More by the hacker and the professor at Perseids Project… https://t.co/ZoV8GWn4Zw
— Perseus DL (@PerseusDigLib) February 5, 2016
Congratulations to the winners of the WCC's Best Paper Presentations of 2015:
* Best Pre-PhD Paper: Anna… https://t.co/LQDboOysGe
— Women's Classical Caucus–US (@WCC_outreach) February 5, 2016
Came across my new fave Greek verb – stickfiguregods: nyx-melaina: κατασκέλλομαι kataskéllomai- to become a… https://t.co/3iGhWymfJE
— Musis Amicus (@Magnantus) February 5, 2016
Plate 6: figures in boats decorated with mythological subjects using poles to propel them https://t.co/ff5aeavLY9 pic.twitter.com/NFU5uiws9F
— Museum Bot (@MuseumBot) February 5, 2016
Beautiful Hellenistic vase showing a bride and her attendants. via @ancientpeoples https://t.co/XqVz7J4Pha pic.twitter.com/8LwT2dsngu
— The Classics Library (@stephenjenkin) February 5, 2016
Work experience for ages 16+ at the Museum of Classical Archaeology, Cambridge! https://t.co/PKrRo1j3Pv
— Katherine McDonald (@Katherine_McDon) February 5, 2016
#Odéon d'Hérode #Atticus, vu de l’#Acropole Circa 1868-1875 #Athens #Greece photo par: Municipalité d'Athènes @EE034 pic.twitter.com/D9ihs95gNA
— Arif Özavci (@ahmetarifaltun3) February 5, 2016
[Exposition] Corseul antique. De la ville à la campagne, jusqu'au 28/02 à #Coriosolis https://t.co/2C5kHl8iwm pic.twitter.com/6zTrpogt3E
— Inrap (@Inrap) February 5, 2016
This statuette may represent Alexander the Great as ruler of Egypt. https://t.co/XbMmCOQfzh pic.twitter.com/urtv0XDxne
— The Metropolitan Museum of Art (@metmuseum) February 5, 2016
[Un jour, une œuvre]
Héraclès
☛ https://t.co/FxiVWzhsDz#ArtGrec pic.twitter.com/D8yxO2MDEt— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) February 5, 2016
Roman mosaic floor panel 2nd century C.E., found at at Daphne (Harbiye), Turkey pic.twitter.com/gqTiylmDwj
— Rabih Alameddine (@rabihalameddine) February 20, 2015
Beautiful plates from Pottier & Reinach 1888 catalogue of terracottas from Myrina pic.twitter.com/nl7xQ0MsUq
— Dr Ruth Allen (@RuthMAllen) January 18, 2016
*-* EDESSA beautiful MOSAİCS *-* Haleplibahçe -Urfa – TURKEY pic.twitter.com/A7I54UX0GM
— SEZER BEŞOK (@besok_s) January 29, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/695554482298601472
Wondering what Happiness looks like? Here personified Eudaimonia (Aristotle's happiness worth pursuing) on a BM vase pic.twitter.com/AopEL6k3ET
— Edith Hall (@edithmayhall) February 5, 2016
Yes it's finally Friday! Have a nice weekend everyone #FridayFeeling pic.twitter.com/iJAPPMhb2G
— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) February 5, 2016
Say hello tomorrow & ask me how I make these! 6-8pm at the Museum of Classical Archaeology,Cambridge @classarch pic.twitter.com/KxOFgbXjRT
— Vanessa Stone (@vanessastoneart) February 4, 2016
Since #zika is the trendy disease we'll no doubt read the Etruscans must have had it based on so many microcephalic sarcophagus statuary
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
That previous tweet would be labelled #classicalshowerthoughts
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Macaulay on Vesuvius (Bread & Circuses)
https://t.co/RbKyeKTvUH— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2016.02.06
https://t.co/HUj9BiJ1mo— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
BMCR: Ayelet Haimson Lushkov, Magistracy and the Historiography of the Roman Republic. https://t.co/IhHFzyETOh
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
