Word of the Day: ambivert https://t.co/PfXbfhQFJU pic.twitter.com/us5GQmDcMR
— Oxford Languages (@OxLanguages) March 20, 2017
Thucydides has branched out into children's literature! The Melian Dialogue exemplified by a nasty Tyrannosaurus Rex. https://t.co/VOEPeLzCIR
— The Thucydides Bot (@Thucydiocy) March 20, 2017
Whenever someone mentions 'the greens' I think they're talking chariot racing #ClassicistProblems
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Happy #worldsparrowday! Sparrows star in 2 famous classical poems, Catullus 2 (lover's pet) & Sappho 1 (Aphrodite's sparrow-drawn chariot) pic.twitter.com/JhDKXlgluo
— Edith Hall (@edithmayhall) March 20, 2017
20th March – birthday of the poet Ovid: pic.twitter.com/sZ542xtSZu
— Catharine Edwards (@CatharineEdwa) March 20, 2017
New finds at Thessaloniki metro station #archaeology #Greecehttps://t.co/sSBttJ2gMK
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) March 20, 2017
#exhibition: 'Pompeii and the Greeks' at the Large Palaestra in #Pompeii (from 14th April to 31st October 2017) https://t.co/55dVvrCpaE
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) March 20, 2017
Great facts about Brading Roman Villa… but what about the chicken-headed guy in the mosaic? 😯 https://t.co/KbtCeqovSi
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) March 20, 2017
Happy birthday, #Ovid! pic.twitter.com/7IMRdtU6Pc
— Lorelei King (@LoreleiKing) March 20, 2017
Glass Turkish pithos. Found in the Athenian Agora in 1971. https://t.co/kEGkead10g pic.twitter.com/jzsRSC2HJa
— ASCSA (@ASCSAthens) March 19, 2017
Roman Mother of the Gods statuette w/lion. The Mother of the Gods was an Anatolian deity later identified w/Greek goddesses Rhea & Demeter. pic.twitter.com/D5a0uIF1Nv
— ASCSA (@ASCSAthens) March 18, 2017
Platonic Philosophy in the Cave of Pan? Lecture this Thursday in Athens & online: https://t.co/NmamPYotOS
— ASCSA (@ASCSAthens) March 18, 2017
Is this Cockheaded Man a caricature of Caeser Gallus who rigged gladiatorial shows? https://t.co/QQXRGuXNpw #BradingRomanVilla #RomanBritain pic.twitter.com/3zc1P6vxtG
— Caroline Lawrence (@CarolineLawrenc) March 20, 2017
Spring, from the Villa Dar Buc Ammera, Libya, C4th AD
Happy #VernalEquinox pic.twitter.com/xIgsPkg1AB— Pythika (@Pythika) March 20, 2017
Going to UTexas El Paso 2 lecture about successful storytelling, audience engagement 4 museums, sites #discoverMiC @museiincomune @SaveRome pic.twitter.com/OdzcUGdcTr
— Darius Arya (@DariusAryaDigs) March 20, 2017
Scylla – https://t.co/79Qz9QERFE pic.twitter.com/hSNjAcUPTP
— Ancient History Encyclopedia (@ahencyclopedia) March 20, 2017
Th team discusses the year of the four Emperors in the latest Ancient Warfare magazine podcast…… https://t.co/CYaL2alrkQ
— The History Network (@historynetwork) March 20, 2017
Happy 1st day of spring!
