ROGUECLASSICIST’S BULLETIN March 27, 2025

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LEGENDA
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Soldier in Ukraine finds 2,600-year-old Greek artifacts | Miami Herald
https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/article302873979.html

Even the common people drank wine in Troy
https://phys.org/news/2025-03-common-people-drank-wine-troy.html

Uncorking the past: new analysis of Troy findings rewrites the story of wine in the early bronze age
https://theconversation.com/uncorking-the-past-new-analysis-of-troy-findings-rewrites-the-story-of-wine-in-the-early-bronze-age-252953

Gateway Unearthed in Selinunte, City Founded by Greeks in the 7th Century BCE – La Voce di New York

Gateway Unearthed in Selinunte, City Founded by Greeks in the 7th Century BCE

Lost Walls And North Gate Of Selinunte, Sicily’s Ancient Greek Polis, Rediscovered

Lost Walls and North Gate of Selinunte, Sicily’s Ancient Greek Polis, Rediscovered

The shockingly simple question historian Tom Holland would ask Julius Caesar | HistoryExtra
https://www.historyextra.com/period/roman/tom-holland-julius-caesar-question/

2,600-Yr-Old Rare Gold Statuette Depicting ‘Family of Gods’ Found in Karnak Temple in Egypt, Excites Archaeologists – Knewz
https://knewz.com/world/2-600-yr-old-rare-gold-statuette-depicting-family-of-gods-found-in-karnak-temple-in-egypt-excites-archaeologists/

More than 300 skeletons found at Gloucester’s old Debenham’s site
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c20lv6dlxwqo

Archaeologists may have finally discovered famous ‘lost’ canal built by Julius Caesar’s uncle | Live Science
https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/romans/archaeologists-may-have-finally-discovered-famous-lost-canal-built-by-julius-caesars-uncle

How to live morally (according to the Romans) | The Spectator
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/how-to-live-morally-according-to-the-romans/

Marble Origins Unveiled: Byzantine Artifacts From Lebanon Trace Roots To Prokonnesos And Dokimeion, Echoing Hellenistic Legacy

Marble Origins Unveiled: Byzantine Artifacts from Lebanon Trace Roots to Prokonnesos and Dokimeion, Echoing Hellenistic Legacy

These 2,200-Year-Old Shackles Reveal The Dark Side of Egypt’s Ancient Gold Mines
https://www.zmescience.com/science/archaeology/these-2200-year-old-shackles-reveal-the-dark-side-of-egypts-ancient-gold-mines/

Metal detectorist strikes gold after finding rare Roman coin in field | Nation | iosconews.com
https://www.iosconews.com/news/nation/article_db7ee6e6-f193-5dad-98cf-e64c6182af73.html

Roman Times: Roman hairdressing
https://ancientimes.blogspot.com/2025/03/roman-hairdressing.html

Archaeologists Reconstruct the Scents of Ancient Mummification
https://hyperallergic.com/998360/archaeologists-reconstruct-the-scents-of-ancient-mummification/

Stunning 2,500-Year-Old Wall Paintings Found in Etruscan Tomb

2,500-Year-Old Wall Paintings Discovered in Etruscan Tomb in Italy

Treasure Trove of 800 ‘Exceptional’ Iron Age Artifacts Discovered in England | Smithsonian
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/treasure-trove-of-800-exceptional-iron-age-artifacts-discovered-in-england-180986311/

[wtf?]Historical ‘evidence’ of Jesus’ crucifixion found in ancient Roman manuscript | Daily Mail Online
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14543595/Historical-evidence-Jesus-crucifixion-ancient-Roman-manuscript.html

Butser Ancient Schoolroom 2024 | Classics at Reading

Butser Ancient Schoolroom 2024

(5) 27 March 58 BCE: From Cicero (at Nares Lucanae) to Atticus (in Rome)
https://epistulae.substack.com/p/27-march-58-bce-from-cicero-at-nares?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=944078&post_id=159951006&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=q7tlq&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

Earliest Known Stone Mold for Coin Production in Roman Hispania Unearthed – Arkeonews
https://arkeonews.net/earliest-known-stone-mold-for-coin-production-in-roman-hispania-unearthed/

Dealing with the archaeological invisibility of the Iberian mints: A technological and contextual analysis of the first stone mould for blank coin production found in Hispania – ScienceDirect
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2352409X25001154

De Dame van Auxerre – Mainzer Beobachter

De Dame van Auxerre

Het Solse Gat (2) – Mainzer Beobachter

Het Solse Gat (2)

Laudator Temporis Acti: Dung
https://laudatortemporisacti.blogspot.com/2025/03/dung.html

Portable Antiquity Collecting and Heritage Issues: Russia Seizes Ancient Gold Coins Stolen from French Museum
https://paul-barford.blogspot.com/2025/03/russia-seizes-ancient-gold-coins-stolen.html

Another Plague: Profiteering – SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE

Another Plague: Profiteering

Curator unravels mystery of Virgil manuscript’s journey to Stanford | Stanford Report
https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2025/03/rare-books-curator-virgil-manuscript-special-collections

AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Zwischen Dionysos und Christus: Bild und Tafelgeschirr im römischen Nordafrika
https://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/2025/03/zwischen-dionysos-und-christus-bild-und.html

AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Les « salles à auges »: Des édifices controversés de l’Antiquité tardive entre Afrique et Proche-Orient
https://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/2025/03/les-salles-auges-des-edifices.html

AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Reconfiguring the Land of Israel: A Rabbinic Project
https://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/2025/03/reconfiguring-land-of-israel-rabbinic.html

AWOL – The Ancient World Online: Analogies végétales dans la connaissance de la vie de l’Antiquité à l’Âge classique
https://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/2025/03/analogies-vegetales-dans-la.html

[AI?]Will the British Museum Show High-Quality Parthenon Replicas? – The Jerusalem Post
https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeology-around-the-world/article-847377

[AI?]Iberians buried Iron-age unborn fetuses, young babies with care, intimac – The Jerusalem Post
https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeology-around-the-world/article-847497

[AI?]Archaeologists discover well-preserved Roman dog in Belgium – The Jerusalem Post
https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeology-around-the-world/article-847379

[AI?]Archaeologists unearth 2,200-year-old pyramid, rare papyri in Israel – The Jerusalem Post
https://www.jpost.com/history/article-847548

Ancient Illyrian Secrets Unearthed: New Archaeological Discoveries on Pelješac – The Dubrovnik Times
https://www.thedubrovniktimes.com/news/dubrovnik/item/17702-ancient-illyrian-secrets-unearthed-new-archaeological-discoveries-on-peljesac

PaleoJudaica.com: The Reception of Philo of Alexandria (OUP)
https://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2025/03/the-reception-of-philo-of-alexandria-oup.html

PaleoJudaica.com: A pyramid and scroll fragments excavated in Judean Desert
https://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2025/03/a-pyramid-and-scroll-fragments.html

PaleoJudaica.com: Four ancient Armenian inscriptions from Jerusalem
https://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2025/03/four-ancient-armenian-inscriptions-from.html

PaleoJudaica.com: Late-antique monastery excavated in northern Negev
https://paleojudaica.blogspot.com/2025/03/late-antique-monastery-excavated-in.html

Objets métalliques de l’âge du Bronze – premier âge du Fer provenant des fonds du musée-réserve Néapolis Scythica. | Spartokos a lu

Objets métalliques de l’âge du Bronze – premier âge du Fer provenant des fonds du musée-réserve Néapolis Scythica.

Beyond the river, under the eye of Rome – Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Beyond the river, under the eye of Rome

Poetics and religion in Pindar: ambits of performance and cult – Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Poetics and religion in Pindar: ambits of performance and cult

Da villa tardoantica a cantiere altomedievale. La trasformazione di Aiano (San Gimignano, Siena) – Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Da villa tardoantica a cantiere altomedievale. La trasformazione di Aiano (San Gimignano, Siena)

“Plaise au peuple.” Pratique et lieux de la décision démocratique en Ionie et en Carie hellénistiques – Bryn Mawr Classical Review

“Plaise au peuple.” Pratique et lieux de la décision démocratique en Ionie et en Carie hellénistiques

How two recent productions of Oedipus offer different meanings through the role of the chorus
https://theconversation.com/how-two-recent-productions-of-oedipus-offer-different-meanings-through-the-role-of-the-chorus-252862

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AUDIENDA
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Ancient Tokens – Revisited! by The Classics Podcast

How an Empire Ends: Culture of the Goths – Ancient History Fangirl

How an Empire Ends: Culture of the Goths

Writing Imperial History: Tacitus from Agricola to Annales with Bram ten Berge (Ad Navseam, Episode 178) | Ad Navseam
https://adnavseam.podbean.com/e/ad-navseam-episode-178/

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VIDENDA
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Vitellius #15- A Good Dose of Civilis – Life Of The Caesars

Vitellius #15- A Good Dose of Civilis

(791) SENECA’s Life & Stoic Philosophy – YouTube

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NOTANDA
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Elektra: A throne restored (King’s Greek Play 2025) | King’s College London eStore
https://estore.kcl.ac.uk/conferences-and-events/academic-faculties/faculty-of-arts-humanities/department-of-classics/elektra-a-throne-restored-kings-greek-play-2025

The Conversation: Uncorking the past: new analysis of Troy findings rewrites the story of wine in the early bronze age

Depas amphikypellon from Schliemann’s excavations at Troy.
Institute of Classical Archaeology at the University of Tübingen/Valentin Marquardt, CC BY-SA

Stephan Blum, University of Tübingen

Wine drinking in ancient Troy was not restricted to the upper classes, as has long been supposed – something our new research has established for the first time. Colleagues at the University of Tübingen and I have discovered that wine was also enjoyed by the common folk, independent of upper-class celebrations and religious rituals.

In the late 19th century, German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann (1822-1890) excavated the ancient city of Troy. He was hoping to discover the residence of Priam, the king of the city besieged by the Greek army under Agamemnon, as immortalised by Homer in the Iliad.

