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Everything posted by Viggen
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Well i guess the average person outside the alps never heard of that word.... However it is BIG here in Austria, on december 5th, every child goes out and chase and get chased by the mighty Krampus.
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Welcome and Introduce Yourself Here
Viggen replied to Viggen's topic in Welcome and Introduce Yourself Here
Hello Ti. Coruncanius and welcome to Unrv.com! Thanks for your kind words regards viggen -
We are happy to announce the UNRV Book of the Month "December" give away... The Fall Of The Roman Empire: A New History Of Rome And The Barbarians by Peter Heather The Patricians decided that it is "Virgil61`" turn, the book will shortly be shipped his way... I hope it will be an enjoyable read and looking forward to his review... regards viggen
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Down the slope from the Old City's Dung Gate, rows of thick stone walls, shards of pottery and other remains of an expansive ancient building are being exhumed from a dusty pit. The site is on a narrow terrace at the edge of the Kidron Valley, which sheers away from the Old City walls, in a cliffside area the Bible describes as the seat of the kings of ancient Israel. full article at MSNBC
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Deep in South Sinai, snuggled amidst dry gorges and naked valleys, 17 centuries of uninterrupted asceticism in an orthodox monastic centre trace back to the reign of the Roman Emperor Justinian in the sixth century. Never in its long history has St Catherine's Monastery been conquered, damaged, or destroyed. It is famous for its icons and manuscripts, and it is the latter that is about to receive attention. full article at Ahram.org
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Our server should be able to support allot more visitors then what we have right now, i would say about 500 user at a time shouldnt be a big deal to handle... cheers viggen
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Looking at your output rate lately, it is no problem at all to set your personal flood control to 1000 seconds... cheers viggen
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Police in Porto Torres have recovered an imperial roman women's head inside private premises, described as being a "fine item". Experts believe the item was stolen from a museum, as indicated by the presence of pedestal marks on its base. The bust was recovered as part of a batch of 71 items. full article at Agi.it
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dont forget the cheese....!!! Nothing beats a Dolce Latte ...well maybe a prosciutto from San Daniele wrapped around a grissini... (yes you are right i live just 30 minutes away from italy hehe)
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Asterix and Obelix is a comic series from France and very popular in Europe it started in the late 50s and it is about a gallic village during the times of Caesars conquest (well most of the time) it is very funny and thought my american friends that never heard of it are interested to know that there is a comic set in roman times... The setting: The year is 50 B.C.Gaul is entirely occupied by the Romans. Well, not entirely... One small village of indomitable Gauls still holds out against the invaders. And life is not easy for the Roman legionaries who garrison the fortified camps of Totorum, Aquarium, Laudanum and Compendium... Some infos about Asterix http://heim.ifi.uio.no/~janl/ts/asterix.html and here a good site in english about Asterix http://www.asterix.co.nz/ cheers viggen
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ah, forum upgrade could have set it back to standard, in any case i leave it that way... ...but i set it that so that Patricians and Equestrians no longer have flood control at all... regards viggen
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It always was set on 120 seconds, since the day we started, because thats the default setting and we havent changed anything since then... regards viggen
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Some books you might find interesting... Kingdoms of the Empire: The Integration of Barbarians in Late Antiquity (Transformation of the Roman World, Vol 1) The Later Roman Empire, 284-602: A Social, Economic, and Administrative Survey Decline and Fall of the Roman City People and Identity in Ostrogothic Italy, 489-554