(Statue of Flora, goddess of flowers and the season of spring, from Hadrian's Villa) pic.twitter.com/H6gn0HDjWe— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) March 20, 2017
Episode 69 – The Reception of Coriolanus https://t.co/6U15PjBQws pic.twitter.com/71L9maYseF
— Partial Historians (@p_historians) March 20, 2017
Spring, medallion from the mosaic of the Four Seasons, in the dining room (triclinium) of the House of Dionysos in Volubilis. 3rd century AD pic.twitter.com/C4mfscgti4
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) March 20, 2017
[wow!] Baia, immagini nuove e uniche della città sommersa ripresa con un drone Video | Il Mattino
https://t.co/F6vOqS43kF— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
On Homer’s Poverty and Lies | SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
https://t.co/owEnK4zlo9— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Quid agitur? (March 19th) – Classical Association of New England
https://t.co/LY8bFWR9Hz— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
#AWISM Khan Academy Ancient Rome – YouTube
https://t.co/Ah5pHYh3WQ— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
#AWISM Ancient Warfare Podcast: The Year of the Four Emperors
https://t.co/Jxphcu8uNB— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
#AWISM QDP Ep 40: De Vere – Quomodo Dicitur? Podcast
https://t.co/5zKvF9RbhA— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
BMCR: Justin A. Stover, A New Work by Apuleius: The Lost Third Book of the 'De Platone'. https://t.co/Jxce0L2Yni
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
BMCR: Bryn Mawr Classical Review: 2017.03.32 https://t.co/FLkHxP7XL4
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Lecture: Criminals without Borders – The many profiles of the (il)licit antiquities trade. ~ ARCAblog
https://t.co/UeAqroQ8VZ)— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
A Don’s Life: The Vatican Experience
https://t.co/ZJ9LZHuD05— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Laudator Temporis Acti: Youth and Old Age
https://t.co/tmHklnMU4s— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
#AWISM Dr Paris Potiropoulos, "Space, place and identity: Landscape as cultural heritage in rural Greece" –
https://t.co/JRHAEH3iJH— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
#AWISM Cycladic Female Figure – Coloring the Past – YouTube
https://t.co/PODYmUkvEb— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
#classicaltwitter ~ March 19, 2017 https://t.co/FJ2sCPAL3a
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
CJ – Online Review ~ Valerius Flaccus: Argonautica, Book III. https://t.co/t8FHTgUJ5o
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
CJ – Online Review ~ Two Oxen Ahead: Pre-Mechanized Farming in the Mediterranean https://t.co/1DNKCnZ3oM
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
AJA Review: Foodways in Early Mycenaean Greece: Innovative Cooking Sets and Social Hierarchy at Mitrou … https://t.co/bJJtlWU3uM
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
AJA Review: Working for a Feast: Textual Evidence for State-Organized Work Feasts in Mycenaean Greece https://t.co/nSEhNi7JvP
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
In an Israeli warehouse, clues about Jesus' life and death | The Times of Israel
https://t.co/3Fu4TZYfJo— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
The Elusive Etruscans |
https://t.co/hx9FnDkpjS— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
How much do you know about Socrates | OUPblog
https://t.co/lwR3uehbqQ— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Roman bathhouse discovered under County Durham town residents' gardens (From The Northern Echo)
https://t.co/2RoikZvYe5— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
#AWISM Episode 69 – The Reception of Coriolanus | The Partial Historians
https://t.co/8lNgZS3oqA— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
looking for podcasts with a classical focus? check the hashtag: #awism
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Classical Greek Columns Walk validates what we already know | Neos Kosmos
