Jump to content
UNRV Ancient Roman Empire Forums

Viggen

Triumviri
  • Posts

    6,235
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    72

Everything posted by Viggen

  1. Thanks to political tensions easing in Lebanon, archaeologists have finally managed to locate the sites of ancient Phoenician harbours in the seaports that dominated Mediterranean trade thousands of years ago. By drilling out cores of sediment from the modern urban centres of these cities, geologists have mapped out the former coastlines that the sediments have long since buried. From this they have pinpointed the likely sites of the old harbours, and have marked out locations that, they say, are in dire need of exploration and conservation. full article at Nature
  2. Archaeologists have unearthed a Roman road, a Bronze Age ditch and some medieval artefacts during major road improvement works in Wiltshire. The historical remains - including three iron horseshoes - were found in the upper layers of the Roman road. Archaeologist Neil Holbrook said the findings had been recorded and added: "The Romans didn't have horseshoes. "We seem to have proved by the discovery that the road continued in use into the medieval period." full article at the BBC
  3. Check out this thread i opened... http://www.unrv.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=2916 cheers viggen
  4. Ok, dont get too exited, there is none out yet, to be exact "The studio is currently not producing this title". However there is a pre-order page on Amazon, so apparently, if you enter your mail adress the studio will be notified how many people are actually waiting for it and it might change their attitude... ...so if you like you can go to the HBO Rome DVD site and sign up to be notified, maybe we can make a differene... cheers viggen UPDATE You can preorder it now Rome: The Complete First Season
  5. There was always a way to use an integrated spell checker on the forum, however it was only available if you use the rich text editor, and this one had some serious bugs, so i never mentioned it... With the latest upgrade of our forum software (2.1.4), most of those issues have been fixed, so i am happy to explain it how it works... First, this only works with Internet Explorer... You need to install the spell checker software here ---> http://www.iespell.com/download.php then go back to the forum, go to My Controls, there you go to Board Settings, change "Type of text editor to use when posting" to "Rich Text Editor" then save it... Now you have when you post a new icon on the top bar (says ABC), once you are finished typing your post just click on it and it will spell check the text for you.... cheers viggen p.s. ok the spell checker is not perfect though (it tries to replace viggen to virgin )
  6. hi M. Porcius Cato, welcome to the bloggers btw, you set that every comment must need approval to show, i approved this one for you, (unless you did that on purpose, then its fine) cheers viggen
  7. The Late Roman Army The primary mission of this book is to give the reader a detailed and examined look at the Imperial Roman Army in Late Antiquity, roughly from the time of the 3rd Century Crisis to the fall of the Western Empire and into Justinian's reign in the East. Though being less than 200 pages long, the book gives the reader a sense of understanding on the army during the late Empire that few do. The entire book covers all aspects of the army from the sources that are used for the piece all the way to the Morale of the Army and shows the development from the old Imperial Army to one which imployed Limitani and Field Armies. The main primary sources used are Ammianus, Zosimus and Procopius and is supplamented with excellent secondary sources like A H M Jones and Ramsey MacMullen... ...read the full review of The Late Roman Army by Pat Southern and Karen R. Dixon thanks Neos Dionysos! cheers viggen
  8. Thanks Moon, As Moon said, we only upgraded to 2.1.4 because of a security issue (we only do major updates usually), however now are several bugs are fixed too... cheers, viggen
  9. Book Review by Neos Dionysos The primary mission of this book is to give the reader a detailed and examined look at the Imperial Roman Army in Late Antiquity, roughly from the time of the 3rd Century Crisis to the fall of the Western Empire and into Justinian's reign in the East. Though being less than 200 pages long, the book gives the reader a sense of understanding on the army during the late Empire that few do. The entire book covers all aspects of the army from the sources that are used for the piece all the way to the Morale of the Army and shows the development from the old Imperial Army to one which imployed Limitani and Field Armies. The main primary sources used are Ammianus, Zosimus and Procopius and is supplamented with excellent secondary sources like A H M Jones and Ramsey MacMullen. While the book may not be an engrossing read it is filled with evidence and information which answers the question, "What happened to the Roman Army? Why did this force which conquerored much of the known world succumb to something so simple as barbarians?" and it disproves the popular theory that barbarization was the main cause of the fall of the army which led to the end of the Western Empire. Through extensive research the author's show that not only is this not the case but that the barbarization had more positive effects than negative. Discussed is also how many scholars in the past have been quick to write so negativily on not only the army but the emperors of the period save for