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Viggen

Triumviri
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Everything posted by Viggen

  1. yeah looking good so far just keep on going, it is getting close to be publishing material cheers viggen
  2. A California businessman said Thursday that skull fragments that once belonged to his great-great-uncle in 19th century Europe very likely came from German composer Ludwig van Beethoven. Paul Kaufmann made the announcement at the Center for Beethoven Studies at San Jose State University, which helped coordinate forensic testing aimed at authenticating the fragments and determining what killed Beethoven at age 56. full article at SFGate
  3. The oldest map of anywhere in the western world, dating from about 500 BC, has been unearthed in southern Italy. Known as the Soleto Map, the depiction of Apulia, the heel of Italy's "boot", is on a piece of black-glazed terracotta vase about the size of a postage stamp. full article at the Telegraph
  4. Dont worry Onasander, only Patricians qualify for free books! Once you are there we can discuss the details Depends how long that part is, i mean 10 pages of it wont be enough i fear... sure send me or pp a pm with the review and we can then decide if it is long enough or not... cheers viggen
  5. hmm, not a bad idea, however the majority that subscribes and read those forums are newcomers and visitors via the search engines, i fear those people would be confused with a new name that means nothing to the average person... cheers viggen
  6. hehe, as he said, he talks too much! actually we are a triumvirate; Primuspilus talks and writes, Moonlapse codes and designs, Viggen is (puppet or not) the Imperator cheers viggen
  7. One of Wales' oldest wells, thought to be a pagan site rededicated by early Christians, is to be restored. Ffynnon Rhedyw in Llanllyfni, near Caernarfon, is believed to be older than nearby St Rhedyw's church, which dates from 600AD. full article at the BBC
  8. UNESCO, the United Nations scientific and cultural organisation, will mark its 60th anniversary with a symposium chaired by one of the great thinkers of the 20th century, the French anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss. Levi-Strauss, who is 96, will first take part in a ceremony attended by UNESCO director-general Koichiro Matsuura and two of his predecessors, Amadou-Mahtar M'Bow and Federico Mayor on Wednesday. full article at Unesco
  9. hi hannibal and welcome to unrv.com! do you have a local museum? maybe they can assist you... cheers viggen
  10. talian researchers have found a pig-related disease in a mummy, squashing a common belief that Ancient Egyptians had a dietary ban on pork . Until now historians have found evidence suggesting ancient high priests in Egypt prohibited pig meat, in common with many Middle Eastern peoples who still don't eat pork today. via Ansa.it
  11. hehe, there are actually much more then that, however the system only recognizes the 10 posts after you have made a post since we switched to slave status... so someone that has more then 10 posts and hasnt posted since the witch is currently "slave" one more post and he will be pleibeian again.... cheers viggen
  12. OOps, sorry made a mistake, here are now the updated figures; Triumvirate (Admin) 3 Members Praefectus (Mod) 1 Member Patricians 6 Members Equestrians 27 Members Plebeians 9 Members Slaves 906 Members Damnatio 7 Members
  13. If Indiana Jones were a real archaeologist, he'd be just as likely to brandish a laptop with broadband as brush and note pad if a recent dig in the small English parish of Silchester was any indication. Researchers from nearby Reading University employed a new methodology during this summer's dig season at the Roman site, excavating with the help of new technologies for streamlining the archaeological process. The innovations, collectively known as e-science, threaten to shrug off archeology's antiquated image. full article at LiveScience
  14. A wave of archaeological revisionism, fueled in part by unfolding discoveries in South Carolina, is challenging long-held views about the first Americans
  15. The story of what really happened inside the Iraq Museum when thousands of valuable antiquities were stolen in the immediate aftermath of the 2003 US invasion has been revealed in a new book. Written by the chief investigator, it says there were three separate thefts, at least one of which was an inside job, another the work of professionals, and a third where fleeing Iraq military had left open a door which let in the looters. At least 13,864 objects were stolen, making it the biggest museum theft in history. full article at The Independent
  16. Yup, thats correct, it takes now 10 posts to become Pleibeian, (and if you have more then 10 posts but it still shows slave then you havent posted since the change, one more post and it will revert to pleibeian) The current status is; Triumvirate (Admin) 3 Members Praefectus (Mod) 1 Member Patricians 6 Members Plebeians 27 Members Slaves 907 Members Damnatio 7 Members cheers viggen
  17. Archaeologists in Crete have found an important trove of archaeological treasures containing some of the earliest known examples of Greek writing, the ministry of culture said on Saturday. It said the finds were excavated at a long-abandoned site on a hill overlooking the port of Chania in Western Crete, which has been identified with the Minoan city of Kydonia. full article at News24
  18. Thanks Pertinax for the review, it is now in our featured review section and elevated you into Equestrian status... well done! cheers viggen
  19. hehe, i rather stick with scientific evidence then rumors..., but interesting read nevertheless... cheers viggen
  20. Viggen

    Redbull Is King

    I just read this article Red Bull wings its way past diet sodas It doesnt happen often that an austrian company is known in the USA or worldwide, one example would be PEZ, yeah you heard right, thats from Austria Now i guess everyone knows RedBull, but did you know it is from Austria? Headquarter is in Salzburg, about an hours drive from my home town. cheers viggen
  21. Europeans owe their ancestry mainly to Stone Age hunters, not to later migrants who brought farming to Europe from the Middle East, a new study suggests. Based on DNA analysis of ancient skeletons from Germany, Austria, and Hungary, the study sways the debate over the origins of modern Europeans toward hunter-gatherers who colonized Europe some 40,000 years ago. full article at National Geographic
  22. Italy welcomed home on Friday three disputed art works from Los Angeles' J. Paul Getty Museum in the latest chapter of a saga that put the spotlight on the international trade in stolen art. The return of the treasures was even more significant because it came just days before the resumption of a trial in Rome of one of the Getty's former curators on charges she conspired with dealers trafficking in looted antiquities. full article at Reuters
  23. hehe, if true, still 400 years too late http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/vinland.html cheers viggen
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