https://t.co/4LG25HvPI9— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
#ancientdrama Ancient play's themes echo modern events (From Messenger Newspapers)
https://t.co/CoJRpTTJuo— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
: no version of this fabulous tale should be unstudied #OrpheusArgonautica included 😉
— Paul McKenna (@PaulMcKenna4) March 20, 2017
Off with Kleanthis to @GlenrothesHS Classical Studs today to talk about leadership in Homer and Sophocles. Great to be invited! pic.twitter.com/dopl9Pw3i2
— Jon Hesk (@Heskers) March 20, 2017
The new PVCRS is full of gems – so many fascinating, and fascinatingly different, classical receptions in the southern hemisphere … https://t.co/MAztOkFvr0
— ClassicalReceptions (@CRSN_UK) March 20, 2017
Anyone have any idea what this is? Found among photos I took at Izmir museum. Label says 4th C from Bodrum. The first Greek Buddhist?! #Odd pic.twitter.com/9ONIXYSaou
— Chris Dickenson (@cpdickenson) March 20, 2017
Equinox comes from the #Latin language meaning “equal night". It only occurs twice a year. pic.twitter.com/04kEgH6dUm
— The Latin Programme (@LatinProgramme) March 20, 2017
How to Ask Politely in Latin — Latinitium. https://t.co/7hHo0XeZb5
— The Classics Library (@stephenjenkin) March 20, 2017
From leather shoes to chisels – want to know about Roman finds? Check out brand new films from @ArchaeologyNCL https://t.co/BE5xfUrrv9 pic.twitter.com/8w5l09C3mX
— ArchaeoDuck (@ArchaeoDuck) March 3, 2017
Just a few more days (to 24 March) for abstracts for symposium 'Gertrude Bell: Her Life, Work, and Legacy' Please RThttps://t.co/uVmDeMrSjH
— Gertrude Bell (@GertrudeBellArc) March 20, 2017
Word of the day: ra-wa-ke-ta = λαϝαγέτας, the second highest member of society. Liquids aren't distinguished, nor voicing marked for velars. pic.twitter.com/Ao5otaenLq
— Theo Nash (@e_pe_me_ri) March 20, 2017
A lovely Roman fresco of Flōra,
the goddess of the flowering of plants & of the season of spring #firstdayofspring Villa di Arianna #Italy pic.twitter.com/CdH6dKX3xv— Ticia Verveer (@ticiaverveer) March 20, 2017
very true, though Aug took the credit of course. The scene is replicated on his Prima Porta statue breastplate. pic.twitter.com/MFXGXafkaS
— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) March 20, 2017
Il frammento di mano destra colossale dei #MuseiCapitolini è in partenza verso il @DioezMuseum_PB per l'esposizione alla mostra #WunderRoms pic.twitter.com/EVftGP1qhN
— Musei in Comune Roma (@museiincomune) March 20, 2017
Born today 43BC Publius Ovidius Naso, known as Ovid in the English-speaking world, was a Roman poet who lived during the reign of Augustus. pic.twitter.com/JM688S66aI
— Roman History (@romanhistory1) March 20, 2017
Harpocrates and a crocodile on this #token from #Roman #Egypt. #numismatics pic.twitter.com/Sqgm7WmzPE
— token_communities (@ancient_tokens) March 20, 2017
Derek Walcott obituary. Nobel prize-winning poet who explored the cultural complexities of Caribbean life. https://t.co/SklWEsk5YR
— Guardian Obituaries (@guardianobits) March 20, 2017
Lovely to hear that Latin students from @FakenhamAcademy enjoyed their visit to the Museum last week https://t.co/I8zirdMqmJ
— Museum of Classical Archaeology (@classarch) March 20, 2017
Discover the strange and unexpected places where #Roman presences have manifested themselves https://t.co/wSpJqhUEPA
— CUP Classics (@CambUP_Classics) March 20, 2017
There was a great CJ piece on falling in love with statues: https://t.co/uBG6QAg2ZW https://t.co/obHvru9pT1
— Clara Shaw Hardy (@ShawHardy) March 20, 2017
Delve into this important interdisciplinary approach to #cultural contacts in #archaic/classical Greece https://t.co/yOJlXUyyMR pic.twitter.com/JzQ22hfh19
— CUP Classics (@CambUP_Classics) March 20, 2017
FRIDAY 24 March 8.50am @oxfordclassics Join us for BOOK 5 of #Homer's #Odyssey – part of @FELGLyon's mass global reading!! pic.twitter.com/xN0sYnzOwP
— Archive of Performances of Greek & Roman Drama (@APGRD) March 20, 2017
A good dissertation is a done dissertation. A great dissertation is a published dissertation. A perfect dissertation is neither.