BMCR: Andrew Faulkner, Owen Hodkinson (ed.), Hymnic Narrative and the Narratology of Greek Hymns https://t.co/WP4TvN83az
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Classics in Sarasota: A "whispering" image from Syria
https://t.co/QCsVLPi5S7— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Computational Historical Semantics – for Analysing Latin Texts Semantically
https://t.co/AV01tRZ8TM— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
2017 Annual Meeting of the Society for Classical Studies, Panel on ‘Epigraphic Economies’ | Current Epigraphy
https://t.co/0wYJnjcqhY— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Doctoral workshop on ‘Writing in urban and peri-urban contexts: reading and studying … | Current Epigraphy
https://t.co/lv8YC3heNN— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Bulgaria’s Varna Completes New Visitors’ Center of Large Roman Thermae of Ancient Odessos
https://t.co/4ClvcF2CcZ— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Robin Symes, Returns from Geneva and the Medici Dossier
https://t.co/BwLSnJiiMO— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Survey: Women in Classics in the UK: Numbers and Issues
https://t.co/USKiGWAcNE— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
In defence of discrimination
https://t.co/23zE49NlIs— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
A Don’s Life: Ten years of a wickedly subversive Don's Life
https://t.co/Z4Ev2zXQ76— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Bestiaria Latina Blog: Latin Proverbs and Fables Round-Up: February 3
https://t.co/7krK41vQ4G— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
The Measure of a Man: the Priapeia on Odysseus (NSFW) | Sententiae Antiquae
https://t.co/qcu05ngsVo— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Using Archaic Words is as Bad as Using Made-Up New Ones | Sententiae Antiquae
https://t.co/8LljYNppnU— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Ancient Tomb from Thracian-Roman Period Discovered during Construction Works in Bulgaria’s Plovdiv
https://t.co/IjgBXsW4Nc— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
On the Eutychia Mosaic Conservation – Corinthian Matters
https://t.co/hz38qitRJ3— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
BMCR: Gregor Kalas, The Restoration of the Roman Forum in Late Antiquity: Transforming Public Space. https://t.co/O5YrVePCPl
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
BMCR: Bogdan Burliga, Arrian's Anabasis: An Intellectual and Cultural Story. https://t.co/LMM1qg7Gb3
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Late Roman Fortress Iatrus near Bulgaria’s Krivina to Be Managed by Tsvenovo Municipality as Cultural Tourism Site
https://t.co/46XvP0nwI3— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Velleius Paterculus on the death of Augustus, II.123 | Sententiae Antiquae
https://t.co/fkcmpZ0cDp— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Were Two Ancient Greek Swords Unearthed in Uruguay in the Early 1800s? – Jason Colavito
https://t.co/Nr833UULtz— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Bolchazy-Carducci: Greek Beats Complete Collection
https://t.co/KeVgD45VZS— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
New Book: Oscan in the Greek Alphabet | Greek in Italy
https://t.co/ByPJ0VycXQ— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Could You Stomach the Horrors of 'Halftime' in Ancient Rome?
