Oudna (Uthina) https://t.co/C7ISsKcu6R pic.twitter.com/fSYn7rsKVk
— S.J.A.Turney (@SJATurney) February 7, 2016
It was Pliny who claimed that hedgehogs roll on apples in the autumn, so as to store them up for the winter… https://t.co/KvIHblfaVR
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) February 6, 2016
"What would Cicero do?" He'd say forget CAAS and go singlehandedly save the Republic. pic.twitter.com/kYb32crDkD
— Magistra K (@MagistraKiernan) February 7, 2016
Uno dei #frammenti della enorme mano sinistra del colosso di #Augusto #mercatiditraiano #ForoDiAugusto #archeologia pic.twitter.com/4LGik0iBHH
— La gatta MiC (@MiC3_0) January 15, 2016
Some brief bits on the Greek gods from @OUPAcademic, to promote the newly launched OCD online https://t.co/Q4BBJk8cwb
— CCHS Latin (@CCHSLatin) February 7, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/696622364788989953
Some of the Roman coins found out metal detecting with MDG pic.twitter.com/jR7HgqBRpx
— Metal Detectives Group (@DetectingDigsUK) February 7, 2016
Read: "Latin Worth Knowing: Auribus Teneo Lupum / I Have a Wolf by the Ears"
A Place of Brightness: https://t.co/em2LYyxQu8— Classics Collective (@ClassColl) February 7, 2016
Frontone da Via di San Gregorio con sacrificio di animali a Marte e due divinità femminili https://t.co/A3yJsTKK3e pic.twitter.com/hXhfjH7Eo8
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) February 7, 2016
A splendid headline for a classicist: ‘Caesar’ Must Bow to ‘Kung Fu Panda 3’ https://t.co/OdItYVU84k
— Adrian Murdoch (@adrianmurdoch) February 7, 2016
Marble well-head (puteal) dedicated by M. Barbatius Pollio (Curule Aedile) to Juturna, goddess of wells & fountains. pic.twitter.com/djCTolpVBu
— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) February 7, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/696856349645398016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/696856441341272065
"Terentia seems to be modelled on Impedimenta, the chief’s wife in Asterix." James Davidson on Harris's Cicero books https://t.co/csQUsUhQ1u
— Dave Morris (@RealDaveMorris) February 7, 2016
It's not every day Juba II of Mauritania gets a shout-out! https://t.co/ifHHFr33KJ
— SCS (@scsclassics) February 7, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/696857535215697921
Roman copy of a Greek original. Head of Apollo, found in Rome. #BarroccoMuseum pic.twitter.com/g7oYOe0vDN
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 7, 2016
@pompei79 what marks it out as a copy?
— rogueclassicist ~ david meadows (@rogueclassicist) February 9, 2016
Tousled hair. Roman copy of a Greek male bust. #BarroccoMuseum pic.twitter.com/YvPWA8TRWs
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 7, 2016
Alexander the Great with his characteristic head tilt. #BarroccoMuseum pic.twitter.com/7xwmRBcacN
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 7, 2016
The haunting faces of the Syrian dead from #Palmyra. 3rd cent. AD #BarroccoMuseum pic.twitter.com/T2xCviHvYn
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 7, 2016
Fresco of a hermaphrodite from Capua. 2nd cent AD #BarroccoMuseum pic.twitter.com/nc4DVrzJWx
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 7, 2016
Mosaic of a bird stand-off over a bird bath. From the Villa of Livia, Prima Porta. 1st cent AD. #BarroccoMuseum pic.twitter.com/KPWM7YLYF2
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 7, 2016
Classic(al) bad hair day?
1st-2nd cent. AD #BarroccoMuseum @CarolineLawrenc pic.twitter.com/cqEd0WG0pR— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 7, 2016
@pompei79 here are another two #Syrian funerary figures from #Palmyra in @McrMuseum (Nos.: 42032/3) late 2ndC AD pic.twitter.com/a4iU36WUpm
— Michelle Scott (@CIPendragon) February 7, 2016
#Latin-IV-ever AUDI has best ad yet in #SuperBowlL
— Barry Strauss (@barrystrauss) February 8, 2016
This probably won’t make the cut for the Latin expansion, but I’m sure he’ll find his way into the modern sets. pic.twitter.com/27HE2wGV69
— Kevin Ballestrini (@kballestrini) February 8, 2016
XLII-yard catch. Carolina is a Latin name. #SuperbowlL
— Barry Strauss (@barrystrauss) February 8, 2016
Congrats @Broncos on the #SB50 win! #musesocial pic.twitter.com/jSqenOVm2p
— Royal Ontario Museum (@ROMtoronto) February 8, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/696860805799768064
Sightseeing in Pompeii during #WWII
📷 taken by US Navy sailors #archaeology pic.twitter.com/c4twUKJfY9— Ticia Verveer (@ticiaverveer) February 8, 2016
This marble portrait head depicts Constantine the Great, the first Christian emperor of Rome https://t.co/qXTbxxlxDX pic.twitter.com/SSQzYpM9M5
— The Metropolitan Museum of Art (@metmuseum) February 8, 2016
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/696861617531809792
[Un jour, une œuvre]
☛ Athéna
https://t.co/qGTDkUycox #ArtGrec pic.twitter.com/z6ba3Tgkj7— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) February 8, 2016
@raylaurence1 @Helenus_ Found it – archive proof of bomb crater in amphitheatre in #Pompeii https://t.co/xlkLvyfKWN
(amazing website btw)— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) February 8, 2016
Why Aristophanes' KNIGHTS is the most radical democratic comedy of all time: Senate House room 349 today 1700. neigh pic.twitter.com/Zf9CB4ue5k
— @edithmayhall (@edithmayhall) February 8, 2016
How to confuse future archaeologists. pic.twitter.com/on63nifHh1
— The Classics Library (@StephenJenkin) February 8, 2016
"Aristophanes BIRDS as Heart of Darkness"–comedy & cynical colonialism-my lecture at UCLA Feb 16 Dodd 248, 5pm. pic.twitter.com/a0jz8MudOC
— @edithmayhall (@edithmayhall) February 8, 2016
Romanian fairy tales feminist cp to Ovid https://t.co/LtCsDcW5b4 pic.twitter.com/YcsfYFRofD
— David Colwill (@majikmutton) February 8, 2016
Fancy a game of Roman Numeral Bingo? Of course you do – https://t.co/3mSb71WNqR
@RomanBathsBath #bingo #numerals pic.twitter.com/3SzjSYC2zG— KidRated (@kidratedlondon) February 7, 2016