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Pertinax

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Everything posted by Pertinax

  1. Fratres! Lovage-Ligusticum levisticum , native to the med but cultivated in Britain and the americas.The plant is used for root and rhizome, though the leaves were always used as a salad (with lettuce) , we know that phthalides are present and some coumarins. As a medicine it is a sedative, anti spasmodic and antimicrobial. Its 'everyday" use would be asa good mouthwash when suffering a throat infection ,ulceration or infected gums.Fortunately not an anaphrodisiac like Lettuce.In the past the stalks were eaten like celery. Ill have a look at Pliny and see what the great man tells us-and by the way Lovage was often used to flavour beer ( like cowslip herb-"Freya's key"). Though Yarrow displaced it in later Medieval times as a flavouring. There are several sub species-the American variety is used more as a cough medicine. Pantagathus do you have any American beers with these flavourings?
  2. Asafetida (also called Devil's Dung) is Ferula rubicaulis-what happened is that Silphium was lost in antiquity and Asafetida was "slotted in " to its position in the medieval herbal materia medica, but ( importantly) they have no actual relationship save they both (appear ) to be Umbillifers .Well done for spotting the connection , very few people even know of it! Please do post a Carthaginian recipe ,that would be a great excitement to our jaded Roman palates, and if you have any knowledge of dining manners and customs better still. Tamrapanni is a fragrant wood from Sri Lanka (Ceylon as was) Force fed animals of any type usually require a diet of quality ( poly/mono -unsaturated fat as opposed to saturates and the modern evil trans -fatty acids) fats and some bulk grain so this doesnt look inaccurate to me. Ahh! the herdsmen of Brutium , just like the Gauls! Meat all over their jowls nice link
  3. a recreation of a boat from the mud of the Ouse in Jorvik (as Eboracvm became)
  4. have you noticed that these icons re-create Brian's Mum and the Centurion? "oh hello centurion " (in a shreiky voice). "myrrh ? thats a type of dangerous animal!" weirdly we had the film on at work today-in a back room , and were unable to to actually function normally after watching the "Bigus Dicus " excerpt
  5. Yes very interesting stuff-my remark about the "wasteland" is qualified by this observation, the writers description was a social commentary- not one suggesting actual reduced numbers of persons on the land.Though if we have slave centred estates perhaps we will have the destuction of small villages and markets no longer required as distributive infrastructure.The concept of economy( as a full blown theoretical system of thought) was not extant-this is very true,I suggest that the concept of citizenship was paramount.
  6. I had to trim all pics to 800 by 600 to get the server to respond-thats abig shrink if you are using anything over 5mega pix.
  7. Towns and Power in Roman Britain looks like it will require purchasing
  8. This is the famous window above the main entrance to the Minster
  9. Pertinax

    Walmgate (2)

    To enter this gate in medieval times you would be funelled into the barbican "throat", passing under the portcullis ,through the main gates between the observation towers.Even the gentle modern slope up to the walls would need a ladder and an athletic outlook, so trying it carrying body armour on a wet day would have been no fun at all.
  10. Pertinax

    Walmgate

    Built by Edward II , extended by Edward III, Henry V and re built in Elizabethan times.Totally restored in 1959. The only gate to retain its barbican.The South Eastern Gate.

    © Pertinax &copy 2003-2006

  11. yes-dignified, full of grace, but slowed by infirmity, a subtle, sad but accurate evocation of the Republic
  12. Museums are very strange-things should be available to everyone-in every sense.
  13. Pertinax

    Imgp0083.jpg

    That does look very Bacony! I actually thought it was an original I hadnt seen! nice work.
  14. The Lord Mayors House-also the site of the Praetorian Gate, another Georgian gem
  15. Pertinax

    Georgian House

    York also has some later buildings of great beauty, here is a Georgian property opposite the Minster.

    © Pertinax &copy 2003-2006

  16. Pertinax

    Castle Inner Court

    Well thank you very much!
  17. Caesarion just screened-Titus Pullo really is a good man in a scrap and Caesars eunuch insults were excellent.
  18. What Western liberals find offensive is quite weird -my Kendo teacher ( from Kawaguchi in Japan, a person of the most austere habit and moral rectitude ) thought the funniest thing he and his family had ever seen was the utterly non-pc comedian Benny Hill performing as Mr Yuu Ficky ( you thicky if not obvious) a sort of Chinese Les Patterson (sorry Sir Les!) with similar teeth and a very bad way with Ingwish Ranguige.He returned to Japan with an armful of video tapes.
  19. these North-Men appear to be in a swine array to me-tough guys with the axes as assault troops-swordsmen to follow up. This is said to be a celebratory carving after a particularly good raid on Lindisfarne.I suppose this would be the equivalent of an air mobile assault on a very wealthy Middle Eastern safe deposit vault.
  20. a column reassembled in situ on the site of the fortress
  21. Carl Jung wrote some useful observations about Mithras ( I think its in 'Aion" from his collected works), mainly about the seriousness of the initiation process and "death and re-birth" as an acted ceremony.
  22. We have various travellers descriptions of the heart of a prosperous Empire as a "wasteland", meaning the abscence of true free farming citizens,just " factories" .The comfortable Roman had a strikingly similar bucolic ideal to an English Gent of the late Victorian/Edwardian period ( and a lot of contemporary Upper Middle Class Britons) ie: a cosmopolitan home in town but a country seat or retreat ideally feeding yourself with the produce.In many ways this illustrates the divorce of the wealthy citizen from the land , but shows a superficial desire to return to the "Republican" sentiment. Andrew Dalby's "Empire of Pleasures" is very good on this subject The fashion for holding dinner parties in the fruit store of ones country estate was a notable "back to rusticity" posing of the Imperial fast set-even to the point of buying the fruit in for display! (Pliny) I would personally suggest that the latifundia was the real seismic shift away from Republicanism toward the mindset of Imperium. Pliny discourses at great length as to how noble the husbandry of land is and what a central moral item it is to justly rewarded soldiery.(excerpts from The Natural History). Favonius Cornelius is, I think, most apposite in his remarks
  23. I enjoy anything so painfully and viciously un-pc. "Your whiskers are very beautiful no?"
  24. strong at the Winter Solstice! In the land of the Pictii chimney cross beams were built of this to protect against Evil Spirits. Forerunner of the Xmas tree. Thor was saved by a female Rowan Tree sprite bending her bows to help him escape a flood. Rowan to all you Wicker man Fans-so she loves the March Hares. Sacred to the Greeks and the Druids ( in particular for making beer).
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