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Book Review by Pertinax This title is a publication from the year 2004. It is a very well presented volume with a considerable range of quality illustrations.The whole presentation of this work is a constant reminder to modern scholars that one must always try to take a step back from any historical material ( and previous scholarly works) to avoid imposing the "modern" on the behaviour and goals of our various ancestors. Cruse is rigorous in attempting to step aside from judgements based on contemporary usage, this is most immediatley obvious in the references to healing plants, as materia medica plants can have a stratlingly wide range of uses for very different medical conditions though within historical eras they have a tendency to be fashionable for one predominant disease.The Opium Poppy was the esteemed painkiller it is today, so our assumptions of the use of the poppy latex in anasthesia are not unreasonable;contrast this to the use of Mandrake (nowadays considerd a byword for medieval superstition and not in conventional usage) it contains hyoscine which prior to the development of modern anasthesia and the use of ether it would have been one of the main tools of anasthesia. It is in the details that Cruse shows her skill throughout the text but her generalisations are also pertinent.We are reminded very cogently that medicine is specific to its culture, time and place ."Our" medicine is no freer from its own "superstitions", no Roman doctor would have had a massive layer of insulating bureaucracy abetween himself and his patient, indeed in contemporary terms the process would be more holistic.Cruse outlines the origins of our medicine in archaic Greece,its evolution under Plato and the rise of cult related healing sites.the developmennt of hospitals is shown as a result of Rome's military aspirations.The healer gods and their sanctuaries are discussed. It is interesting to note where disease and morbidity diverge from our present experience, for instance eye conditions were of great concern in the Ancient world ( I would personally suggest that this is strongly linked to the incidence of parasitical infections) and there wasa large volume trade in solidified eye salves( and fistula medication) for travellers mirroring our own airport trade in medicaments .Healing sleep within shrines of a healing deity stood alongside the "rational" intervention of medication, the widespread use of votive objects (as thanks or for concentration of the deities efforts) is attested, and there is particular mention of the conflation of Gallic votive practises into the Roman sphere. A section which resonated very amusingly was where the use of ritual chanting /prayer /music was used to effect a cure or palliative: ie midwives being able to relieve birth pangs by chant and song-exactly how different is that to modern whale song and ambient music in birthing pools? When Cruse moves onto the use of plants her writing covers ceremonial,spiritual and clinical properties and I was delighted to see the continuity with modern herbalism (elsewhere on UNRV in thre Gallery section I have posted a few illustrations) .Healers in Rome were well aware of the potential deadliness of Opium,henbane, Stramonium and Nightshade but also were able to deduce that a weakened poppy could be cultivated with less toxic side effects -from which we see the escaped poppies across British fields.We see that the Pax Romana was a huge impetus to the trading of plants on a continet wide scale either for commerce or medicine, and that finds from Pompeii evidence a range of cultivated plants for processing into medicines. Health and hygeine are covered , the provision of water and sewerage seem to be rather superior to contemporay usage certainly the constant flushing of sewers by waste fountain water would be a step forward!A short history of the Cloaca Maxima is included and some information on the use of lead for water distribution. The unfortunate side effects of the widespread lead technology are also considerd, the chronic anemia caused by constant overuse of water and food exposed to lead is explained in an excellent study of Poundbury in Roman Britain (chronic fatigue,infertility, depression), with an excellent rejoinder showing how taking of iron rich waters was used as a cure. Cruse gives us a brief history of the supply of Rome itself with water and what a great undertaking this was and how rapidly the city outgrew each of these schemes.The item which struck me most forcibly was that the Romans were quite aware that putrid matter must be kept away from clean water but that germ theory was not mooted in any form given that internal wcs were often close by to the kitchen and we are reminded of the collection and use of urine on a wide scale for fulling( and the olfactory problems that arose) .The provision of vast comunal latrines is also described in quite sufficient detail. The Baths as a cultural and hygenic force are explored and their elevation to a central role in the community; and the description from the younger Seneca of the poseurs (grunting away loudly whilst weight lifting-very bourgeoise) , nostril pluckers, sausage vendors, and fat wheezy old men in the baths is gruesomely modern. I think it is in the description of possible valetudinarii (hospitals) that the strength of the author's rigorousness comes through, the essence of this being: we know of the hospital from primary sources, we see many ruins and have many finds of medical instruments but what we have long considered to be "standard pattern" wards may be general purpose building constructed for a whole range of logistical uses . It is also a possibility that many of the Soldiery carried medical equipment as well as those