Hodie est a.d. IV Id. Iun. 2775 AUC ~ 11 Skirophorion in the first year of the 700th Olympia
In the News
- The Wine Dark Sea: Exploring 425 BC Shipwreck Off Alonissos Island – The National Herald
- Turkish hilltop where civilisation began
- Akadimia Platonos revamp gets green light | eKathimerini.com
In Case You Missed It
- The return of a Mycenaean treasure | eKathimerini.com
- Check out this Ancient Greek yearbook | Boing Boing
- Metal detectorist in UK finds ancient Roman penis pendant | Live Science
- 1,700-Year-Old Penis Graffiti Found at Ancient Roman Site
Classicists and Classics in the News
Greek/Latin News
Fresh Bloggery
- De sofist Gorgias – Mainzer Beobachter
- Laudator Temporis Acti: Drinking Party
- Laudator Temporis Acti: For What?
- Laudator Temporis Acti: Schadenfreude
- Laudator Temporis Acti: Virtue and Wisdom
- “Their Only God is Money” – SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
- AWOL – The Ancient World Online: In Pursuit of Visibility: Essays in Archaeology, Ethnography, and Text in Honor of Beth Alpert Nakhai
- AWOL – The Ancient World Online: This Week in the Ancient Near East Podcast
- AWOL – The Ancient World Online: New version of Nomisma.org site released
- Milking the He-Goat: The Only Proverb You Need for a Thursday – SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
- Polis Views | Archaeology of the Mediterranean World
- Portable Antiquity Collecting and Heritage Issues: Syria Idlib Enclave Today
- De sofisten: Relativisme als basis voor democratie – Mainzer Beobachter
- PaleoJudaica.com: Ross, Postclassical Greek and Septuagint Lexicography (SBL)
- PaleoJudaica.com: Interview with James VanderKam
- PaleoJudaica.com: Everyday life for the Babylonian exiles
- Spencer Alley: Paintings Ignored by S.J. Freedberg – Titian before 1560
- Judeans: Tacitus (second century CE) | Ethnic Relations and Migration in the Ancient World: The Websites of Philip A. Harland
- Blogging ancient epigram: The Athenians at Chalcis: two versions
- Eating Rome: Hypotrimma
- Eating Rome
- Laudator Temporis Acti: Fighting for One’s Native Land
- Portable Antiquity Collecting and Heritage Issues: Looting at Apamea Syria 2011-2019 (Overview)
Other Blog-like Publications
- The Parthenon Sculptures: Unprecedented momentum building in favour of their return
- Εxcavations at the Late Cypriot harbour city of Dromolaxia-Vyzakia
- ANE TODAY – 202206 – Everyday Life in Exile: Judean Deportees in Babylonian Texts – American Society of Overseas Research (ASOR)
- What Happened to the Missing Half of the Roman Colosseum? | Open Culture
Assorted Twitter Threads
Fresh Podcasts
The giant stone sculptures of boxers found in a first millennium BCE Sardinian cemetery have our contestants puzzled. Are these protective deities or just slightly oversized sports heroes? And why does every culture around the world first pile stones and then carve them? Didn’t they have anything better to do with their time?
In this episode of the Ancient Warfare Magazine podcast Jasper, Murray and Myke talk to games designer Mark Backhouse about his new game Strength & Honour. The game allows you to recreate battles from the start of the Marian reforms in Rome around 105BC, when the professional Roman legionaries organised in cohorts replaced the older Republican Legion structure of maniples, through to about 200AD.
Daisy Dunn joins us to talk about how Oxford found itself at war, even after the First World War ended…
Selections from past conversation episodes featuring LGBTQIA topics from Greek mythology (and history!). Selected by incredible intern Grace Roby, put together by the magnificent Michaela Smith. CW/TW: far too many Greek myths involve assault. Given it’s fiction, and typically involves gods and/or monsters, I’m not as deferential as I would be were I referencing the real thing.
What really happened in Britain as Roman influence waned? Recent research is shaking up our view of the end of imperial rule during the fifth century, and one new find in particular – a mosaic at Chedworth Roman villa – is leading experts to reassess how far people carried on “being Roman”. In the opening episode of our new series, David Musgrove takes a trip to Chedworth to begin his investigation into the end of Roman Britain.
Fresh Youtubery
- PROMISE OF LIGHTNING: How To Meet Your Soulmate According To Greek “Myth” (Book Review) – YouTube | Moan Inc.
- Did the Romans find Dinosaur Fossils? #history #history #documentary – YouTube | Invicta
- The Myth of Persecution: How Early Christians Invented a Story of Martyrdom | Candida Moss PhD – YouTube | MythVision Podcast
Book Reviews
- BMCR – Hany Kahwagi-Janho, Les chapiteaux corinthiens du Liban. Formes et évolution du Ier au IVe siècle p.C. Mémoires, 58. Bordeaux: Ausonius Éditions, 2020.
- BMCR – Carolina López-Ruiz, Phoenicians and the making of the Mediterranean. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2021
Dramatic Receptions
Online Talks and Conference-Related Things
- See what’s happening today in Dr Pistone’s Online Classics Social Calendar
- SCS Calendar: Classics, Ancient History, and Classical Archaeology Webinars
Jobs, Postdocs, and other Professional Matters
- PDRA in Ancient Material Religion | Employment
- Placement: Advertisements 2021-2022 | Society for Classical Studies
Alia
- Archaeologists digging into Egypt’s past – Late Night Live – ABC Radio National
- The Enduring Legacy of Ancient Greek Fashion and Clothing
- Not Just Rome: Where You Can See The Incredible Roman Ruins Of Switzerland
- When Greek Hero Achilles Fell in Love with an Amazon
Diversions
‘Sorting’ Out Your Day:
- Homeromanteion | Online Homeric Oracle
- Sortes Virgilianae (English)
- Sortes Virgilianae (Latin)
- Consult the Oracle at UCL
Today on the Etruscan Brontoscopic Calendar:
If it thunders today, it portends many deaths but also prosperity.
… adapted from the text and translation of:
Jean MacIntosh Turfa, The Etruscan Brontoscopic Calendar, in Nancy Thomson de Grummond and Erika Simon (eds.), The Religion of the Etruscans. University of Texas Press, 2006. (Kindle edition)