— CityMetric (@CityMetric) December 3, 2015
After six years of tending to his cabbages in retirement, Diocletian dies at Split #OnThisDay in 311 pic.twitter.com/pYqKaCMA8V
— CANI (@ClassAssocNI) December 3, 2015
A worthwhile retweet. Showing this amazing vid of building Trajan's Column in class: https://t.co/yIgiRRKtOe They'll understand Rome better!
— Sebastian Heath (@sebhth) December 3, 2015
An abandoned Roman villa: Otford was systematically demolished in C4 AD https://t.co/SqduZuJu5U pic.twitter.com/5KQIvetMBr
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) December 3, 2015
#OnThisDay the Roman emperor Diocletian died at Split in Croatia https://t.co/Fn1Rg4DSwI pic.twitter.com/sMZVopqQiF
— Mint Imperials (@Mint_Imperials) December 3, 2015
Classics dept decries admin “raid” on funds
https://t.co/id6Er1WISh— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 3, 2015
Caesar is Boring, Cicero is a Windbag | Sententiae Antiquae
https://t.co/EqStaKoq7H— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 3, 2015
Roman Bioarchaeology Carnival LXXVII ~ Powered By Osteons
https://t.co/Wfs9B4jRES— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 3, 2015
Casts of Pompeii – Archaeology Magazine
https://t.co/hm79z1sQgL— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 3, 2015
‘Prometheus Eternal,’ a Comic-Book Anthology in the Company of Masterpieces – The New York Times
https://t.co/tsfNBrjIy8— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 3, 2015
OU's temporary Roman bust exhibit extending its stay – https://t.co/QU4aaLEhkv: Arts & Entertainment
https://t.co/F1mErDsgIV— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 3, 2015
#ThrowbackThursday The Temple of Poseidon at Cape Sounion #Greece https://t.co/4CSRsNVWwB#archaeology #travel pic.twitter.com/qDvxKdd90F
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 3, 2015
Bust of a female divinity (Artemis?), from 4th c. BC Greek original by Kephisodotos, Musei Capitolini @museiincomune pic.twitter.com/xWAdg93RJR
— Milestone Rome (@MilestoneRome) December 3, 2015
King Hezekiah’s Other Seal Impression https://t.co/DrEWsqhh6s pic.twitter.com/bBWiqr2ui0
— Robert R Cargill (@xkv8r) December 3, 2015
@vasvasvas510 @museiincomune wonderful! Did you see this? https://t.co/BD9ZMf2vTJ here you can surf the museum 😉 pic.twitter.com/pUUgjPUv74
— Silvia Bendinelli (@sbendi) December 3, 2015
Domenica #6dicembre vivi in famiglia il bello dell'arte con la visita ai #MuseiCapitolini https://t.co/TZshsU2zPR pic.twitter.com/Oabe23BWqy
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) December 3, 2015
ICYMI: D. Reitzenstein's review of A. Barrett's _Caligula_, 2nd ed.: https://t.co/jC9VpNPRU1
— Guy Chamberland (@GuyChamberland) December 3, 2015
Our NEW Masters of Research (MRes) Classics programme is now live and open for applications: https://t.co/MeTMrrxPPh
— Classics and Ancient History at Leeds (@LeedsClassics) December 3, 2015
We welcome proposals for the Myth Reading Group & new members https://t.co/SN2IGRdmpO @Uni_of_Essex @CISH_Essex @emmabridges @jesshughes61
— Myth Studies Centre (@MythStudies) December 2, 2015
Nōn omnēs quī habent citharam sunt citharoedī.
Not all people who have a lyre are lyre players.
(Varro)— Bolchazy-Carducci (@BCPublishers) December 3, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672515640419180544
#Latin Profanity: How to Swear in Latin https://t.co/UKeueMYNVF
— Latin Language (@latinlanguage) December 3, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672524200947687425
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672524242437672961
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672524283218890752
Watched on #Periscope: First time on #periscope the Siwa Oasis in Egypt – Mountain of the dead https://t.co/suSduRHcM8
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 3, 2015
https://t.co/GC4KxfrN8E Lake County publisher releases 'Where The Wild Things Are' in Latin. #LatinLanguage pic.twitter.com/WaA4HytwCR
— Bolchazy-Carducci (@BCPublishers) December 3, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672525044380278785
Online information will disappear and it is CRITICAL that you archive what you use: a “how-to” for researchers https://t.co/n3dNhxsVaa
— Dr Donna Yates (@DrDonnaYates) December 3, 2015
Celebrate the Roman festival of Saturnalia @EHHadriansWall and handle Roman artefacts! https://t.co/ZKKpOTuNrV pic.twitter.com/NuJyiVH1fl
— English Heritage (@EnglishHeritage) December 3, 2015
The Roman emperor Diocletian died #onthisday in AD 311, depicted here on a large medallion https://t.co/BKrHAMPnTz pic.twitter.com/2HnajPmtxY
— British Museum (@britishmuseum) December 3, 2015
