Hodie est pr. Non. Jul. 2775 AUC ~ 8 Hekatombion in the second year of the 700th Olympia
In the News
- Israeli archaeologists reassemble 3,500-yr-old huge jars
- Study points to Armenian origins of ancient crop with aviation biofuel potential — ScienceDaily
- Earliest depictions of biblical Deborah, Yael found at 5th-century Galilee synagogue | The Times of Israel
- BTA :: Archaeologists Set at Finding Early Dionysus Temple at Perperikon Site
- Roman villa, mosaic uncovered in southern Turkey during construction | Daily Sabah
- PA appropriates Israeli heritage site in Samaria » J-Wire
- Aydın’s earliest settlement waiting to be revealed
In Case You Missed It
Fresh Bloggery
- Laudator Temporis Acti: Word-Hunter
- Laudator Temporis Acti: Restoration of Overthrown Statues
- Write Here, Write Now | Sphinx
- Humility and Pride: The Masks We Wear Day-to-Day – SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
- How to Unfriend with Lysias – SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE
- What fate awaits the Apollon Temple at Didyma? | Turkish Archaeological News
- Reviewing An Archaeology of Structural Violence | Archaeology of the Mediterranean World
- PaleoJudaica.com: Hopkins, … Religious Sacrifice in the Dead Sea Scrolls (Gorgias)
- AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Semitic Dialects and Dialectology: Fieldwork—Community—Change
- The History Blog » Blog Archive » Helmet from 7th c. B.C. chariot burial restored
- Anderen over Sokrates – Mainzer Beobachter
- PaleoJudaica.com: Fleming Festschrift (Brill)
- PaleoJudaica.com: Concerning the Goddess of Ancient Israel
- Barbarian wisdom: Poseidonios on inventors of the golden age (first century BCE) | Ethnic Relations and Migration in the Ancient World: The Websites of Philip A. Harland
- Scythians: Klearchos (fourth century BCE) | Ethnic Relations and Migration in the Ancient World: The Websites of Philip A. Harland
- Lydians: Xanthos of Lydia and Klearchos of Soloi (fifth-fourth centuries BCE) | Ethnic Relations and Migration in the Ancient World: The Websites of Philip A. Harland
- Iapygians and Tarentinians: Klearchos (fourth century BCE) | Ethnic Relations and Migration in the Ancient World: The Websites of Philip A. Harland
- Spencer Alley: Francesco Albani (1578-1660) – Bologna to Rome
Other Blog-like Publications
- Energy from Elegy: What Did the Greeks Use Elegiac Poetry for? – Antigone
- Puzzling Finds from Kuntillet ‘Ajrud – Biblical Archaeology Society
Fresh Podcasts
“The Sea Peoples” is a term that refers to a seafaring culture of unclear origin that bopped around the eastern Mediterranean and adjoining areas around 1200-900 BCE. There are ancient Egyptian murals and reliefs that depict battles against these unnamed adversaries, but no definitive labels or helpful texts. So who were the Sea Peoples? We’ll discuss some theories, and probably not reach any conclusions apart from “wow people really care a lot about this, huh?”
Homer’s Odyssey depicts an afterlife that is relatively dull, with heroic actions and glory reserved for the living. Nonetheless, people in Southern Italy in the fourth century BCE were captivated by the underworld and decorated large funerary vases with scenes of the afterlife—the domain of Hades and Persephone, where sinners like Sisyphus are tortured for eternity and heroes like Herakles and Orpheus performed daring feats. Little is known about precisely how these vases were used and seen in death rituals. A new book by Getty Publications, Underworld: Imagining the Afterlife in Ancient South Italian Vase Painting, brings together 40 such vases and explores new research on them. In this episode, Getty Museum curator of antiquities David Saunders discusses these enormous and often elaborate vases, explaining the myths they depict and what is known about the ways in which they were used. Saunders is editor of Underworld.
Fresh Youtubery
- I Don’t Understand Why Everyone Loves HADES & Persephone (Carly Spade Book Review) – YouTube | Moan Inc.
- EES Tuesday Spotlight: The Lighthouse, the Laser, and the Stone – YouTube | Egypt Exploration Society
- Dialoghi in Curia. Aedes Serapidis. Da tempio dinastico a cava di marmi – YouTube | Parco Colosseo
Online Talks and Conference-Related Things
- (Im)Migrants and Democracies: Ancient and Modern
- Ancient and Modern Narratives of the Greco-Persian Wars Tickets, Multiple Dates | Eventbrite
- 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
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 fatal diseases for enslaved persons.
… 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)