https://t.co/IEw9PdQf9o— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
CFP: «Cupis volitare per auras» Books, libraries and textual transmission from the Ancient to the Medieval World… https://t.co/Os4hB37VQN
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
The International School of Geneva has a Greek theatre in its grounds https://t.co/JqY0Bfiqq8 #Classics #drama pic.twitter.com/U8S5wBCvre
— Dr Arlene H-H (@DrArleneHH) February 5, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/695727792609169408
In France this year? Meet #Antinous at big #Hadrian #Yourcenar exhib at #Bavay museum. More: https://t.co/QE7s5BUElO pic.twitter.com/MtB597bY8c
— Antinous the Gay God (@antinousgaygod) February 5, 2016
Does anyone know whether it is true that garum is the historical ancestor of ketchup? https://t.co/x8BAfgCUlF
— Kate Cooper (@kateantiquity) February 5, 2016
CALL18.03.2016 Reconciling Ancient & Modern Philosophies of History& Historiography #London #England #callforpapers https://t.co/1u1icFbwP4
— Fasti Congressuum (@fasticongress) February 5, 2016
"thrilling….The most surprising read of 2015."https://t.co/OTxlTUjTzx pic.twitter.com/dBcABStXex
— Barry Strauss (@barrystrauss) February 5, 2016
Ten things you may not have known about Greek gods and goddesses https://t.co/8PEUdIwniy
— Constantina Katsari (@c_katsari) February 5, 2016
Translations of Homer in a Latin metre were "not a natural or inevitable thing to happen" https://t.co/TgbVVLrS6d pic.twitter.com/1otB5uT2pQ
— The Economist (@TheEconomist) February 5, 2016
We’re used to seeing sculptures & buildings as bare marble, but the ancients painted them. #2P61 pic.twitter.com/XLSl55UBsi
— Alison Innes (@InnesAlison) February 5, 2016
Tondo showing the Severan dynasty: Septimius Severus with Julia Domna, Caracalla and Geta whose face was erased. pic.twitter.com/hJLyYpRLGF
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) February 4, 2016
Eleusinian mysteries were agricultural (grain) festival held in fall. Not harvest, but planting festival. #2P61
— Alison Innes (@InnesAlison) February 5, 2016
Avidius Cassius Family Tree (pretty much my Sistine Chapel of family trees – at least so far!) pic.twitter.com/g0hh8ULoCq
— The Ancient World (@TheAncientWorld) February 5, 2016
The Voyage of Odysseus – 5th in the Odysseus series – is now available as an e-book https://t.co/89VXTRWj4c
— Glyn Iliffe (@GlynIliffe) February 5, 2016
@sentantiq As Aristophanes wrote in Peace, "You will never smooth the rough spikes of the hedgehog."
— Carly Silver (@CarlyASilver) February 5, 2016
Le Tibre, marbre de Carrare découvert en 1512 à Rome #AntiquitésRomaines #Louvre #nocturne pic.twitter.com/WPEgotEhNx
— Scribe Accroupi (@scribeaccroupi) December 23, 2015
[Artwork of the day]
Hercules
☛ https://t.co/T03DmmDGNn#GreekArt pic.twitter.com/FiS2WZNPhm— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) February 5, 2016
[Pour finir la semaine] L'épisode 19 des "experts du passé" : Le secret des lettres gravées https://t.co/tzNJWGpdeD pic.twitter.com/k6ewMSvuVJ
— Inrap (@Inrap) February 5, 2016
Reine vêtue en Isis, peut-être Cléopâtre II ou III (305-30 av JC) #Osirisexpo @imarabe https://t.co/u6EHC3PD5m
— Scribe Accroupi (@scribeaccroupi) February 5, 2016
OTD: Temple of Concordia's (Augusta) dies natalis. See cool vids from @AIRomanCulture: https://t.co/oq0xhvF7K2 pic.twitter.com/NCGjZCTr9K
— IMP CAE DIV FIV AVG (@Divus_Augustus) February 5, 2016
The closest examples come from a Roman villa in Cologne (Germany) as well as a Roman Domus in Orange (France). pic.twitter.com/YY6kyMspX4
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) February 5, 2016
Isis incarnée par Arsinoé II, manifestation d'Aphrodite, granit noir (IIIe av JC) #Osirisexpo @imarabe https://t.co/fT6Y0MW82E
— Scribe Accroupi (@scribeaccroupi) February 5, 2016
How English became English and not Latin. https://t.co/oh4kRLKCmC pic.twitter.com/FpkwygJIKN
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) February 5, 2016
Sérapis avec un couvre-chef, dit calathos, symbole de fertilité (IIe siècle av JC) #Osirisexpo @imarabe https://t.co/TqVB72qiXB
— Scribe Accroupi (@scribeaccroupi) February 5, 2016
Sérapis avec calathos (Ier-IVe siècle) barbu et trônant tel Zeus, Hadès ou Asclépios #OsirisExpo https://t.co/rHl0DToVHE
— Scribe Accroupi (@scribeaccroupi) February 5, 2016