Watch our patrons Boris and Beard in the #GreeceVsRome debate @intelligence2 as many times as you like! https://t.co/Hf4IG8dn2n
— Classics For All (@classicsforall) December 3, 2015
From bright white to burnished bronze, @classarch welcomes the newly restored Terme Boxer https://t.co/nUbFoxAk1J pic.twitter.com/2GsYlujITm
— University of Cambridge Museums (@CamUnivMuseums) December 3, 2015
@DorothyKing @PaulaLock5 Also from Nereid. pic.twitter.com/xz4W9d3S7w
— Graeme Houlden (@GraemeHoulden) December 3, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672529264747638784
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672529995840004097
House of the Labyrinth, Pompeii. Writing a paper about the economic basis of this kind of extreme elite expenditure pic.twitter.com/GaVdIBIOg5
— Miko Flohr (@drflohr) December 3, 2015
So grateful for moments like this. (via @SaveRome) #Periscope pic.twitter.com/05hHFw1Gyd
— Colleen Rose (@ColleenKR) December 3, 2015
Ovid! His subjects are more interesting for students. https://t.co/XQFt6EDX49
— 🏴☠️ Єmanن☪l✡ 🏴☠️ (@emanuelo_eo) December 3, 2015
Picked this poster up for 20p in the @EnglishHeritage sale! #venividivici pic.twitter.com/JQV80i9UwD
— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) December 3, 2015
Odyssey 9, 256-318 (Year 9 student) https://t.co/L9ZJDwVBWN
— Andy Keen (@keenerclassics) December 3, 2015
The Trojan spy Dolon dies at the hands of Diomedes and Odysseus
Gem intaglio 2–1 cent BCEhttps://t.co/6wEJB3gKaC pic.twitter.com/BsgdJEvWOk— Jake Nabel (@JakeNabel) December 3, 2015
Greece, Greeks and Greek in the Renaissance -13/12/2015, #Nicosia #Cyprus #congress https://t.co/ujlWV9pFcY
— Fasti Congressuum (@fasticongress) December 3, 2015
#Martial is probably a bit too naughty https://t.co/lqhmKEhuQk for the debate: https://t.co/2kOfL9terT
— sententiae antiquae (@sentantiq) December 3, 2015
Sky lights up over Sicily as Mount Etna's Voragine crater erupts https://t.co/L6QOhkAbhR
— Guardian World (@guardianworld) December 3, 2015
Come & learn about the Emperors from Augustus to Marcus Aurelius: CLAS/HIST 3P06 Winter: W & F. 1:00-2:00. pic.twitter.com/pHphb2TlOT
— BrockU Classics (@brockuclassics) December 3, 2015
ICYMI: I talk about The Odyssey a bunch on the most recent @netflakespod podcast on O Brother, Where Art Thou? https://t.co/TJE8vxjmge
— masc of the rad death (@drechyng) December 3, 2015
Statua di Amazzone ferita nei Musei Capitolini: https://t.co/LgXzkM1bMM#CapolavoriCapitolini pic.twitter.com/YdoqRuiFPa
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) December 3, 2015
#diventare quello che gli altri si aspettano? No, grazie: preferisco essere me stessa.
Cleopatra, by A.Gentileschi pic.twitter.com/ZTE9xAozPD— Lucia Tassan Mangina🇪🇺 #FBPE (@LuciaTassan) December 3, 2015
The Roman Quests: Escape From Rome by Caroline Lawrence https://t.co/2byaYVCn3Y
— Lisa Brewster (@lbrewsterprojec) December 3, 2015
@sentantiq Valerius Maximus' Dictorum Factorumque Memorabilium is fascinating for his historical anecdotes !
— SonnyBurnett (@sonnyburnett91) December 3, 2015
Read: "How Percy made me love Classics"
Redborne Classics: https://t.co/X1bVoXTkCg— Classics Collective (@ClassColl) December 3, 2015
| @MichaelDPress @lizgloyn Interesting. If necessary I'll pursue the fight on my own terms. When I think many brilliant young scholars are →
— Guy Chamberland (@GuyChamberland) December 3, 2015
The finale of the #JACTGreek Summer School is always a play performed in Greek in Bryanston's own Greek theatre… pic.twitter.com/NX9t7onrgV
— JACTGreekSummerSch (@JACTGreek) December 3, 2015
Ancient Rome History Comes Alive With New App – The Appian Way, ancient Rome’s “queen of roads,” is about… https://t.co/CdCS1tzUmw
— Archaeological News (@archaeologybuzz) December 3, 2015
Yay! There's a Thucydides question! https://t.co/iLf0dRGXfR
— Neville Morley (@NevilleMorley) December 3, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672547633752338432
Clash of the titans: when Boris Johnson met Mary Beard https://t.co/mTgylVV2Ej pic.twitter.com/XL4Qj4oPoF
— New Statesman (@NewStatesman) December 3, 2015
@sentantiq @rogueclassicist Where is Tacitus? I liked Tacitus. No flim flam. And Lucretius is a gift. Potty but mesmerising
— Diane Leedham (@DiLeed) December 3, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672548798493761537
#Exam ready! Did students in @RBJMason class correctly ID the technology behind this #Roman pot sherd? @ROMtoronto pic.twitter.com/Z24EOpDM3N
— Dr Kay Sunahara (@KaySunahara) December 3, 2015
@IdaOstenberg remember that we once 'learned' Latin and Greek? Then spend the rest of our lives discovering we never have. Ditto the cello.
