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Ludovicus

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Posts posted by Ludovicus

  1. Thanks for the link Ludovicus! I'm looking forward to the podcasts. I have to agree with you that I also side with Bryan Ward-Perkins and Peter Heather on the fall of the Roman empire, even though that view may not be in vogue with many academics these days. I just can't seem to see the continuity between Roman and Post-Roman europe, especially in places like Britain, where there is considerable change and not continuity.

    Hogarty, author of the podcast series, states flatly that the collapse in Britain was much more serious than on the Continent. What I found interesting was Hogarty's tracing of the long history of relationships between the Romans and the barbarians near the frontier.

  2.  

    Salve, M

     

    The three inscriptions were discovered at the Colosseum in the XVI century, but CIL 06, 32094 a has since been lost; nevertheless, its transcription survives as follows:

     

    Venanti / v(iri) c(larissimi) / co(n)s(ulis) / Decius Marius Ve/nantius Basilius / v(ir) c(larissimus) et inl(ustris) praefectus / urbi patricius cons(ul) / ordinarius arenam / et podium quae abomi/nandi terrae motus / ruina prostra/vit sumptu proprio restituit

     

    As you can see, its heading phrase (ie. "From the distinguished Lord Venantius", highlighted above) is lacking from the other two copies (b and c)

     

    Both spacing and abbreviations are peculiar to each copy.

    Very interesting, thank you.

    Reviewing this old post I see that I never thanked you for the transcription. Thanks indeed!

  3. The first seven episodes of this Joseph Hogarty podcast/slide show series contains very interesting commentary and rarely seen (for me, at least) art work on the transformation of the Western and Eastern Roman Empires during late antiquity.

    http://www.ahistoryofeurope.eu/A_History_of_Europe/A_History_of_Europe.html

     

    The emphasis here is on transformation rather than fall of the West. I'm generally of the fall position alla Ward Perkins, but Hogarty provides some good evidence and visuals for something more gradual, especially in Gaul and Hispania.

     

     

  4. I was going to say just call him Macrinus, although that may cause some confusion with the Emperor of the same name. Perhaps you could use his full name once, and then just use the cognomen for the rest of the lecture?

    Decimus,

     Thanks! The more I read accounts of the tomb in the Italian press the more I realize that he's called Macrinus after a first reference to his entire name, just as in your suggestion.

  5. The tomb of Marcus Nonius Marcrinus was discovered about two years ago along the Tiber. The find was spectacular owing to the high rank of this individual, a confidant of Marcus Aurelius. Unfortuately, the Italian government lacks the funds to adequately excavate and secure the site for the enjoyment of future generations. If no funds are forthcoming, the most interesting site in Rome in decades will have to be reburied. I think that here we've all been aware of the loss of precious sites in Pompeii for lack of proper upkeep, e. g. the House of the Gladiators. The Uffizzi lost some of its ceiling frescoes just last week.

     

    I'm looking for statistics and budget figures that reveal the lack of funding for the maintenance and development of Italy's cultural and archaeological sites. Perhaps, it not just a lack of funding, but the way cultural sites are viewed in general by the Italian government. No doubt, the current austerity measures directed at the economic crisis have played a role, as well.

     

     

  6. I'm doing a presentation on the recently discovered tomb of Marcus Nonius Macrinus, confidant of Emperor Marcus Aurelius (and inspiration for the movie The Gladiator). How do I refer to the occupant of the tomb? M. Nonius Macrinus, M. Nonius, M.?

    It's quite a long name. Any suggestions?

  7. The government-backed institute has recently finished analysing components of the glass beads, measuring five millimetres (0.2 inches) in diametre, with tiny fragments of gilt attached.

     

    It found that the light yellow beads were made with natron, a chemical used to melt glass by craftsmen in the empire, which succeeded the Roman Republic in 27 BC and was ultimately ended by the Fall of Constantinople in 1453.

     

     

    For the full story:

     

    http://news.ninemsn....aspx?id=8488215

  8. The financial industry, in securitizing (making stocks out of) debt, produces nothing except huge profits for those willing to gamble. And they have even riskier games than most people can begin to understand. Then, when the banks lose their shirts in the Casino of Risky Financial Instruments, as in 2008, the public is made to bail them out. At least the robber barons of the 19th Century, corrupt and ruthless as they were, created great wealth for the country: railroads, industries, commerce, innovations, and infrastructure. This new bunch of 21st Century capitalists are endangering capitalism as a productive system. I, for one, would like to see enough regulations to prevent another 2008 bank rescue.

  9. Income inequality has been a feature of our US society from the beginning. It would be utopian in the extreme and even harmful to eliminate it. Greater productivity should receive greater compensation.

    The phenonom that we see developing now in the US is extreme income inequality. Those receiving the greater compensation--bankers and investment managers--are the very ones destroying wealth, yet their salaries and bonus are sacrosanct.

  10. In a series of studies, Ian Moyer explores the ancient history and modern historiography of relations between Egypt and Greece from the fifth century bce to the early Roman empire. Beginning with Herodotus, he analyzes key encounters between Greeks and Egyptian priests, the bearers of Egypt's ancient traditions. Four moments unfold as rich micro-histories of cross-cultural interaction: Herodotus

  11. Far from the cliches of warmongering hunter-gatherers with winged helmets, the show reveals them to be sophisticated farmers, craftsmen and traders. ''The Gauls didn't wait for the Romans or Greeks to civilise them,'' said archaeologist Francois Malrain, one of the show's curators. ''They lived in a refined society

  12. 1320956366[/url]' post='118202']

    You know what else is doing a good job of recreating Constantinople, Assassins Creed Revelations. If you watch their newest trailer, they have a segment where you're running through the ruins of the old Hippodrome before it was turned into a park.

     

    Do you have a link?

     

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