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Keyword: ancientrome

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  • 'Caesar's superglue' find

    12/04/2007 6:32:34 PM PST · by BGHater · 77 replies · 196+ views
    The Scotsman ^ | 05 Dec 2007 | The Scotsman
    ARCHAEOLOGISTS in Germany have found a 2,000-year-old glue Roman warriors used to repair helmets, shields and the other accessories of battle. "Caesar's superglue" - as it has been dubbed by workers at the Rhine State Museum in Bonn - was found on a helmet at a site near Xanthen on the Rhine River where Romans settled before Christ. Frank Welker, a restorer at the museum, said: "We found the parade cavalry helmet had been repaired with an adhesive that was still doing its job. "This is rightly called some kind of superglue because air, water and time have not diminished...
  • Sanctuary of Rome's 'Founder' Revealed

    11/20/2007 10:08:23 AM PST · by Pyro7480 · 59 replies · 265+ views
    Yahoo! News (AP) ^ | 11/20/2007 | Ariel David
    ROME - Archaeologists on Tuesday unveiled an underground grotto believed to have been revered by ancient Romans as the place where a wolf nursed the city's legendary founder Romulus and his twin brother Remus. Decorated with seashells and colored marble, the vaulted sanctuary is buried 52 feet inside the Palatine hill, the palatial center of power in imperial Rome, the archaeologists said at a news conference. In the past two years, experts have been probing the space with endoscopes and laser scanners, fearing that the fragile grotto, already partially caved-in, would not survive a full-scale dig, said Giorgio Croci, an...
  • Ancient Rome is rebuilt digitally

    06/11/2007 2:21:35 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 35 replies · 1,135+ views
    Associated Press ^ | 6 minutes ago | ARIEL DAVID,
    ROME - Computer experts on Monday unveiled a digital reproduction of ancient Rome as it appeared at the peak of its power in A.D. 320 — what they called the largest and most complete simulation of a historic city ever created. Visitors to virtual Rome will be able to do even more than ancient Romans did: They can crawl through the bowels of the Colosseum, filled with lion cages and primitive elevators, and fly up for a detailed look at bas-reliefs and inscriptions atop triumphal arches. "This is the first step in the creation of a virtual time machine, which...
  • Lessons from Carthage

    08/27/2006 4:30:46 PM PDT · by tobyprissy · 29 replies · 1,001+ views
    Lessons from Carthage Elyakim Haetzni August 22, 2006 Carthage was an empire that ruled from Libya in North Africa to Sicilia to Sardinia to parts of Spain. It was the center of world finance. Rome stood in opposition, but encountered Carthage's naval superiority. The fighting between them continued for 200 years and ended with the destruction of Carthage. Theodor Mommsen, in his classic "The History of Rome", describes the people of Carthage as a nation not driven by freedom, or even by power. All they cared about was money. And they tried to use their money to buy peace and...
  • Road sees first traffic for 1,400 years

    07/28/2006 9:56:49 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 47 replies · 633+ views
    Havant & W Sussex News ^ | 27 July 2006 | unattributed
    Feet have trodden on a stretch of Roman road for the first time in 1,600 years. A section of the road has been fully uncovered in the final stages of an archaeological excavation on the former Shippams factory site in Chichester city centre... Jo Taylor, of Pre-Construct Archaeology, which has been carrying out the project with Gifford Archaeology, said the road probably dated from the late first century AD. Postholes on the southern side indicated some form of settlement, which was probably domestic. District council archaeological officer James Kenny said it was a privilege to stand on a Roman street....
  • Sabine Chariot Rewrites History

    05/12/2006 4:17:08 PM PDT · by blam · 25 replies · 838+ views
    Ansa ^ | 5-12-2006
    Sabine chariot rewrites history'Exceptional' find proves independence of ancient city (ANSA) - Rome, May 12 - An ancient king's war chariot found in a tomb near Rome has helped rewrite the history of the Romans and their Sabine rivals . "This chariot is an exceptional find," said archaeologist Paola Santoro. "It shows that the city of Ereteum remained independent long after the Sixth Century BC." "In other Sabine cities like Custumerium, conquered by the Romans, the custom of putting regal objects in king's tombs had died out by that time". "We can say that Eretum kept its independence until the...
  • Spain destroys lost Roman city for a car park

    04/30/2006 4:38:05 PM PDT · by gd124 · 74 replies · 1,739+ views
    The Sunday Times ^ | April 30, 2006 | Jon Clarke
    THE archeologists could barely hide their excitement. Beneath the main square of Ecija, a small town in southern Spain, they had unearthed an astounding treasure trove of Roman history. They discovered a well-preserved Roman forum, bath house, gymnasium and temple as well as dozens of private homes and hundreds of mosaics and statues — one of them considered to be among the finest found. But now the bulldozers have moved in. The last vestiges of the lost city known as Colonia Augusta Firma Astigi — one of the great cities of the Roman world — have been destroyed to build...
  • The Portraiture of Caligula in Right Profile- AR Denarii: The Imagery and Iconography- Joe Geranio