— Armand D'Angour#StayHomeSaveLives #WashYourHands (@ArmandDAngour) December 3, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672579437502857216
@DrDonnaYates @Etsy Absolutely — like my attempts to find anyone at @eBay @AskEbay who gives a damn about looted antiquities for sale there
— Justin Walsh (@jstpwalsh) December 4, 2015
@jstpwalsh @DrDonnaYates Craigslist too…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 4, 2015
I finally realize after 20 years teaching – even upper level Latin assessments can be done well without translation pic.twitter.com/99L6nMkWZR
— Edward Zarrow (@drzarrow) December 2, 2015
Trends in #Classics: What the Critics are Saying (and How the Machines are Changing It) https://t.co/oNJMd6udBX via @wordpressdotcom #data
— Jaclyn Neel (@ProfessorJackie) December 1, 2015
Saturday, December 5 live webcast Center for Hellenic Studies Research Symposium!
The stream will be available at https://t.co/cnZ3kj3WvN.
— Ancient Greek Hero (@AncGreekHero) December 2, 2015
My poster on the Philistines is up: please photograph, retweet, ask me questions #AAA38
— Prof Louise ‘Student Whisperer’ Hitchcock (@ashlarblocks) December 2, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671998168440156161
Three fabulously fruity #frescoes from the Villa Poppaea at #Oplontis pic.twitter.com/qS7fsItcgs
— Dr Paula Lock (@PaulaLock5) December 2, 2015
Today's Latin carol: RUDOLPHUS. Six versions of Rudolph in Latin… plus a Gregorian chant! https://t.co/M68yn8Koxy @randyhoyt #GaudiumMundo
— Laura Gibbs (@OnlineCrsLady) December 1, 2015
In the battle of Zama, 202 BC, Hannibal's war elephants were frightened by horns blown by the Romans and they rampaged into their own troops
— Roman Legion Museum (@RomanCaerleon) December 2, 2015
The rediscovery of Oscan – a fascinating post by @Katherine_McDon on Samnitophilia in early modern Italy: https://t.co/1oKmSLvci0
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) December 2, 2015
According to @robertosaviano, the mafia bosses of Campania strongly identify with "the unassailable might of the Samnites" @Katherine_McDon
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) December 2, 2015
Early morning Via Appia today #ancientromelive pic.twitter.com/y1oyZxzXGa
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 2, 2015
"Roman Wall Blues" by W.H. Auden… I love this poem so much. #RomanBritain pic.twitter.com/1kSLziQMoW
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) December 2, 2015
Partly reconstructed Roman fort features a "whifferama"! https://t.co/2zrdUhyQRE via @WorldWideWriter #RomanBritain pic.twitter.com/fx9KhC3jGK
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) December 2, 2015
#Roman sarcophagus from man's garden given to Yozgat museum, Turkey. https://t.co/2YrMbDDwNW pic.twitter.com/JQMbS92eje
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) December 2, 2015
Roman Inscriptions of Britain is online – check out the @RomanBinchester epigraphy https://t.co/TSwIqO3e2O
— David Petts is taking Industrial action again! (@DavidPetts1) December 1, 2015
. @DavidPetts1 @RomanBinchester @rogueclassicist RIB Online: a labor of love and tech tour-de-force by @Sarcanon #epidoc #inscriptions
— Tom Elliott (@paregorios) December 2, 2015
@rogueclassicist My latest post on instructive differences between Athens 403 BC and Paris 13/11/15: https://t.co/cl9Ow94mtL
— Jon Hesk (@Heskers) December 2, 2015
The ultimate pit stop on the Via Appia! Appia Antica Cafe (u can rent a bike,too) pic.twitter.com/JIQvUa1GCK
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 2, 2015
Thunder thighs but no thunderbolt: Artemision Zeus @classarch Cambridge pic.twitter.com/GcU0LR12ys
— James Cahill (@JamesCahill) December 1, 2015
Wow #classicalreception Stunning line-up for Nottingham's #Iphigenia conference! (29-30 Jan) Keynote: @edithmayhall https://t.co/NdzFe2EQxY
— Archive of Performances of Greek & Roman Drama (@APGRD) December 2, 2015
Who maintains a decent list of classically themed mailing list/discussion groups these days?
