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Viggen

Triumviri
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  1. dont you have anything to say at all about your site? cheers viggen
  2. For millennia, ancient Egyptians used oil tar to preserve bodies. New geologic research shows that the tar came from several sources, shedding light on how trade routes of old compare to those of today. New research suggests that ancient Egyptians used oil tar from Gebel Zeit in Egypt, shown here, and from the Dead Sea to preserve mummies. Image courtesy of James Harrell. full article at Geotimes
  3. Exellent job Ursus... cheers viggen
  4. The site of a nearly 1,000-year-old church has been found in Skien, making it likely Norway's oldest. Norway may have been converted to Christianity far earlier than believed. full article at Aftenposten
  5. sure http://www.unrv.com/government/emperor.php cheers viggen
  6. A CRUMPLED piece of metal found in a field in the Newchurch parish turned out to be an extremely rare Bronze Age decorative ring of national importance. full article at IWCP
  7. Coventry's medieval history is well documented, but experts excavating in the city centre have made a discovery which could indicate there was a Roman settlement here hundreds of years before. A team of archaeologists digging up the site near the Herbert Art Gallery ahead of the construction of the city's new history and archive museum have unearthed a Roman brooch. The find indicates there was Roman activity in the area - and could mean there was a settlement on the site. full article at IC Coventry
  8. Archaeologists believe what they originally thought was a Viking burial ground in Cumbria, may actually have been a 10th Century market. Excited experts unearthed a wealth of treasures at the site, near Barrow. They were particularly impressed with a merchant's weight, which is the size of a finger and shows a dragon design with two figures. full article at BBC
  9. Work to halt the erosion of an Iron Age hill fort in Gloucestershire is due to begin soon. Kimsbury Camp on Painswick Beacon is a popular beauty spot, visited by local people and walkers on the Cotswold Way. full article at the BBC
  10. A tiny Umbrian village is taking on the mighty Metropolitan Museum in New York, claiming that one of its most exalted exhibits, an Etruscan chariot, was illegally exported from Italy 100 years ago. The sixth-century bronze and ivory chariot, the pride of the museum's Etruscan collection, was originally sold to two Frenchmen by a farmer who dug it up in a field at Monteleone di Spoleto, near Perugia, in 1902. full article at Telegraph
  11. Swiss researchers have uncovered a rare exchange of letters written in ancient Greek during the fifth century in what is now the Gaza Strip the University of Fribourg said. The discovery offers proof of a rich intellectual society in a region that is better known today for a bitter and bloody standoff between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, said one of the researchers, Professor Jacques Schamp. full article at the Daily Star
  12. When the infamous emperor Nero fell from power in 68 A.D., weakened by military revolts, his successors decided that no personal trace of his reign should remain. They covered with debris the giant and sumptuous Domus Aurea
  13. Book Review by Ursus Romulus, meaning "little Rome" is the eponymous ancestor of the Roman people. But who or what was his twin Remus? How did he come about and fit in the picture? The general gist of the story is that a female descendant of Aeneas copulates with the god Mars and twins are born as a result. Due to unfavorable political situations, the twins are sent away from home on a box that floats down the Tiber. The twins are rescued and nursed by a she-wolf, an animal sacred to Mars. The twins are then raised by a pastoral demi-god. When they mature they return home and reclaim their birthright by overthrowing a corrupt king. Then comes the time to found their own city. The Twins have a disagreement on which of the Seven Hills of the Tiber to found their first settlement. Remus and his followers, headquartered on the Aventine Hill, see six vultures and take it as an omen. However, Romulus and his followers take camp on the Palatine Hill and claim to see twelve vultures. Incensed, Remus crosses into palatine territory where either Romulus or one of his followers has him killed. Romulus goes on to be king and unites various tribes to form the nascent core of the Roman people. T. P. Wiseman claims a serious study of the myth has never been attempted before and seeks to correct the oversight in his latest book. Wiseman sets out to answer three basic questions: 1) Why must Romulus have a twin? 2) Why call him Remus, which is similar to a Latin word meaning "to delay" or "to be slow"? 3) Why have the twin killed off? Wiseman looks at the historical data and claims to find no evidence of a primordial Foundation Myth of divine twins. Archaic Rome, which had been subjected to the influences of Greek culture and Greek mythology from the beginning, produced a variety of colorful and contradictory folk epics in the Greek style regarding its origin. Unfortunately, so Wiseman claims, none of them can be connected to the infamous Romulus and Remus. Wiseman places the real origin of the myths around fourth century Before the Common Era. This would mean the "foundation myth" occurred not in Rome's Archaic monarchial past, as is usually assumed, but in the semi-historical early Republic. Indeed, according to Wiseman, the myth is a very product of Republican politics. According to the scholar, Romulus, or Little Rome, represents the Patrician party headquartered on the Palatine Hill. Remus, or the Slow One, represents the Plebians with their interest historically tethered to the Aventine Hill. Remus is the Slow One because the Plebians were impeded for centuries to share in the full powers of the Roman constitution. In one stroke Wiseman answers two of his three questions: who was Remus and how did he get his name? To Wiseman, Remus is the embodiment of the hopes and the angst of the Plebian half of the Roman people. Regarding the third question (why was Remus killed?) Wiseman descends into wild conjecture. It seems in the Good Old Days of paganism, human sacrifice was often conducted to consecrate important building projects such as the founding of a city's walls. Remus, to Wiseman, is a guilty memory of a savage past where some innocent Plebian would have been sacrificed to appease Rome's gods and secure the foundations of the new state. Wiseman claims the myth