Among Schliemann’s most outstanding achievements was – alongside the identification of the site of Troy itself – undoubtedly the discovery of the so-called “treasure of Priam”.

The find included several hundred gold and silver objects. But during his excavations, Schliemann was captivated by a more humble item mentioned in the Iliad – the depas amphikypellon (two-handed drinking cup). He discovered numerous cylindrical, double-handled goblets thought to be the cup mentioned in the epic tale.

Schliemann believed the vessels had been used either for ritual wine offerings to the Olympian gods or, more likely, by the royal elite for drinking. The characteristic double handles, he suggested, allowed the vessels to be passed easily between participants seated next to each other.


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Despite fierce opposition to many of his interpretations in contemporary archaeological research, Schliemann’s hypotheses on the drinking customs of the early bronze age elite have become an enduring narrative.

Further archaeological excavations at Troy (in modern Turkey) were led by the University of Tübingen between 1987 and 2012. Since then, my colleagues and I have been analysing the results, focusing on architectural findings and the vast array of artefacts uncovered.

Over time, scientific methods have played an increasingly important role, with a particular focus on the analysis of organic residues in vessels (ORA). This method has proven particularly valuable, as it provides insights into what the early bronze-age inhabitants of Troy prepared in their cooking pots and enjoyed from their drinking vessels.

Drilling into Troy’s wine culture

Excavations over the past 150 years have shown that use of the two-handed drinking cup spanned from Greece in the west to Mesopotamia in the east.

A silver cup with two handles
The silver example from the British Museum, found near Troy.
The Trustees of the British Museum, CC BY-SA

They were produced in various forms between BC2500 and 2000. Likely inspired by now-lost metal prototypes, except for one silver example in the British Museum, these ceramic vessels were often made on the potter’s wheel, a technological innovation introduced from the near east during this period.

Many of the double-handled goblets have been found not only in settlements but also in graves. This is an indicator of their special significance in cult and ritual. Written sources also suggest that wine was regarded as particularly precious during this time, though these are generally from distant geographical regions. It has therefore been inferred that only the social elite, through their control of long-distance trade, had access to it.

For many inland and eastern Anatolian settlements, this may have been true. However, Troy, like many other sites in the Aegean and western Asia Minor, was located in a region particularly favourable for the cultivation of wine, which means it would have been more widely available.

So it’s hardly surprising that two-handed vessels have been found not only in Troy’s fortified citadel with its monumental buildings, but also in areas of the outer settlement. It led us to wonder – does this mean that farmers, craftsmen and others could also consume it on special occasions, or even in their daily lives?

To address this question, it was first necessary to prove scientifically that the goblets were actually used for drinking wine. Just because they might seem suitable for it doesn’t provide proof. To this end, two fragments from the collections of the Institute of Classical Archaeology in Tübingen were analysed for organic residues by Dr Maxime Rageot.

Two grams of ceramic material was drilled from the inner walls of the vessel, and the collected ceramic powder was then treated with solvents to extract lipid and resin compounds. After further chemical processing, these were heated to a maximum of 380°C and then analysed. Several aldaric acids were identified in both specimens. Namely, succinic, fumaric, pyruvic, malic and – in significant quantities – tartaric acids.

The latter can be interpreted as a grape marker, since such concentrations are not documented in other fruits available in the Mediterranean. The identification of succinic and pyruvic acids, commonly associated with fermentation markers, suggests the presence of wine (or vinegar) derived from ripe grapes.

So Schliemann was right: the depas amphikypellon was certainly used for wine consumption. Whether this was tied to religious practices, rituals and public banqueting, or simply drinking wine as part of everyday life, remains uncertain.

However, when it comes to who consumed it, our analysis results necessitate a correction of the conventional archaeological perspective. It seems that not only the elite enjoyed drinking wine – but also the common folk. For a counter-test, two simple cups, commonly found by the hundreds in early bronze-age Troy, were also sampled. The results were striking: the exact same organic residues were identified in both specimens.

Wine for all?

In archaeology, it is often the seemingly insignificant small finds that, when viewed in a broader context, have a profound impact. Based on organic residues –imperceptible to the naked eye and detectable only at a molecular level – the role of wine consumption in the second half of the 3rd millennium BC must be fundamentally reconsidered, at least in the case of Troy.

Here, wine was far from being reserved solely for the rich and powerful. The two-handed depas amphikypellon wasn’t a status symbol for the elite – it was a widely appreciated drinking vessel. Furthermore, for everyday drinking, it seems any type of vessel would do, with no particular one set aside for the task.

Whether and to what extent a shift in perspective can be expected at other sites of the Aegean and Anatolian early bronze age can, of course, only be definitively answered through comparable biomolecular analyses. After all, as in so many cases, it wouldn’t be surprising if Troy turned out to be the exception that challenges the norm.The Conversation

Stephan Blum, Research associate, Institute for Prehistory and Early History and Medieval Archaeology, University of Tübingen

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.