— Gabriel Bodard (@palaeofuturist) December 2, 2015
[Un jour, une œuvre]
Coupe attique type B bilingue
☛ https://t.co/aEXbjr3xF3#ArtGrec pic.twitter.com/JyDobvtEvJ— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) December 2, 2015
Rock carving of Diana at Philippi (2nd-3rd century AD) #AncientWays @BBCRadio4 pic.twitter.com/DnfUritII0
— Bettany Hughes (@bettanyhughes) December 2, 2015
Univ. of Liverpool Schools Classics Project & Liverpool College: Greek Academy FREE GREEK LESSONS for YRS 9-13 https://t.co/pp9bhAX5A2
— Hellenic Society (@Hellenic_Soc) December 2, 2015
I use @Academia .edu . But it's worth looking closely at our tools: https://t.co/VxCAXo6osi (h/t @paregorios )
— Sebastian Heath (@sebhth) December 2, 2015
RT @uvihervalli: Snugly wrapped up hypocaust of 4th century Roman villa at @NTChedworth. Great site! pic.twitter.com/yP2NVh5sTm
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) December 2, 2015
Should scholars be boycotting https://t.co/xjILoocnYD? https://t.co/xKdfyFld8A
— The Chronicle of Higher Education (@chronicle) December 2, 2015
Giovedì 3 dicembre visita con noi il deposito delle sculture di #VillaBorghese. Prenotati: https://t.co/i7v2RI50Kn pic.twitter.com/0LoYLOUKcS
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) December 2, 2015
Tiberius is #Day2 of my #Roman #Emperors #AdventCalendar. pic.twitter.com/aOuX9HLKSS
— Mr Andrew Christie (@MrAJChristie) December 2, 2015
Asclepios & Asclepiades Statues in the Arch. Museum of #Dion. More pics: https://t.co/XUXL87Uo1R #Macedonia #Greece pic.twitter.com/rC07K3EBsU
— History of Macedonia (@GreekMacedonia) December 2, 2015
What was the werewolf myth in Ancient Rome? https://t.co/j0X3FxsotL pic.twitter.com/voHIswLJIM
— History Extra (@HistoryExtra) December 2, 2015
oggi è #santabibiana: dettaglio mosaico IVsec ritrovato vicino alla chiesa S.Bibiana ora alla #CentraleMontemartini pic.twitter.com/7eoO0hTIPR
— Silvia Bendinelli (@sbendi) December 2, 2015
Holidays as they once were: captivating images of tourists 100 years ago | via @Telegraph https://t.co/ztaaWlLxSt pic.twitter.com/APTeha2QmG
— Ivana Lepojev (@ivanalepojev) December 2, 2015
I #MuseiCapitolini visti dai visitatori: ogni mercoledì diamo spazio al vostro talento! Qui: https://t.co/h7XZEObsmM pic.twitter.com/3KhMPmqVu3
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) December 2, 2015
"Do the Archaeologist" is one of my favorite tunes, smacking of They Might Be Giants (which is pretty OK). #punkarch https://t.co/oxr6mv6q08
— Dr. Andrew Reinhard (@adreinhard) December 2, 2015
eítiuvam, acc. ‘money’ (Oscan). Etymology unknown. Attested at Pompeii, Bantia and Alfedena. #ItalicWordoftheDay pic.twitter.com/mUTdkfzrqW
— Katherine McDonald (@Katherine_McDon) December 2, 2015
Join the party! We're exploring "Festivals and Celebrations in Antiquity" today 6-7 pm #free with admission pic.twitter.com/uNcooEc9T6
— Museum of Fine Arts (@mfaboston) December 2, 2015
Check out NPR's interview with Mary Beard. https://t.co/mIIDOUAPcm
— CAMWS (@camwsclassics) December 2, 2015
Could #Latin be set for a comeback in Welsh classrooms? https://t.co/ENAyELXsZm
— Latin Language (@latinlanguage) December 2, 2015
Breathing life into cold marble with a flickering flame – casts by candlelight @classarch https://t.co/jmI5a4NV7p pic.twitter.com/QbMu0aOirD
— University of Cambridge Museums (@CamUnivMuseums) December 2, 2015
Perfer et obdura, dolor hic tibi proderit olim
Be patient & tough; someday this "pain" will be useful to you.
Ovid
RT @alainsola#Latin— The Latin Programme (@LatinProgramme) December 2, 2015
How do antiquities, orchid collectors justify engaging in criminal market? My new OPEN paper https://t.co/7Ux8f2bi1c pic.twitter.com/PBaw3pzWvt
— Dr Donna Yates (@DrDonnaYates) December 2, 2015
Me finally meeting the renowned fish sauce merchant from Pompeii – Umbricius Scaurus – #raisingpompeii 🎥 pic.twitter.com/fBSghvJn7h
— Michael Wadding (@waddo100) December 2, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672211995677040640
Today's #archtravelpostcard is from the Roman gallery @YorkshireMuseum https://t.co/JYhSNXOLy3 pic.twitter.com/v94OEl8FRg
— 🗿ArchaeologyTravel (@ArchTrav) November 30, 2015
Delighted! #RSC #director TerryHands, #StageManager RogerHowells joining line-up #Stravinsky #OedipusRex #Exhibition pic.twitter.com/2JcKp0hPTU
— Archive of Performances of Greek & Roman Drama (@APGRD) November 5, 2015
With whom do you share a deep propinquity?