Diocletian, Constantine, Julian and Justinian. They are seen as the creators of the defense and rebirth of the empire while other emperors left it to ruin, yet credit is given to those which improved fortifications and defensive works across the borders. The author's devout a good chapter on all types of fortifications in the late empire, where and why they were built and the reasoning for thier abandonment or transformation over time. Also talked about is the equipment used by the army at this time and thier change in tactics. Numerous plates and figure sketches of equipment from the period adorn this part of the book giving the reader a vivid picture of what a soldier in the late empire would have looked like and how well he would have been trained. The authors go into the changes in recruitment at different periods as well as the change in pay and compensation and the corruption which ate away at the army's structure to the point where civilians and citizens were more afraid of the army than of the enemies of the state. A key aspect dicussed at length is on the role of barbarians in the army from Constatine to Justinian. The authors show how different regions responded to the barbarization of the army, how these peoples were utilized by various Emperors and thier policies toward them. One interesting point to note is the point made how two major germanic groups were settled into the empire at Rome's desire. The Visigoths and the Burgandians were both settled on Roman land with Rome having the position of strength in the diplomatic discussions. The authors go on to discuss why intergration and settlement were so important and of the positive and negative aspects of this policy. Finally, the book leaves you with an excellent grasp at the severity of the situation faced by Rome in the 3rd-5th centuries AD and how the army faced with these difficulties still performed as well as they did, though by comparison to the Early and High Empire periods they are seen as falling quite short, and shows the relsiliance and adaptability of the Roman army and empire during times of extreme hardships and situations. All in all, I would rate this a 4 1/2 out of 5; and would highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the late Imperial Army and of causes for the decline and collaspe of the western empire. It is a lot of information to take in and I would suggest this not to the casual reader due to the heavy dose of information and facts in such a short volume, though if you have a decent grasp on the late period of Rome you should adapt quickly and be able to take in a lot if not all the information presented to you. ...more Book Reviews! Release Your Inner Roman by Jerry Toner A Companion to Roman Italy by Alison E. Cooley Oxford Classical Dictionary by Hornblower Patrica Southern is an English historian of classical Rome. Born in 1948 near Altrincham, Cheshire, she studied Ancient History and Archaeology with the Universities of London and Newcastle upon Tyne. She was the librarian of the Department of Archaeology at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne from 1983 to 1996 and later at the library of the Newcastle upon Tyne Literary and Philosophical Society. She has published 13 books on Roman history and archaeology and contributed numerous articles on Roman history to the BBC History website and the academic Roman studies journal Britannia. Southern's first two books The Roman Cavalry and The Late Roman Army were co-authored and illustrated by Karen Dixon. Dixon also illustrated several other books in the publisher's catalogue. Dixon's analysis of morale in the late Roman Army was well received and influenced the development of the study of military psychology in history pioneered by John Keegan in The Face of Battle. Tell us your opinion - Submit your Review - Buy the book! Book Review of The Late Roman Army - Related Topic: Roman Legion Bibliography Get it now! The Late Roman Army for the UK ________________________________ Archive
  10. as far as i know Judaea was not a very rich province and had little economic value to the empire, right? cheers,viggen
  11. Discovery of an ancient village just outside Jerusalem has brought into question one of the strongest images of biblical times - the wholesale flight of Jews running for their lives after the Roman destruction of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE. full article at JPost
  12. There are five new copies left at Amazon USA Roman Sex 100 BC - AD 250 however if you dont mind waiting a couple of weeks you can get a also brand new copy from Amazon UK Roman Sex: 100 B.C. to A.D. 250 cheers viggen
  13. The real question would be then; If we could travel back in time and present translations of Virgils own works to him (spanish, portuguese,italian, romanian), which one could he understood most? My guess is he probably wouldnt understand any of them, either because of the wording change or because of the complete different grammar, so is it fair to say the closest today used language to latin language is church latin? and would he understand that? (and yes church latin is the official language in Vatican) but as i said i am not a linguist... ...another point no one seems to ever mention is the evolution of the latin language during roman times, again i am not a linguist, but i would be very surprised if the Latin of Tarquin the Proud was the same as the latin that was used by M. Porcius Cato or the latin that was used during Constatine`s reign, because 1000 years are a long long time and no living language is not evolving at some point, right?