dedicated to medicine (frequently Greek) in the field .From these two strands of thought it is then a reasonable conclusion to look harder at our conventional wisdom in all matters relating to built environment. ...more Book Reviews! Life In Rome by J. Carcopino Empire Of Pleasures by A. Dalby Dining Posture by M. Roller The section on diseases and operations (rather vividly illustrated in HBOs Rome when Titus Pullo has his head wound treated) makes the reader think :are we any more advanced or knowing in certain areas of medicine ? what have we perhaps forgotten? Its very easy to be self congratulatory and say that our surgical skills are greatly advanced but the rate of Iatrogenic deaths (admitted) is vast. We do have great advantadges in some fields but sophisticated instruments abound in Rome for many purposes (if in or visiting the UK I reccommend the Pitt-Rivers Museum Oxford if you wish to examine ancient/folk surgical tools) and one has a constant sense of feeling within touching distance of the Roman healer. On a site note...this book is excellently illustrated ,in fact ive been a bit remiss not to say that the photos and illustrations are top notch Tell us your opinion - Submit your Review - Buy the book! Book Review of Roman Medicine - Related Topic: Roman Medicine Bibliography Get it now! Roman Medicine for the UK ________________________________ Archive
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Archaeologists in northern Greece have uncovered traces of two prehistoric farming settlements dating back as early as 6,000 B.C., the Culture Ministry said Monday. The first site, located on a plot earmarked for coal mining by Greece's Public Power Corporation, yielded five human burials, as well as artifacts including clay figurines of humans and animals, sealstones, pottery and stone tools. full article at Boston.com
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Ancient wooden anchors preserved by natural salt for more than 2,000 years have been discovered on the receding shores of the Dead Sea, Israel TV reported Monday. Archaeologist David Mevorach told the TV station that one anchor dated back 2,500 years the oldest ever found. Another anchor was 2,000 years old, he said. They were built from acacia wood for Roman ships, he said. full article at ABC News
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The Praetor Peregrinus
Viggen replied to Primus Pilus's topic in Renuntiatio et Consilium Comitiorum
There is nothing wrong being a pleibeian... Onasander, do you want to become one again? cheers viggen -
my prediction for the future is "you cant predict a damm thing" I remember back in primary school we learned about soviet union, and warscaw pact, GDR, well gone... I remember in the middle of the 80s when i visited my uncles office seeing a huge machine were a piece of paper came out it was called a fax machine, it was shocking to me back then and i couldnt understand how someone could send something written via a telephone line... I remember back in the early 90s when i was playing with my monster computer Intel 0486 with 66 Mhz Ultima 7 II The Serpent Isle, reading a computer magazine about Origin (the maker of Ultima) planning on an Online version of it, i was like "huh?" what do they mean with online? I remember back in 95 when i left Austria to move to South Africa, no one had a mobile phone, only 7 years later when i moved back to Austria, Everyone including my 80 year old grandma had one... As i said, things move so quickly, so many things happen we havent even thought of or imaged a couple of years ago, as i said i cant predict a damm thing... cheers viggen
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The Monophysite Christian Kingdom Of Axum
Viggen replied to Favonius Cornelius's topic in Historia in Universum
via JewishVirtual Library -
I have no doubt that Phoenicians or Romans could have been in the Americas, but rather by accident (pushed westwards in a major storm for example), however i have big doubts those stranded "Europeans" every managed to get back to europe... cheers viggen
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uhm, any chance on staying on topic? thanks and cheers viggen
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Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologists conducting a salvage dig in the Armenian monastery in Jaffa expected to find artifacts connected to the ancient fortifications of the city. However, a few days ago they were surprised to discover, some 60 centimeters below the monastery floor, no fewer than 10 horse skeletons. Excavation directors Amit Re'em and Martin Peilstoker said yesterday the horses may have died in battle, and if so, it occurred long before the 17th century, when the monastery was constructed. It was possible, the archaeologists said, that the horses were buried as early as the Hellenistic period, about 2,200 years ago, or in the Early Arab period, 1,500 years ago. The archaeologists assume the horses were buried outside the city wall because of the stench of them decaying. full article at Haaretz
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In 1933, archaeologist Jos