Read the full definition here: https://t.co/QmkAVpvPJ5 pic.twitter.com/RIaAr3EHzj
— Dictionary.com (@Dictionarycom) December 2, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672212536255717377
Heracles & the ketos – or is it a dinosaur? Watch @holland_tom & @amayor https://t.co/sxjvLKDIiO
Pot @mfaboston pic.twitter.com/uC1bSAh5xH— Pythika (@Pythika) December 2, 2015
A centaur and a merman frolic together with a man, 2 animals, and a bird within an initial D https://t.co/Z6K15GdIak https://t.co/UF8cNVXnAF
— Getty (@GettyMuseum) December 2, 2015
There are over 200 of these rock reliefs on the hillside above Philippi #Ancient Ways @BBCRadio4 pic.twitter.com/LeT2uTpkIW
— Bettany Hughes (@bettanyhughes) December 2, 2015
Only 2 weeks before @holland_tom comes to talk on 'Whores and the House of Caesar' https://t.co/shG64FOdrx pic.twitter.com/ttR4XHhiVR
— British School at Rome (@the_bsr) December 2, 2015
@bev_back's Jon Snow, Roman crow talk is underway!! pic.twitter.com/BHfIxONLS0
— LUU Classics Society (@LUUClassicsSoc) December 2, 2015
Centurions, kicked out of the central piazzas, hanging out in the fringes- https://t.co/4sNz0ETKFI time 4 @Roma 2 get serious
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 2, 2015
I detest the Vittorio Emanuele II monument but in the darkness it resembles an Ancient Roman temple complex. pic.twitter.com/7VzaopSmZK
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) December 2, 2015
Crystal ball with magical inscription ABLANAQANALBA
Cult of god Abrasax https://t.co/65DhJv1w3w #archaeology Denmark pic.twitter.com/sHzRzuXZJ2— Ticia Verveer (@ticiaverveer) December 2, 2015
Jon Snow and Ygritte parallel with Aeneas and Dido?!! pic.twitter.com/ksxA9Um6BS
— LUU Classics Society (@LUUClassicsSoc) December 2, 2015
PHD Comics: How Professors are just like Jedi https://t.co/Jl5rLh9Bup via @phdcomics
— Jeffrey A. Becker (@servilius_ahala) December 2, 2015
Crater exponens adminium in Plantie Argyre — https://t.co/C82H1YBZHa pic.twitter.com/H0ciVBcPEA
— HiRISELatin (NASA) (@HiRISELatin) December 2, 2015
I can't find a connection in Virgil between Evander, doors, windows or locks. The Arcadians too simple for them. pic.twitter.com/zLAcy6aoL7
— Classical Snacks (@ClassicalSnacks) December 2, 2015
Latin II – Ss write Latin sentences to demonstrate knowledge of topical vocabulary @KatyReddick @kballestrini pic.twitter.com/ouIkIdPmJq
— Edward Zarrow (@drzarrow) December 2, 2015
The Abduction of Helen by Paris (1757 circa)
Johann Heinrich Tischbein the Elder
— Biagio Angrisani (@Biagio960) December 2, 2015
Helen and Paris
Charles Meynier (1768-1832)
p.c.
— Biagio Angrisani (@Biagio960) December 2, 2015
Homer Singing His Iliad at the Gate of Athens (1811)
Guillaume Guillon-Lethiere
Nottingham City Museums – UK
— Biagio Angrisani (@Biagio960) December 2, 2015
Now taking bookings for the Minimus British Museum Day, Sat 18 June 2016. https://t.co/yYKcJbEGP0 pic.twitter.com/MzI3QxlMmj
— Helen Forte (@minimus_latin) December 2, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672215613641777152
If the best-known figure of Athena is in the @Liebieghaus, the best-preserved figure of Marsyas is in the Vatican. pic.twitter.com/JW5xiBLUSC
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 2, 2015
There is another Roman copy of the Athena of Myron in the @MSR_Tlse. pic.twitter.com/h8lw3WHwFy
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 2, 2015
Joaquín Sorolla
Las Nereidas
1886@LuciaTassan
Buongiorno Lucia!🌷🍃 pic.twitter.com/7XhmcZcwmJ— Adriana Evangelisti (@AdrianaCioci) December 2, 2015
And another one in the Museo del Prado in Madrid. The head is a plaster cast from the version in the @Liebieghaus. pic.twitter.com/NObDTTxBkJ
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 2, 2015
Mouse, perhaps a baby's feeding bottle, 5th century BC, Sicily @metmuseumhttps://t.co/Pw6r8yYQ82 pic.twitter.com/aQRQ0t8M9d
— Pythika (@Pythika) December 2, 2015
#3p06 Suet.10 65 BC as aedile Caesar provides beast hunts & glad. games with a colleague, but took all the credit! pic.twitter.com/oBucHI11Jf
— BrockU Classics (@brockuclassics) December 2, 2015
@SarahEBond And here is a possible source. ▶️ "I saw it on the Internet." pic.twitter.com/vqoawwndV6
— Bill Thayer 🎗️ LacusCurtius (@LacusCurtius) December 2, 2015
#3p06 In Rep. no permanent stone amphitheater in Rome – gladiators were staged in Forum in temporary wooden arena. pic.twitter.com/qEt6yA8ZWU
— BrockU Classics (@brockuclassics) December 2, 2015
Don't forget Dr Icks' talk on Roman emperors on display is 2mrw at 6.45pm @QUB_History… pic.twitter.com/svJZ0oKk4v
— CANI (@ClassAssocNI) December 2, 2015
Marble bust of Polydeukes, who died young as a pupil & foster-son of Herodes Atticus, ca 165 AD, Altes Museum Berlin pic.twitter.com/rwgERor3Oc
— Tom Ljevar (@tomljevar) December 2, 2015
Ritratto maschile, degli inizi IV secolo d.C., nei #MuseiCapitolini: https://t.co/ANH18ufoxQ#CapolavoriCapitolini pic.twitter.com/HMfahmdQQa