  14. hehe, well you just have to wait to find out cheers viggen
  15. I was very pleased to find this book as I was aware of Mr Dalby's previous works, and it is evident that his sources are well researched and his excellent eye for language digs out subtle interperative nuances that may be lost to the monolingual. The thing that strikes me about this book is that it benefits from being "read" in the Roman manner, ie: out loud - to savour cadences and phrases like rich foods, indeed that is both a compliment and a type of critiscism. The difficulty with this work is, that if one sits and reads, without the slow discipline of speaking and proper phrasing, the detail of the text is actually almost too rich. That of course is a critiscism that most people would consider a compliment , my point is that it was apt for me to read this book over the Xmas period as its density mirrored a festive meal. ...continue to the full review of Empire Of Pleasures by Andrew Dalby
  16. Book Review by Pertinax I was very pleased to find this book as I was aware of Mr Dalby's previous works, and it is evident that his sources are well researched and his excellent eye for language digs out subtle interperative nuances that may be lost to the monolingual. The thing that strikes me about this book is that it benefits from being "read" in the Roman manner, ie: out loud - to savour cadences and phrases like rich foods, indeed that is both a compliment and a type of critiscism. The difficulty with this work is, that if one sits and reads, without the slow discipline of speaking and proper phrasing, the detail of the text is actually almost too rich. That of course is a critiscism that most people would consider a compliment , my point is that it was apt for me to read this book over the Xmas period as its density mirrored a festive meal. You cannot rush this book, I did so initially because I was keen to try and greedily experience the real sights ,sounds and smells of the Roman world. I started to read aloud to Madame Pertinax and that action made me realise Dalby's desire to "imagine the world of the senses that belongs with the world of monuments and inscriptions" (but which breathe no life). My abiding interests are the Triclinium and Materia Medica from Roman days,so to be presented with a catalogue of luxuries (and glimpses of simpler fare, betrayed by asides and ancient commonplace) was a delight to me. I think for many Forum members at UNRV the time frame of the work will resonate well - approx 50BC to 150AD when all the fervid events and epic partying seemed to take place. There are remarks to savour in a general context, for example , a rejoinder to remember that the Empire was "without predestined limit" and that such an attitude starkly recalls the confidence of Rome and how it sat in the world. Rome as the centre of Roman excellence and its corrosive desire for luxury and wealth, dating from its final victory over Carthage. The early parts of the work take us on a sightseeing tour of the heart of the Empire, and as we move along we absorb sights, sounds, flavours with nice insight into social mores and a "rustic idyll" of city life and country estate that would do well in Edwardian Britain ( Faustinus's villa at Baiae p26, a sort of Marie Antoinette vision of bucolic excellence is wholly pertinent). If I quote too much here I may spoil your journey ,so I can offer small signposts to give you a desire to travel - the Lucullan fish ponds of Naples and the joyous detail of the "parrot wrasse" raised not for its indifferent flesh but glorious colouration brought alive to the dining table. After exploring the Roman countryside we are drawn to examine the splendour of Rome's dominions.We see the stereotypes for each of the "ethnic" groups identified by Rome, and we learn of the produce of these exotic lands. I wondered why I found this section of the book so interesting despite , I felt , it being a little drier in tone than the foregoing chapters. After reflection I realised that this was how I had wanted "geography" to be presented to me as a subject when I was young ie: full of asides as to the ferocity of Liburnian pirates , the white skinned Gauls and their childlike credulity , the dark wavy hair and deep voices of the tough spaniards. The produce of the countries is named but again in a way that gives much more life to the subject eg: certain woolens being suitable for the dress of particular ranks and types of slaves, the context of the product pins it much more vivdly in the imagination. I couldnt help but enjoy the asides about Britain - being included in a list of "places best left unvisited"-and the ferocity of her peoples, fierce and blue (painted) being the main adjectives employed. My favourite quote on Britain from Statius is included, naming the province as the place for a man of valour and courage to test himself beyond all other places in the wide Empire. I always enjoy reading about this strange "wild frontier". We are reminded of the great extent of cisalpine Gaul and its relationship to Gaul proper. Many of the generalities in the book will be known to active Romanophiles, but its use lies in the application of flesh to bone, both sweet or strong smelling flesh. My initial comment about the work being like a rich dinner recurs as one becomes caught up in the guts of the book, you may have to slow down to digest properly . I read through in