    04/23/2006 6:15:10 PM PDT · by Joe Geranio · 11 replies · 461+ views
    The Portraiture of Caligula ^ | 4/22/06 | Joe Geranio
    The Portraiture of Caligula in Right Profile- AR Denarii: The Imagery and Iconography By Joe Geranio For photos at portraitsofcaligula.con under basesclaudius tab For some time now I have been fascinated with the portraiture of Caligula in the round! He has typically been portrayed in the round (typology)1 , and his physiognomy. as follows, but first Most of these portraits are based upon official portraits, we can assume as Caligula (Princeps) wished to be portrayed some twelve to 30 sculptural likenesses of Caligula have survived,2 but these identifications can be quite subjective due to familial assimilation. Caligula’s characteristics typical are:...
  • Italians Dig Deep to Reveal Forgotten Roman City

    04/22/2006 8:04:40 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 12 replies · 504+ views
    Ancient Worlds (Reuters, Yahoo) ^ | Sun Aug 17, 2003 | Estelle Shirbon
    for 10 years, an Italian team has been beavering away underground to reveal the wonders of Pozzuoli, once the port of ancient Rome, which is buried under a 16th century city. Excavators at Pompeii, entombed in ash and toxic debris by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79, were able to remove the volcanic material and expose the city to the open air. But in Pozzuoli, whose beauty was such that the great Roman orator Cicero called it "little Rome," the ancient streets were encased in the foundations of a new city built by the Spanish in the 1500s,...
  • Scholars Unearth Mystery (Romans)

    02/19/2006 4:46:32 PM PST · by blam · 4 replies · 1,559+ views
    Rocky Mountain News ^ | 2-13-2006 | Jim Erickson
    Scholars unearth mysteryVilla of Roman emperor raises new questions for researchers on dig in Italy Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maxentius is depicted on a coin. Print By Jim Erickson Rocky Mountain News February 13, 2006 In The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Edward Gibbon portrays the pagan emperor Maxentius as a licentious youth and "a tyrant as contemptible as he was odious." Historians have long assumed that the reviled Roman emperor lived part-time at an 80-acre suburban villa complex until he was killed by his rival Constantine at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge in A.D. 312....
  • Archaeologists Find Tomb Under Roman Forum

    01/20/2006 2:48:28 PM PST · by The_Republican · 29 replies · 1,086+ views
    AP ^ | Jan 20th, 2006 | AP
    ROME - Archaeologists digging beneath the Roman Forum have discovered a 3,000-year-old tomb that pre-dates the birth of ancient Rome by several hundred years. State TV Thursday night showed an excavation team removing vases from the tomb, which resembled a deep well. Archaeologists were excavating under the level of the ancient forum, a popular tourist site, when they dug up the tomb, which they suspect is part of an entire necropolis, the Italian news agency ANSA reported. "I am convinced that the excavations will bring more tombs to light," ANSA quoted Rome's archaeology commissioner, Eugenio La Rocca, as saying. Also...
  • Big new Roman find in city

    11/26/2005 4:24:52 PM PST · by SunkenCiv · 9 replies · 474+ views
    West Sussex News ^ | 24 November 2005 | staff writer
    Experts believe they have unearthed a Roman road in the heart of Chichester and now have hopes of discovering a 1st-century fort... [T]eams found a road -- running parallel to East Street -- complete with camber and a ditch alongside it. Experts believe buildings that would have run alongside this road were likely to have been a combination of homes, shops and workshops. Smaller Roman finds, including coins and a pair of tweezers, have also been turned up already. But archaeologists believe they will unearth even more gems -- including the possibility of a Roman fort -- when excavation work...
  • Vanity: New episode of "ROME" on HBO-HD tonight (Episode 9: UTICA)-GGG Ping!

    10/30/2005 5:31:07 PM PST · by DCBryan1 · 24 replies · 1,326+ views
    HBO ^ | 30 OCT 05 | dcbryan1
    Episode 9: Utica With Scipio and Cato defeated, Caesar returns home to a hero's welcome. Vorenus and Pullo's showdown with local thug Erastes gets an unexpected reprieve from Caesar. Servilia's plan to use Octavia to unearth a secret about Caesar backfires. Don't miss the all new episode "Utica", Sunday, October 30th at 9PM ET.
  • Child-sex book canceled after WND report