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) December 2, 2015
#CoinHoard from the 1st days of Roman Britain. Claudius' coins probably minted for use by invasion force. Dorset. pic.twitter.com/GlmLyFl495
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) December 2, 2015
The Nigel Farage of Roman Britain – silver denarii of Carausius. Frome #CoinHoard pic.twitter.com/ldflAY02xJ
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) December 2, 2015
Has anyone written anything about Odyssean echos/allusions/elements in Star Trek: Voyager? If not, could one of you? I'd like to read it. 🙂
— Aven (@AvenSarah) December 2, 2015
@ACLCLassics Cyber Week sales include gift quality books, resources for teachers, and materials for young students https://t.co/rAWMCHSM0G
— ACL Classics (@ACLClassics) December 2, 2015
Brock students, faculty & friends don’t forget about our Saturnalia social: Dec. 8th 4-6 in IC104: all welcome! pic.twitter.com/vXV4ZHT6BF
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) December 2, 2015
Thinking on Policies: my colleague Neil Brodie discusses disrupting the trade in antiquities https://t.co/TfH2jcE6xw pic.twitter.com/7mse1Q37Yn
— Dr Donna Yates (@DrDonnaYates) December 2, 2015
Et ipse manus porrigit eamque ad pectus trahit atque dulciter amplectitur dum ora iunguntur. pic.twitter.com/XHMNLTaz3I
— Bellatrix (@dodecafonia) December 2, 2015
Or likely to have been looted or smuggled from anywhere. They don’t just have to be from a conflict zone. https://t.co/oRMX2FLXrL
— Dr Donna Yates (@DrDonnaYates) December 2, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/672221739439534080
Gallery: Virgil and Augustan Period https://t.co/KjrRA28JAs
— Ancient Greek Hero (@AncGreekHero) December 3, 2015
"unpronounceable"?"off-putting"? "long-winded classics class"? Nonsense! Classics is fun & exciting, & *always* relevant! @KellyMacFarlane
— Classics at UAlberta (@ClassicsAlberta) December 3, 2015
Israel aims to recreate wines drunk by King David and Jesus, and the…: The new crisp, acidic and mineral whi… https://t.co/Z35HEHe4on
— david meadows (@exploratorraw) December 1, 2015
Allerta antiterrorismo a Pompei, il cane Don in cerca d’esplosivo https://t.co/X97kaAhzAV
— LastDaysPompeii (@LastDaysPompeii) December 1, 2015
Ancient complex metal, used in high quality decoration, found in ship sunk 2,600 years ago https://t.co/ONQGg8Xit4 pic.twitter.com/uNb1VEO5jJ
— Ind. Wastes Auction (@IWAuction) December 1, 2015
|REPLAY| Early morning Colosseum – join me #givingtuesday #ancientromelive #katch #Periscope https://t.co/rlynVcDzLr pic.twitter.com/nNoLtefLlh
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 1, 2015
Special way to see Ancient Rome thanks @WalksofItaly – special trip to House of Augustus #takewalks #GivingTuesday pic.twitter.com/4mce41RCPF
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 1, 2015
49 B.C. Silver Denarius.
Roman Republic.
Julius Caesar.
(R) Elephant trampling dragon. #archaeology #Roman #Coins pic.twitter.com/r9plVWKa4x— Ticia Verveer (@ticiaverveer) December 1, 2015
[Ressources] Découvrir l’archéologie paléochrétienne https://t.co/TlAYendsF3 pic.twitter.com/9O2SaSvH5n
— Inrap (@Inrap) December 1, 2015
#mercatiditraiano #umbertopasseretti #unpresenteantichissimo @TrastevereRM @museiincomune @PeppeGaribaldi @tipiti54 pic.twitter.com/SJJCbXHNcI
— Federica 🌻 (@f_girasole) December 1, 2015
December mosaic from El Djem, Tunisia, 3rd century AD, Sousse Archaeological Museum. pic.twitter.com/HI6iSqQhDP
— Pythika (@Pythika) December 1, 2015
|REPLAY| Upper deck of Colosseum with @walksofitaly #takewalks… #katch #Periscope https://t.co/l1wd63YSoQ pic.twitter.com/R1y9Datx9f
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 1, 2015
Hey Tronca aren't these guys now banned?? Centurions of Rome R still at it @NickSquires1 @stephanfaris @Moscerina pic.twitter.com/afypCPgvXB
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 1, 2015
New office decoration, courtesy of the fabulous @firstdogonmoon. pic.twitter.com/FXcP9k0mCS
— Neville Morley (@NevilleMorley) December 1, 2015
|REPLAY| Join me in the Roman Forum #ancientromelive @walksofitaly #katch #Periscope https://t.co/f1zvly3tSa pic.twitter.com/5gic1hbX9E
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) December 1, 2015
The new #AudioGuide includes over 250 highlight objects, with expert commentaries in your own language pic.twitter.com/09RKeF9MXm
— British Museum (@britishmuseum) December 1, 2015
Prof. Pedar Foss Explains the Origins of #Latin languagehttps://t.co/aLxpk8xf0O
— The Latin Programme (@LatinProgramme) December 1, 2015
Listen to samples from the new #AudioGuide and discover more features here: https://t.co/93gxj47tCp pic.twitter.com/UiutbEjflC
— British Museum (@britishmuseum) December 1, 2015
It never ceases to amaze me that people directly email me offering me artefacts *for sale*. Poor reading comprehension? Insanity?