a couple of sittings as I was greedy to imbibe, but I found that dipping back into specific parts yielded snatches of descriptive phrase that gave vivid mental "coat hooks" to time , place and events. The tour also includes the cultural journey of the educated Roman, that is the urbane asimmilation of Grecian culture , firstly by cultural tourism (possibly the first instance of this in the recent past) and also the linguistic digestion of Greek loanwords into an educated mans vocabulary.The effect of this varying rather, from some languid wit dropping the odd semi-ironic bon mot into his after dinner chat to some lower middle class arriviste ( ) littering a loud cocktail conversation with pretenious phrases. The use of the Greek seems to echo the use (and distrust ) of foreign languages in the robustly phillistine British Victorian upper classes, and a hint of sexual ambiguity attaches to the use of greeek garments and accoutrements. We see also the frisson of temptation as the robust Roman confronts the "eastern" pleasures and the "unhealthily wicked egyptians" ( just speaking that phrase should make you smile ). The company of "flute girls" ,that is temptingly available bar girls of Syrian origin or appearence seem to heat up Stoic Roman blood somewhat. The Perigrinato continues from the reasonably well known and somewhat salacious to the exotic and other worldly. There are some interesting notes on slavery here - namely the unlikelihood of Numidians falling into Roman hands, but we see earlier in the book the universality of the trade amongst all ethnic types. The trade of exotica be it the hippopotamus , elephant and rhinoceros is examined and we are reminded of the bestia entertainment of the Colesseum and the prestige of supplying the fabulous and rare for death in the arena . The Roman mind set is considered in the case of Arabia - a harsh desert and desolate yet often called happy and blessed in Roman literature ;mainly we see because of the desire for hair gel. I am skittish with your sensibilities here, but in a modern sense the trade in frankincense ( Boswellia) mirrors that modern grooming accesory, perhaps we can be kinder and say it is the languid, heavy ,cleansing aroma of the resin ous gum that is desired so fervently.Frankincense is not alone but its role gives us a sharp insight into an idea of exotica as desired luxury as an emblem of wealth and discrimination. The aroma of alluring spices hangs over Parthia and we meet silphium the lost jewel of the the triclinium and from India the splendid pepper, there is a whole line of interest and enquiry related to the trading of spices above and beyond the scope of this work which the authour has tackled in the work "Dangerous Tastes". So these various journeys bring us back to Rome itself , the devourer of pleasures, tastes , odours, lithe limbs, bloody arenas . As I said the "central " parts of the book may make you wonder "why do I take these journeys in taste and sensation?" The Saeva Urbs and Use of Empire chapters deliver the goods . Here we have the context of the consumption of goods and their social utility. Firstly Rome is vast. Rome is various and thronged.Rome is a clamouring whirlpool, worried about extending citizenship yet proud of its huge gravitational pull across the whole world. HBOs Rome and its portrayal Caesars mob of greasy haired Gauls in the senate is the very paradox here . We move around city and suburb seeing what and who is on sale, and note how the poor can take advantadge of hot food stalls, not being able to light a risky cooking fire in their rickety tenements . The wafted smells of home cooking drift past us in the clamour of noisy trades,we see the enticing "curtains with price tags", naughty corners of taverns for assignation . The reality of the dish of sow's womb is encountered in a snapshot of promiscuous food ordering . The imagined noise and smells took me back to the crowded pavements of Hong Kong as a sort of approximation to the Rome of butchers and fishmongers crowding the public pavements amidst a riot of bleeding flesh and living fish. The centre of the vortex ,the route to which all the exotica travel to achieve "justification" is the circus and the theatre-arenas to sate the constant Roman need for incident and thrills. Are they not entertained? We have travelled widely, returned to the maelstrom of Rome and now enter our friends' houses to eat, drink and show a keen appreciation of his good taste (and wealth) in providing both the exotic and the fragrantly bucolic , rare balsams and perfumes to be headily inhaled, myrtle garlands for the heated brow. We also see the very virtuous "rustic idyll" of quality home grown produce brought to the table, a reminder of no nonsense virtue to the strained gut, and a subtle allusion to the Romaness of the host. Rome spanned the world for its desires, was proud of its reach , and consumed happily and noisily. ...more Book Reviews! Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome by Adkins Roman Empire by C. M. Wells Roman Medicine by Audrey Cruse Should you buy this work? Rubicon was a good "story" and a useful popular book to give further flesh to the enjoyment of HBOs Rome; these popularising entertainments are to be welcomed as they open up imaginative windows into Romanophilia. The subject book is a heavy mixture of very vivid living snapshots linked as a perigrination around the Roman world, it adds sensuous flesh and perfume to the commoner images and worthier "hard " histories . If you are a Legion and Ballista devotee , I think this catalogue of "greek" fleshiness might not be to your satisfaction . One could not take the book and read it through without pausing and setting it aside for a day or two to consider and digest its plummy contents.I suggest reading it in little morsels at a quiet table near the seafront at Positano, whilst eating a dish of local seafood. A book for daydreaming of Rome. When I edited this piece I cut out some rather excessive flourishes , one such was a reference to a quote from Ian Fleming's "From Russia with Love" , where Bond says to kerim Bey "Moi j'aime les sensations forte", meaning in food , drink and emotion. It came to me why I enjoyed the reviewed work so much, Fleming was a master of the description of "things" and fixing their essence in the readers mind by giving telling , accurate and vivid information . This work is full of such lucid snapshots. I beg your indulgence in the verbosity of this review, honest friends have been kind enough to say that I am perhaps over-excited by enthusiasm for a work I enjoyed so much. I vow terse and martial discretion in the future. Tell us your opinion - Submit your Review - Buy the book! Book Review of Empire Of Pleasures - Related Topic: Daily Life In Ancient Rome Bibliography Get it now! Empire of Pleasures for the UK ________________________________ Archive
  17. what amazes me is that people hammer on those 10 or 20 or whatever percentage it is, of slavonic words, i mean heck german has (without having any accurate numbers, but beeing a german native speaker) at least as many non germanic words. We have many loan words from latin, greek, later french and recently english and no one would come to the idea german is not damm close to the german of the early times, so i am not that sure why or how that would be different to any other language... Languages do evolve, sometimes extremely quick, look how short the split between USA and Britsh english was and how many different words spelling phrases are already appearing... It took only 50 years for eastern germany to develop some unique words the west germans didnt understand... but i guess i am wandering off topic now... cheers viggen btw. if i am not mistaken then a uniform italian language (standard italian) was first shaped by Dante Alighieri`s Commedia which was written in a tuscan dialect mixed with some southern dialects? Italian has always had a distinctive dialect for each city, since the cities were up until recently city-states, which is a very similar situation in the german language (first standard german attempt was by Guthenbergs bible) also, people always speak about the classic latin, but thats (as far as i know) was not the language the people spoke it was Vulgar Latin, wasnt it? ok i am completely off topic now
  18. The forum for what the name suggestion was for is about life after the Roman empire in general, not only the byzantine empire, so it would be misleading, however if that forum gets busy enough a sub forum could be easily created that would be then all about the byzantine empire and therefor could be named without problems basileia Romaion... regards viggen
  19. Swiss german is unique, it is basically just an allemanic dialect but unlike the allemanic dialects used in Germany, Austria or France it is an every day spoken language (TV, Radio etc...) unrestricted and practically used in all situations of daily life. A non allemanic person (like me, i belong to the Austro-Bavarian dialect group) can hardly understand them, my fellow countrymen in the most western austrian province called "Vorarlberg" which are the only ones in Austria speaking an allemanic dialect can follow without a problem... You can find an exellent overview about german dialects here http://german.about.com/library/weekly/aa051198.htm regards viggen
  20. The Patricians have decided it is Hamilcar Barcas turn for the UNRV Book of the Month "January" give away... The Colosseum (Wonders of the World) by Mary Beard and Keith Hopkins ...the book will shortly be shipped his way... I hope it will be an enjoyable read and looking forward to his review... regards viggen
  21. hehe, yeah shame on me, i must have missed that during my south africa period... just doing some cleaning up of dead links and thats how i stumbled over this one... cheers viggen
  22. While doing some research i stumbled upon the site from Carl Edlund Anderson and his PhD Dissertation, he says "Most Ph.D. dissertations make terrible books, and mine is no exception!", however i found it an easy read and wanted to share this find with you guys as there is so little info on early germanics... http://www.carlaz.com/phd/ regards viggen
  23. this link is now unfortunately dead, is there another source for that kind of info? cheers viggen
  24. Channel 4's Time Team have unearthed some fascinating ancient finds in Britain's fields. But the discovery of their latest Roman settlement in the Cotswolds was not the result of academic research. Instead, experts on the TV show have moles to thank for digging up stones from an ancient villa. They burrowed their way through a remote, unploughed two-acre field near Withington - and churned up what looked like unremarkable stone cubes. fulla article at This is Gloucestershire
×
×
  • Create New...