— Shit Academics Say (@AcademicsSay) March 20, 2017
"Swearing works as a kind of social glue, enabling human beings to generate intimacy between one another" https://t.co/8pz67XoAFE
— The TLS (@TheTLS) March 20, 2017
from the Tiber, this #token with radiate head of #Nerva (?), DI(VUS) AVG(VSTVS) and the legend Sodal(es) Consua(les). #numismatics pic.twitter.com/8o6PX89z0s
— token_communities (@ancient_tokens) March 20, 2017
Publius Ovidius Naso (Ovid), poet, was born #OnThisDay 43BC https://t.co/wbhBHbNZZd @BBCInOurTime HT @Corieltauvia
— Roman Society (@TheRomanSoc) March 20, 2017
If you missed previous opps to see the exquisite Crosby Garrett Helmet, summer 2017 is your chance #HadriansWall https://t.co/4IbQp6Uebh
— 🗿ArchaeologyTravel (@ArchTrav) March 20, 2017
I prepared for university with John Taylor, 'Greek to GCSE' & 'Greek Beyond GCSE': again, for UK syllabus but cover all grammar
— Olivia Thompson (@livyaugusta) March 20, 2017
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/843940127252631554
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/843940439925448706
Rostovtzeff believed #tokens used in distributions; here the denarius sign (𐆖) is accompanied by V S, (viris singulis) – one denarius each? pic.twitter.com/K9IWWm3H21
— token_communities (@ancient_tokens) March 20, 2017
Inscriptions at Museo Civico di #Catania – Quintus Atilius Severus, duumvir by vote of the people pic.twitter.com/iFTolhoCKV
— I.Sicily (@Sicilyepigraphy) March 20, 2017
Join me @VindolandaTrust for a hands-on Roman Samian Ware making workshop. Don't miss out they're selling fast https://t.co/CXgjS5T4Bi
— Graham Taylor (@Pottedhistory) March 20, 2017
Per la #giornatadellafelicita ecco un'altra foto: il nostro satiro danzante dalla Villa dei Misteri. pic.twitter.com/Y3CZDI4iFn
— Pompeii Sites (@pompeii_sites) March 20, 2017
TODAY! Info Session on why to do, and what to do with, a Classics or History BA! Bring your questions & get answers! All Welcome ! #UAlberta pic.twitter.com/4W8vcbHk09
— Classics at UAlberta (@ClassicsAlberta) March 20, 2017
Marble head of Flora, goddess of flowers and the season of spring. From Salona, 2nd century AD (Split Archaeological Museum). pic.twitter.com/yOn7j51bs1
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) March 20, 2017
Today in history: Ovid is born. (43 BCE)
Photo: Ettore Ferrari pic.twitter.com/AT1iJiPTMW
— Ancient History Encyclopedia (@ahencyclopedia) March 20, 2017
LOVE the new virtual tour of Sir John Soane's Museum https://t.co/NYVfKEOUGY Gives a real feel for being there @SoaneMuseum
— David Hopes (@HopesDavid) March 20, 2017
Continuing our reading of the lightning thief… Does anyone know of an ancient image of echidna?
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Read AIA President Jodi Magness's letter regarding the U.S. President's proposed 2018 federal budget: https://t.co/5quFyEhtw3 #archaeology
— AIA (@archaeology_aia) March 20, 2017
for years.. They used to be YouTube based and just recently went to audio
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
📲 Have you downloaded the #MyVisitToTheLouvre App yet? Try our #Quiz to find out what it has to offer! ➡️ https://t.co/hwQKEfDW5M pic.twitter.com/1jfafEp4p5
— Musée du Louvre (@MuseeLouvre) March 20, 2017
Ovid was born on this day in 43BC. Listen to Nicholas Parsons read his favourite tale by the poet https://t.co/ia4YcJfyvE
— Classics For All (@classicsforall) March 20, 2017
The ancient theatre of Hephaesteia.Lemnos island,Greece pic.twitter.com/dsoAValhd3
— Ioannis Tz (@tzoumio) March 20, 2017
#Greece – Image of the excavations at Mycenae in 1897 at Grave Circle A by archaeologist Christos Tsountas pic.twitter.com/1yAom5pGOL
— John Trikeriotis (@spartanwarriors) March 20, 2017
Amphora: Using Low-Cost Hardware for 3-D Scanning at Kenchreai, Greece https://t.co/KSdsZag08N
— SCS (@scsclassics) March 20, 2017
Neptune and a standing bather (?) on this #Roman #token. #numismatics. pic.twitter.com/SX0ur9UAkn
— token_communities (@ancient_tokens) March 20, 2017
Galba, Otho, Vitellius, Vespasian: four Roman emperors, one terrible year, AD 69. The free @ancientwarfare podcast https://t.co/81dOmkeTOB
— Lindsay Powell (@Lindsay_Powell) March 20, 2017
Hopefully this will be in 3d shortly. Such a great piece of sculpture. pic.twitter.com/MqLgmzLrWa
— Daniel Pett (@DEJPett) March 20, 2017
#RomeOnThisDay · 235AD · The Roman throne seats its first foreigner when Maximinus Thrax is proclaimed Imperator…. https://t.co/HkjZdrUKls
— AIRC Roman Culture (@SaveRome) March 20, 2017
Students: Why does #Ovid have to list *every one* of Actaeon's dogs?