of the twins was developed and refined in the popular games and theatre of Republican Rome. He claims in the span of about twenty years, the two classes consciously invented their eponymous ancestors and the foundation myth took root. Wiseman reduces myth as the mere and deliberate fiction of class conflict. The above has been an extremely condensed summary of Wiseman's views. To better understand the logic of his theories, one would have to read all the minute details as the author tries to lead you from point A to points B and C. Unfortunately, many readers may find the sojourn difficult as Wiseman is rather wordy and writes with a grating, condescending style. Wiseman seems to see himself as the Great Prophet, come to annihilate all our False Ideas regarding the true origins of Rome. If Wiseman's writing style does not do much to sell his theories, his theories can also be questioned simply on their own merits. The reduction of myth as a product of competing socio-economic interests is an atavism, something that should have died with the fall of the Soviet Union. It is, in a word, Marxist drivel, an antiquated belief that the "superstructure" of society is but a projection of class exploitation. When reading Wiseman's treaties, I could almost hear "The International" playing in the background. The vast majority of Wiseman's theories are based on pure conjecture and cannot really be proven one way or another. A far better basis to studying Roman myth would be to place it in the comparative fold of various Indo-European cultures. where "Remus" has a linguistic history completely outside the scope of Wiseman's class struggle. Wiseman does mention this approach early in his book, but quickly and curiously dismisses it. I give the author high marks for imagination, but not much else. ...more Book Reviews! The Greek and Roman Myths Religion in the Roman Empire Venus: A Biography by A. Dalby Timothy Peter Wiseman FBA (born 3 February 1940), who usually publishes as T. P. Wiseman and is named as Peter Wiseman in other sources, is a classical scholar and professor emeritus of the University of Exeter. He has published numerous books and articles, primarily on the literature and the social and political history of the late Roman Republic, but also the mythography of early Rome and Roman theatre. Among Wiseman's students at Exeter was J.K. Rowling, about whose encounters with ancient authors he has written. Because of his connection with Rowling, Wiseman attracted brief pop-culture notoriety when media speculated that he was a model for the character of Albus Dumbledore in the Harry Potter series of books and movies. Tell us your opinion - Submit your Review - Buy the book! Book Review of Remus, a Roman Myth - Related Topic: Latin Language Bibliography Get it now! Remus : A Roman for the UK ________________________________ Archive
  14. Russian archaeologists have found the site of a 4,000-year-old concentric wooden structure resembling Britain's Stonehenge, the Art Newspaper reported Friday. Evidence of the structure was found near Ryazan southeast of Moscow at the confluence of the Oka and Pronya rivers. full article at Big News
  15. RESEARCHERS in the ancient Roman town of Pompeii are attempting to revive 2,000-year-old traditions to reproduce imperial cloth used to make togas and uniforms. The project follows successful production of Roman wine two years ago using methods that would have been employed in vineyards buried by a devastating eruption from Mount Vesuvius in AD79. Historians at the archaeology department in Pompeii are experimenting with wild broom as the base product to make the textiles. full article at the Scotsman
  16. The Shroud of Turin, the piece of linen long-believed to have been wrapped around Jesus' body after the crucifixion, is much older than radiocarbon tests suggest, according to new microchemical research. full article at ABC.net
  17. The Ningbo Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology announced this month that, after a 4-month excavation of 725 square meters, they have confirmed the discovery of a 7,000-year-old village of the early Hemudu culture. full article at Peoples Daily Online
  18. Researchers from the Copenhagen Museum in Denmark have traveled to the coasts of the Caspian Sea, northern Iran, in search of clues of relationships between Iranians and Vikings. A few years ago, a researcher from the Copenhagen Museum, Nadia Haupt, discovered more than one thousand coins and relics that did not belong to the Danish or other Scandinavian cultures, and therefore set to find out more about the historical roots of the Danish civilization. full article at Payvand
  19. A spa treatment followed by a trip to the suburbs for a bit of shopping and dining sounds like a day in the life of a wealthy suburbanite, but it also could describe someone's schedule from around the 1st century A.D., as archaeologists in Bath, England have identified an ancient suburb located outside of Bath's main city center. Since suburbs dating to the Roman period also have been found around other major cities, such as London, the finding adds to the evidence that suburban living is not a modern phenomenon. full article at Discovery
  20. Excited archaeologists are sifting through the contents of 150-year-old New Zealand toilets to get a better understanding of the everyday lives of early settlers. Although there is plenty of oral and written history, there are gaps which can only be answered by lifting the lid on the sanitary habits of pioneering families, they say. full article at IAfrica
  21. The research, which disputes images of ancient combat such as those seen in the Russell Crowe epic Gladiator, suggests that the fighters of yore would have far more in common with the overblown histrionics of modern-day premier league footballers or WWE wrestlers: highly trained, overpaid and pampered professionals with throngs of groupies - and an interest in not getting too badly injured. full article at the Scotsman
  22. When the infamous emperor Nero fell from power in A.D. 68, weakened by military revolts, his successors decided no personal trace of his reign should remain. They covered with debris the giant and sumptuous Domus Aurea -- the Golden House -- that he built on a hill in central Rome. They replaced an adjacent artificial lake with the Colosseum. full article at MSNBC
  23. A cool way to learn Latin is with this book Latin for Dummies
  24. I just like to mention that we put Tony Gees Review online now http://www.unrv.com/book-review/centurion.php thanks tony
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