— Dr Donna Yates (@DrDonnaYates) December 1, 2015
@DrDonnaYates I was too quick to use the word baby… One of the examples I posted from obsequens was a hermaphrodite who…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 1, 2015
@DrDonnaYates … Identified as a female and was tossed in the sea
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 1, 2015
Do you feel more like the lion or the deer today? Newly discovered/shared mosaics from Lod. #TesseraeTuesday pic.twitter.com/Kd7x2VfZhF
— Redborne Classics (@RUSClassics) December 1, 2015
Repititiationes ~ 11/30/15 https://t.co/0ICjMagtX4
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 1, 2015
This Day in Ancient History ~ kalendas decembres https://t.co/sW94ONw1sC
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 1, 2015
Day 1 #24days24words pic.twitter.com/JPTJmJYoIH
— Oxford Languages (@OxLanguages) December 1, 2015
Listen to @UoNClassics Prof. Stephen Hodkinson featuring on panel discussion 'Sparta: a nation of myths and heroes’ https://t.co/jlg5sXgLSf
— UoN Humanities (@UoNHumanities) November 27, 2015
Reconstructions of Phidias's Athena Parthenos, dedicated 438 BCE. It stood in the Parthenon for 1000 years @drzarrow pic.twitter.com/I1oaEKJE2v
— Helen A. (@Helenus_) December 1, 2015
Did you know Buffalo Bill once toured his Wild West Show to Bath? Here he is at @RomanBathsBath #littlesureshot pic.twitter.com/VBFKwEL6sQ
— the egg theatre (@theeggbath) December 1, 2015
[Un jour, une œuvre]
L'Entrée d'Alexandre le Grand dans Babylone
☛ https://t.co/evnrOde6ca#Peintures pic.twitter.com/VXRIgnsqGE— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) December 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671794851650904065
@SarahEBond and where did the greenery come from?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 1, 2015
What a great idea! A Latin advent calendar with adorable Minimus! @minimus_latin @stephenjenkin
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) December 1, 2015
Tawdry Tuesday: What Did the Greeks Eat and Screw for 10 Years at Troy? https://t.co/dX7sjfTAKI pic.twitter.com/jNrueWU9NE
— sententiae antiquae (@sentantiq) December 1, 2015
Today's my 1-year anniversary as the publisher for the American Numismatic Society. This is the best job I've ever had.
— Dr. Andrew Reinhard (@adreinhard) December 1, 2015
Ancient Roman advice for parents, via Seneca, Plutarch & @raylaurence1 https://t.co/QXmi6G8de6 #LuciusRomans pic.twitter.com/oc1LESuena
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) December 1, 2015
Bones of the victims at Roman Herculaneum https://t.co/svrJ4A1QGl #ancient #history
— LatinD.com (@LatinDiscussion) December 1, 2015
Traces of 1st or 2nd century #Roman building found by archaeologists in Chester https://t.co/ZueRRcUx6D pic.twitter.com/uTZ30xmLLQ
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) December 1, 2015
Happy December!
December was the 10th month in the Roman calendar. It retained its name: from Latin decem = ten. pic.twitter.com/y90xOOmaUV— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 1, 2015
İznik's late Roman-era tomb moved to museum. https://t.co/7sPRZZO6LG via @HDNER #archaeology
— St Andrews Classics (@StA_Classics) December 1, 2015
Lots to look forward to in December @the_bsr , incl @holland_tom on 16 Dec https://t.co/COdU6EdZj8 @LittleBrownUK pic.twitter.com/wR3JVD9ylw
— British School at Rome (@the_bsr) December 1, 2015
Gem with intaglio portrait of Julius Caesar
16–17th cent
Purchased by MFA in 1927 for $161khttps://t.co/zUgSHonXO1 pic.twitter.com/RttgMtqr35— Jake Nabel (@JakeNabel) December 1, 2015
I wonder if only half of it will be visitable at a time, just like real life- "Syracuse mus galleries in StreetView" https://t.co/Nc5e6qoKi8
— Justin Walsh (@jstpwalsh) December 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671810248836030465
The grotty orange brick chunk was actually a piece of a Roman cheese press, or strainer.