Me: They're good dogs Brent.HBD Ovid !@dog_rates @LeVostreGC pic.twitter.com/DuKuOjQ1Gt
— Damian Fleming (@FW_Medieval) March 20, 2017
It's a free showing of 'Agora', a film about the late-antique philosopher Hypatia, starring Rachel Weisz, followed by a Q&A session with me! https://t.co/QFdbCDlQxg
— Richard Flower (@RichardAFlower) March 20, 2017
A flight over the "Atlantis" of Argolida, a sunken city beside the coast of ancient Epidaurus: https://t.co/CnNEeauV39 @GreeceHighDef
— ASCSA (@ASCSAthens) March 20, 2017
#RomeOnThisDay · 235AD · The Roman throne seats its first foreigner when Maximinus Thrax is proclaimed Imperator. #MeetRome @DariusAryaDigs pic.twitter.com/MkHDHXit8y
— AIRC Roman Culture (@SaveRome) March 20, 2017
Roman settlement, historic pottery and tools discovered in Pontefract https://t.co/axqt9Ivbtx #RomanBritain #Pontefract pic.twitter.com/rcWDoJhNyW
— Roman Britain News (@Roman_Britain) March 20, 2017
Moving further onto faces represented within @britishmuseum objects. Quick test via @researchspace SPARQL and python – portrait busts. pic.twitter.com/8CvKI0cc45
— Daniel Pett (@DEJPett) March 20, 2017
Professor Clifford Ando speaks about "The Long Defeat: The Fall of the Roman Empire" https://t.co/ete5nJKkew #archaeology
— Oriental Institute (@orientalinst) March 20, 2017
#Vatican behind the scenes: Gallery of the Statues and Cabinet of the Masks. pic.twitter.com/lCVqjeqkVt
— Cinzia Possenti (@GuideofRome) March 20, 2017
I did see that one but didn't think it was right
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
The US has been a pioneer in the Digital Humanities @alastairdunning on the @NEH_ODH https://t.co/BldMcUDFzR
— Yale Classics Lib (@YaleClassicsLib) March 20, 2017
These creation myths involve typical family problems. You know, castrating your dad, eating your kids. The usual. https://t.co/C3tBYGllzm pic.twitter.com/9ChswX3BmU
— CrashCourse (@TheCrashCourse) March 20, 2017
Lecture on Hymn to Demeter & the story of Persephone today. Actually remembered to mention the appropriateness of the date! #springequinox
— Aven (@AvenSarah) March 20, 2017
not talking about Australian beasties
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Suetonius 13.3 on Domitian & his INNUMERABLE arches: ΑΡΚΕΙ = ARCI ("arches"), but also Greek for "enough already!" https://t.co/kTtsF2wRky pic.twitter.com/AnPBOaWSns
— Llewelyn Morgan (@llewelyn_morgan) March 20, 2017
#RomeOnThisDay · 43BC · The birth of Ovid – A Roman poet whose 15 book epic "Metamorphoses" is an important… https://t.co/34TPVnhrBQ
— AIRC Roman Culture (@SaveRome) March 20, 2017
Marble portrait bust of Antinous found in Patras, 130-138 AD (National Archaeological Museum of Athens). pic.twitter.com/s1w0zrynqF
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) March 20, 2017
In #Greece &looking for artistic gifts by #local designers? Head to @TheBenakiMuseum shop, the first one in #Athens https://t.co/MLZrO2MZCz pic.twitter.com/udSipvSlRs
— Museeum (@museeum_) March 20, 2017
Not sure Ptolemy should the go-to Greek author, but still…. https://t.co/y0ccme08EV
— SCS (@scsclassics) March 20, 2017
Ancient port found on Salamis where Greek naval forces gathered before a battle against the Persians in 480 B.C. https://t.co/7TgmouJgN1 pic.twitter.com/dhmfrPWQw4
— Archaeology Magazine (@archaeologymag) March 20, 2017
Classical Cry for Help:
Does anyone have a copy of Lyne's 'The Latin Love Poets' to hand and could they tell me the titles of chapters 1-5?— Andrew James Sillett (@andrewsillett) March 20, 2017
I was using the last one quite a lot. Macron means one thing to a metrician classicist: siglum longae quantitātis syllabārum (vel morae) https://t.co/wbfRXawsIH
— Armand D'Angour (@ArmandDAngour) March 20, 2017
It's Ovid's birthday! Here's the programme I made about him for @BBCRadio4: https://t.co/0o7WNQXJwA