    09/25/2005 12:33:41 PM PDT · by tuesday afternoon · 19 replies · 1,279+ views
    WorldNetDaily ^ | 9/22/05 | WND
    'Expert' author claimed sex good for 'nurturing,' 'mentoring' young boys Two days after WND exclusively reported on a new book claiming sex with children "can benefit and even serve a "mentoring function," the publishing company has announced it is canceling the book in light of the public outcry the story prompted. "Same-Sex Desire and Love in Greco-Roman Antiquity and in the Classical Tradition of the West" features "scholarly" treatises by a raft of mostly-Ph.D. academics, all praising earlier civilizations – particularly Greece and Rome – for the role homosexuality played in those ancient cultures. One chapter in particular, titled "Pederasty:...
  • Ancient Roman Navy Soldier Surfaces

    10/23/2005 4:42:46 PM PDT · by blam · 29 replies · 1,542+ views
    Archeobo ^ | 10-23-2005
    Ancient roman navy soldier surfacesRavenna Classe site yields his first-ever image of imperial officer The first-ever image of a soldier in the Ancient Roman navy has surfaced on 17th September 2005 at the major imperial naval base at Ravenna Classe. The armour-clad, weapon-bearing soldier was carved on a funeral stone, or stele, in a waterlogged necropolis at Classe ('Classis' in Latin means Fleet), the now silted-up Ravenna port area where Rome's Adriatic fleet was stationed. Previous finds at the site have only shown people in civilian garb (toga). An inscription on the soldier's funeral slab says he was an officer...
  • Roman Finds Re-Write History

    10/14/2005 4:44:24 PM PDT · by blam · 55 replies · 2,041+ views
    Isle Of Wight County Press ^ | 10-14-2005 | Suzanne Pert
    ROMAN FINDS RE-WRITE HISTORYBy Suzanne Pert AMAZING finds by archaeologists during recent excavations at Brading Roman Villa mean history will have to be re-written, not just there but at other important mosaic sites around the country.Archaeologist Kevin Trott with some of the pieces of pottery found at the Brading Roman Villa site. Picture by PETER BOAM Although his findings are still to be published, archaeologist Kevin Trott has compiled a 400-page report, which has dispelled some long-held myths and is set to take the archaeological world by storm. This week he gave the County Press an insight into the archaeologically-explosive...
  • Archaeologists Stumble On Brickworks Of Ancient Rome

    10/01/2005 6:15:47 PM PDT · by blam · 6 replies · 817+ views
    The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 10-2-2005 | Nick Pisa
    Archaeologists stumble on brickworks of ancient Rome By Nick Pisa in Rome (Filed: 02/10/2005) Two thousand years ago its furnaces must have been working around the clock, turning out the bricks that built ancient Rome. Now archaeologists have discovered the site of the brickworks that provided Rome with its most famous monuments, including the Colosseum and the Pantheon. One of the inscribed bricks used to build the Colosseum in Rome It lay 50 miles north of Rome, near the village of Bomarzo and close to the Tiber - enabling the red bricks to be loaded onto boats and transported down...
  • Secrets of the Dead; Case File: The Great Fire of Rome

    10/01/2005 4:17:14 PM PDT · by Captain Rhino · 45 replies · 1,683+ views
    Secrets of the Dead Series webpage on PBS website ^ | © 2002 Educational Broadcasting Corporation | John Uhl; Thirteen/WNET New York.
    Certainly, it's hard to know whether to trust the allegations in the writings of Tacitus. Yet, what about the explanation offered by Nero, that the Christians were to blame? At least one scholar believes Nero was on the mark. Professor Gerhard Baudy of the University of Konstanz in Germany has spent fifteen years studying ancient apocalyptic prophecies. His studies have shown that in the poor districts of Rome, Christians were circulating vengeful texts predicting that a raging inferno would to reduce the city to ashes. "In all of these oracles, the destruction of Rome by fire is prophesied," Baudy explains....
  • MITHRAISM: The Legacy of the Roman Empire's Final Pagan State Religion

    08/15/2005 2:04:48 PM PDT · by Navydog · 4 replies · 516+ views
    University of Chicago ^ | Unknown | Franz Cumont
    For over three hundred years the rulers of the Roman Empire worshipped the god Mithras. Known throughout Europe and Asia by the names Mithra, Mitra, Meitros, Mihr, Mehr, and Meher, the veneration of this god began some 4000 years ago in Persia, where it was soon imbedded with Babylonian doctrines. The faith spread east through India to China, and reached west throughout the entire length of the Roman frontier; from Scotland to the Sahara Desert, and from Spain to the Black Sea. Sites of Mithraic worship have been found in Britain, Italy, Romania, Germany, Hungary, Bulgaria, Turkey, Persia, Armenia, Syria,...
  • Ancient Roman temple found

    08/12/2005 8:30:03 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 8 replies · 427+ views
    ANSA Italy ^ | August 10 2005 | staff
    The woman's head is therefore without doubt that of an important member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty (14-68 AD), but there is still a slight question mark as to whether it is Agrippina, daughter of the Emperor Claudius.