Caerhun Roman fort. pic.twitter.com/T0vhNN7lrO— Caerhun Roman Fort (@Conovium) December 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671810653724778497
More analysis of @BMCReview reviews from the Library of Antiquity Bloghttps://t.co/m9vFli3Qtu pic.twitter.com/KzWEzLu23I
— Yale Classics Lib (@YaleClassicsLib) December 1, 2015
A beautiful room of the House of Augustus visited during the Caesar's Palace tour – #takewalks with @WalksofItaly pic.twitter.com/AaXW6Wp5E2
— Loredana Cardinale (@lorymaki) December 1, 2015
Octo- = 8
Nov- = 9
Dec- = 10
But December is the 12th month?!Here’s why. https://t.co/Mc8FbL5i7G
— Merriam-Webster (@MerriamWebster) December 1, 2015
Thorneloe T-Shirts for sale!https://t.co/QFlU5khnwj pic.twitter.com/qEsP5trt8R
— Thorneloe University (@ThorneloeUni) December 1, 2015
No, The Siberian Ice Maiden Is Not A Man https://t.co/Cu4osky6MG
— Kristina Killgrove (@DrKillgrove) December 1, 2015
Nashville Parthenon was lit in its original colors last night. Photos by @TNPhotoShelleyM: https://t.co/cQeUMgf7Mc pic.twitter.com/92Hk18C3Rp
— Lizzy Alfs (@lizzyalfs) December 1, 2015
@Clah_Mcr Roy G. And Ruth M. presenting Suetonius at @CIDRAL_UoM book launch pic.twitter.com/7XMagX2MXd
— Roberta Mazza (@papyrologyatman) December 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671819487235166210
Statue of Athena, 1st century AD Roman copy of Greek original from mid-5th century BC by Myron. Now in @Liebieghaus. pic.twitter.com/adb5oQ8JTt
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 1, 2015
This statue was part of a group representing Athena & Marsyas, as per this reproduction in the @Liebieghaus garden. pic.twitter.com/kpJ60VHBLj
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 1, 2015
It depicts Athena throwing the double flute to the ground as it bulges her cheeks when she plays the instrument. Marsyas tries to snatch it.
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671820230872727552
Noted: Female Gladiators in Imperial Rome: Literary Context and Historical Fact: https://t.co/NWHaTK3UEO #Zotero
— John (@jdmuccigrosso) December 1, 2015
Noted: Female Gladiators of the Ancient Roman World: https://t.co/uZ9Quvof3y #Zotero
— John (@jdmuccigrosso) December 1, 2015
Ancient Ways with Bettany Hughes, Episode 1 https://t.co/suRilYzVtJ Recommended listening for Classicists and Medievalists @keenerclassics
— BGS Scholars (@BGSScholars) December 1, 2015
The vanished temple of Serapis on the Quirinale – an old map from BCOM 1885 pic.twitter.com/WDpPbjCiYp
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) December 1, 2015
Ruin of the day: The macellum (market) of Minturnae #Italy and the monumental colonnade along the Via Appia. pic.twitter.com/WdjoqRDCcR
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) December 1, 2015
RT @museiincomune: Là dove tutto è iniziato: il rilievo con menadi danzanti nel #MuseoBarracco. pic.twitter.com/JNB2rwOhKj
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) December 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671821173731258371
@thegetty is there a replay?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 1, 2015
You and the internet https://t.co/nVUClfqob0
— LatinD.com (@LatinDiscussion) December 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671822044720455680
300 BC theatre discovered in #Cyprus — the oldest such structure ever found herehttps://t.co/MHQNej2kTg pic.twitter.com/2eQcDlcILd
— Michael Theodoulou (@MichaelTheodoul) November 28, 2015
Constellation Hercules, astronomical miscellany, France 14th century (Lyon, BM, ms. Palais des Arts 45, fol. 73v) pic.twitter.com/8WH61OTyvZ
— Discarding Images (@discarding_imgs) December 1, 2015
#2p34 Roman Rep. theatres prior to Pompey’s were made of wood, built & dismantled for festivals and performances. pic.twitter.com/GfVZNxp6Uc
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) December 1, 2015
#2p34 Double theatre of Scribonius Curio 52 BC = 2 pivoting theatres into 1 amphitheatre! https://t.co/EN6gMH5QOh pic.twitter.com/PZNdA20ljp
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) December 1, 2015
#TriviaTuesday: Can you name the two warriors depicted on this vase playing a boardgame? pic.twitter.com/nngo5WgO98
— Museum of Fine Arts (@mfaboston) December 1, 2015
Jupiter Dolichenus + Juno, Sol, Luna, Dioscuri, Serapis, Isis. Ca 250 AD.https://t.co/wc99NEqkOb pic.twitter.com/1mfG487YsG
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) December 1, 2015
From Saalburg. Obviously Mithras, with usual suspects: but who is the dude at the top. pic.twitter.com/XM56B4innw
— Noah Nonsense (@noah_nonsense) December 1, 2015
Annotating the scholarly Web @NatureNews on @hypothes_is https://t.co/NETl2VbXiy pic.twitter.com/vkfPQJHdTI
— Yale Classics Lib (@YaleClassicsLib) December 1, 2015
John Maler Collier (British, 1850-1934)
Clytemnestra pic.twitter.com/FyZuLQpuJF— Pax vobiscum (@BillD2409) December 1, 2015
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/671828564334002180
@SarahEBond what software do you make these with?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 1, 2015
@SarahEBond I actually suspected that!
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 2, 2015
@SarahEBond not laughing by the way… Marvelling
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) December 2, 2015
Could Homer’s Odyssey have a specific date? Poem may mention eclipse on April 16 1178 BC! https://t.co/KvRHv0cSe4 pic.twitter.com/ibH1wiww5p
— BrockU Classics (@brockuclassics) December 2, 2015
Pompey's theatre design inspired by Sanctuary of Fortuna at Palestrina? Shrine at top above circular stairs #2p34 pic.twitter.com/0BmtgWn9o2
— Nadine Brundrett (@BrundrettNadine) December 2, 2015