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) March 20, 2017
Mosaic depicting the Abduction of Hylas by the nymphs, 3rd century AD, from the House of the Procession of Venus in Volubilis #Morocco. pic.twitter.com/ebnXNrtvdx
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) March 20, 2017
Learn about the constellation myths of ancient Greece & Rome in our next "Great Beasts of Legend" lecture: https://t.co/Fj9Dq2fErS pic.twitter.com/SdVh6TSD9s
— Penn Museum (@pennmuseum) March 20, 2017
Finding Germanicus at the Damnatio Memoriam exhibit pic.twitter.com/K51N6nDXoS
— Dr Emma Southon (@NuclearTeeth) March 20, 2017
#OnThisDay in 44BC, while giving Caesar's elegy, Mark Antony whipped the people into a furor, showing off Caesar's bloodied toga pic.twitter.com/j63vrOk27N
— CANI (@ClassAssocNI) March 20, 2017
Happy 2058th Birthday to Publius Ovidius Naso, born in Sulmo #OnThisDay
in 43BC. He would die in Black Sea exile pic.twitter.com/sH60EmxJbR— CANI (@ClassAssocNI) March 20, 2017
With the death of Severus Alexander, #OnThisDay in 235, the "eight foot six inch" Maximinus Thrax became emperor pic.twitter.com/yktfopDQ0x
— CANI (@ClassAssocNI) March 20, 2017
#Ostia antica, part. di un mosaico proveniente dalla Domus del Perseo, oggi fissato a un muro nel cortile della Casa di Bacco Fanciullo. pic.twitter.com/drG6ZNTUWa
— Ostia Antica (@Ostia_Antica) March 18, 2017
not a positive Id… There are a lot of those things
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/843951451844022273
The Temple to Caesar's Clemency; decreed to him by the senate in 44 BC and depicted on his coinage ..but never actually built. #numismatics pic.twitter.com/zZk2TjRLGm
— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) March 20, 2017
http://twitter.com/rogueclassicist/status/843953328920776704
Circles in #Pompeii from a recent trip. pic.twitter.com/xjJl3MsViF
— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) March 20, 2017
House of the Geometric Mosaics in #Pompeii.
Does exactly what it says on the tin. pic.twitter.com/QmjW3innsZ— Dr Sophie Hay (@pompei79) March 20, 2017
We toast the birthday boy, Ovid… pic.twitter.com/0iC78AtZfB
— Tom Holland (@holland_tom) March 20, 2017
Classical Greek Vases
Via @tomgauld @stephenjenkin @Scholiast @twittfilosofici pic.twitter.com/MOnfG2hC9G— 📚📚📚 (@Many_Many_Books) March 20, 2017
Today 235AD Maximinus Thrax became emperor. His rule is often considered to mark the beginning of the Crisis of the Third Century. pic.twitter.com/rzifhctmRV
— Roman History (@romanhistory1) March 20, 2017
It would be helpful if @archaeologymag didn't use the word 'treasure' to describe finds
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Skeletons unearthed in Borough Roman cemetery ‘absolutely phenomenal’ – Southwark News – https://t.co/Hs4umoDosq
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 20, 2017
Lovely enamelled Roman brooch also from #WestBerkshire @findsorguk @RomanFindsGrp @WBerksMuseum #chicken! pic.twitter.com/zBe2lVVVZl
— Anni Byard – coins & artefacts (@ArchaeoAnni) March 15, 2017
Beware the Ides of March! A silver denarius struck by Julius Caesar, recorded by the Portable Antiquities Scheme @findsorguk #idesofmarch pic.twitter.com/vwy3ZEeABH
— Cotswold Archaeology (@CotswoldArch) March 15, 2017
Learn the difference btw Greek words Chronos & Kairos as they relate to #mBible in @CarySummersMOTB's recent post! https://t.co/UiD1saFcjO
— Museum of the Bible (@museumofBible) March 20, 2017
The Catacombs of #Naples are passages hollowed out of the rock with side niches excavated by early Christians (engraving 1877) pic.twitter.com/04WtZyDAZG
— Tiziana Matarazzo (@tiziana_archeo) March 21, 2017
From the fine folks at Lego Classicists (Facebook and Instagram) pic.twitter.com/wiEbYypjJW
— rogueclassicist (@rogueclassicist) March 21, 2017