Review: 'Beyond Greek: The Beginnings of Latin Literature,' by Denis Feeney https://t.co/lzdUga9EfP pic.twitter.com/dIo68IFuCg
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) February 5, 2016
"Let The Games Begin"
Gladiator mosaic from the Bignor Roman Villa in West Sussex #archaeology England #SuperBowl pic.twitter.com/Bec3SZwzZi— Ticia Verveer (@ticiaverveer) February 5, 2016
VIDEO Carabinieri TPC, Demonstrating the return of a terracotta Head Depicting the Greek God Hades. https://t.co/oDyP1N8Rwo
— ARCA (@ARCA_artcrime) February 5, 2016
#clcv1550 we haven't got to Heracles yet, but can you guess how they ID'ed this w/o club or lion skin? https://t.co/iL7DXn2hWu
— Dr. Alexis M. Christensen (@AM_Christensen) February 5, 2016
@MuseeLouvre @DorothyKing he looks very Doryphorus-y
— Dr. Alexis M. Christensen (@AM_Christensen) February 5, 2016
"Under" the Romans..skull of #Palaeoloxodon antiquus discovered in 1932 near the Colosseum (painting) #FossilFriday pic.twitter.com/uZtgE26O8v
— Luca Pandolfi (@LucaPaleo) February 5, 2016
The monument commemorates the Greek soldiers who died during World War I / Liege, Belgium pic.twitter.com/1n4hcn2kmY
— @ntiquitas@eterna (@A_and_AE) February 5, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/695751459397365760
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/695752027046080517
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/695752068599058432
Pentheus torn apart by Agave and Ino. Attic red-figurelekanis (cosmetics bowl) lid, c. 450-425 BC #history #myth pic.twitter.com/tURk1C6bZe
— GroovyHistorian (@GroovyHistorian) February 5, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/695752186459000832
Fascinating to hear from Maria Pantelia about the development of the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae. Its first home: https://t.co/qvYqfAtmFS
— Miriam Posner (@miriamkp) February 5, 2016
@carolemadge @rogueclassicist Ah Geta – the name that escaped me & @llewelyn_morgan last week when looking at this pic.twitter.com/cq3vU1mTdL
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 5, 2016
Join us for an exciting talk by Prof. Susan Kane about #archaeology and #culturalheritage in #Libya @WolfsonCollege pic.twitter.com/4f0BD14xdi
— LibyanAntiq.AtRisk (@LAaR_SLS) February 5, 2016
The story of one of the coolest figures #mythology has to offer; Atalanta the Huntress & many of her grand exploits! https://t.co/nXWJptFSoq
— Dael Kingsmill (@DailyDael) February 5, 2016
Happy Nones of Februarius (AUC MMDCCLXIX)! @ Phoenix, Arizona https://t.co/WnkemodPvP
— Colin B. (@Valerianus) February 5, 2016
Archaeologists Unearth More—a Lot More—of a Massive Underground City | Mental Floss – https://t.co/xUWFx1UTFX
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Rosia Montana makes government’s proposal list for UNESCO World Heritage sites – Business Review – https://t.co/pSNeJUrhkz
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 5, 2016
Hellenistic Kings in Roman Athens | Monuments of Roman Greece – https://t.co/7P5cfULF01
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 6, 2016
@roughtradeX and they must have had that 'stone' smell
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 6, 2016
friday links, including some to help you (and me) figure out why Sarah Palin talks the way she does https://t.co/nUJpsbUIw0
— Donna Zuckerberg (@donnazuck) February 6, 2016
John William Waterhouse – Pandora 1896. Happy Weekend 🙏 pic.twitter.com/JK5KLlXzcC
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) February 6, 2016
Pandora’s Box – Paul Cesaire Gariot 1877. pic.twitter.com/2NHnXEhpya
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) February 6, 2016
John Dickson Batten – 1913 Pandora pic.twitter.com/0kDtPizrDT
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) February 6, 2016
Jules Joseph Lefebvre – 1872 Pandora pic.twitter.com/XY3dNgv9H1
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) February 6, 2016
Odilon Redon – circa 1914, Pandora. pic.twitter.com/KGThcogUS3
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) February 6, 2016
Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882) Pandora 1879. pic.twitter.com/UoqklxaCND
— Amy P💫 (@Amyperuana) February 6, 2016
maybe Pandora was looking for clothes in that box…
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) February 6, 2016