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Viggen

Triumviri
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Posts posted by Viggen

  1. Archaeologists will have a greater understanding of the lives of the people who built great ritual monuments such as Stonehenge following excavations at one of Scotland's largest rural settlements.

    A dig at a new housing development in Dreghorn, Ayrshire, has revealed major medieval remains and Neolithic features including the site of a ceremonial pole, houses and a pottery kiln.

     

    full article at the Herald

  2. Could anyone share with me about the different Herods of Rome, and a brief history of each. And what did Jesus Christ mean when He called Herod 'The Fox.'

     

    Hello Ladydonna and welcome to UNRV.com :)

     

    I don't know much about the Herods myself, so i searched a bit for you and found some pages, I am not sure about their quality, but here they are anyway. :)

     

    http://www.imt.net/~gedison/herod.html

    http://www.cresourcei.org/herodrule.html

    http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07289c.htm

    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/sh...trait/jews.html

     

    and here are some Books

     

    About the Fox;

    The Pharisees had warned Jesus that if He remained in Herod

  3. High in the Altai mountains of southern Siberia, where Shamans still practise their ancient rites and most people are descended from Asiatic nomads, there is a whiff of revolt in the air. Local officials, urged on by the increasingly militant electorate, are collecting signatures, writing petitions and demanding audiences with regional political leaders.

     

    Their demands are simple and have nothing to do with the inept rule, poverty, corruption and ecological disasters dogging the region. They want a 2,500-year-old mummy, found by Russian archaeologists 11 years ago and being studied in the Siberian capital of Novosibirsk, to be reinterred without delay.

     

    full article at the Telegraph

  4. Scholars who believe the Kensington Runestone is a 19th-century prank -- and not concrete evidence that Norsemen beat Columbus to America by 100-plus years -- say they have found the smoking gun to prove it.

     

    The latest in the century-old controversy centered in Minnesota came in documents written in 1885 by an 18-year-old Swedish tailor named Edward Larsson. He sometimes wrote in runes -- an ancient Scandinavian language that differs from the English alphabet. But Larsson's runes were not the usual runes used over the centuries.

     

    full article at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer

  5. The epic romance between Egyptian queen Cleopatra and the Roman general Marc Antony was immortalized on a Roman vase that is now housed at the British Museum, according to an expert in classical art.

     

    Susan Walker, former deputy keeper of Greek and Roman antiquities at the British Museum who is now the head of a similar department at the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, believes the Portland Vase shows Cleopatra seducing Antony, while cupid and Anton, the son of Greek mythological hero Hercules, look on. Marc Antony's family claimed they had descended from Anton.

     

    via Discovery

  6. Here are all the books we listed in the second week of April;

     

    First Man in Rome by Colleen McCullough

    Imperial Governor: The Great Novel of Boudicca's Revolt by George Shipway

    Ancestor Masks and Aristocratic Power in Roman Culture by Harriet I. Flower

    Caesar's Legion: The Epic Saga of Julius Caesar's Elite Tenth Legion and the Armies of Rome by Stephen Dando Collins

    The World of Rome : An Introduction to Roman Culture by Peter V. Jones, Keith C. Sidwell

    I, Claudius by Robert Graves

    Roman Remains of Southern France: A Guide Book by James Bromwich

     

    feel free to comment or discuss any of those books listed above, has anoyne read one of those already?

     

    cheers

    viggen

  7. Researchers investigating Italian cemeteries have found further evidence to confirm that syphilis and rheumatoid arthritis plagued the Americas long before the arrival of Columbus.

     

    Involving various sites throughout Italy, the study examined 688 skeletons dating from the Bronze Age to the Black Plague epidemic of 1485-1486. The remains were investigated for the presence of bony alterations characteristic of rheumatoid arthritis, gout, spondyloarthropathy and syphilis-causing organisms, called treponemes.

     

    via Discovery

  8. An interesting story about Dr. Robort Cohon and his journey to find out the truth about a 7 inches tall barbarian statue.

     

    The nude figure had muscular legs and a cape. It held one hand high, the other low, as if carrying a shield and a weapon. The dark bronze surface was mottled with tiny patches of red and green patinas. With its twisted posture, the look on its face and a bandaged leg, the barbarian appeared wounded and in pain. To someone steeped in the art of ancient cultures, this small bronze statue of a warrior was quite a prize. Its presence at the museum helped Cohon decide to take a job as the Nelson's curator of antiquities. Yet, within a couple of years, his elation turned to doubt amid questions about the figure's authenticity. Could it really be 2,000 years old? Or was it of more recent vintage - from the Renaissance, say, or even a forgery?

     

     

    full article at Kansas.com

     

    The statue can be seen here

  9. The authenticity of the recently discovered 11th century King Samuil landmark was proven. Eminent Bulgarian scientists executed several tests that proved that the landmark was genuine. It was revealed that the signature that read "Samuil autocrat of Bulgaria" was not engraved at once. More tests will be made to disclose the exact date of the archaeological find.

     

    The victorious warrior Samuil who then became Bulgarian king was born in today's Macedonia. That gave reason for contentions that the Samuil state was Macedonian. Some experts say that the new find will disprove all these claims.

     

    via novinite

  10. The ancient split between the English and Scots is older than previously thought, an Oxford don said today. Traditionally the difference between the English and Scots, Welsh, Irish and Cornish was attributed to the foreign influence of invading forces such as the Anglo-Saxons, Celts and Vikings settling in different areas of Britain hundreds of years ago. But Professor Stephen Oppenheimer of Oxford University, believes the difference originates much further back in history. In a book tracing humankind from its origins in Africa 80,000 years ago, Prof Oppenheimer develops a theory of the original inhabitants of Britain.

     

    full article at the Scotsman.com

  11. Something came up, and i only could go yesterday.

     

    I must say it just shows that you have to see it for yourself to judge properly film critic mean almost nothing.

     

    I neither passed out or found it an orgie of violence nor did i find any suggestion of anti semitic portrayal, to be honest i "enjoyed" (not sure if this is the correct word) watching it, it was a special movie and the speaking of aramaic and latin gave it a much more authentic touch. The torture was at times really heavy and nothing for the faint hearted. The only critizism i have is that Pilatus was not portrayed correctly, i believe he would have never made such a fuss about trying to defend him, but that's just my opinion.

     

    Overall, it is not your regular movie, but worth while watching, time went by very quick and it makes you think....

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