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Fulvia

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Posts posted by Fulvia

  1. Thank you very much for those links- I'll have lots of fun searching them out. :thumbsup:

     

    May I ask where you are from? If you are interested (And can read Swedish) I wrote and essay on Roman baths from a technological point of view which was very fruitful. It's published at Xerxes (Lund).

     

    I'm from Canada and can't read Swedish, unfortunately. But I'd be very interested if you were willing to summarize it!

     

    I did my own paper on the baths as a Romanizing agent in Judaea at the time of Herod the Great. I am still but an undergrad in many subject areas of Rome and I have to admit that I was quite betaken by the significant exchanges of ideas and technology that passed between the Herodians and the Augustan circle and very significantly in the direct importation of Roman baths.

  2. Much better, Fulvia -- thanks!

     

    You are a freedwoman of Rome, formerly a Greek slave in the household of Lucius Anthestius Germanus, a wealthy equestrian in the palm and olive business.

     

    You used to work for your master pressing olives into oil (a skill you had learned in your homeland of Greece). Upon obtaining your freedom, you took your former master's nomen gentilicium (in the feminine form) as was customary, thus giving you the Roman name of "Anthestia". You kept your original Greek name of "Thespeia" (meaning "inspired by the gods") as your cognomen (also, as was customary).

     

    Your full Roman name is:

     

    Anthestia Thespeia

    = shewapiethtnetams -wm +ia

     

    Welcome to UNRV!

     

    -- Nephele

     

    Awesome! Not exactly noble, but fun! Thanks for the official welcome. :D

  3. Same to that. I had a friend give them to me to read, and out of friendship to him I managed to suffer through most of the first two books. His style is decent but it quickly got to the point where he was no longer writing about thee C. Iulius Caesar but some guy with the same name. I have my flexibility with historical fiction, but Iggulden did not even try to get anything accurate and that ruined the books so thoroughly that I was ranting to anyone who would listen (aka my poor roommates) for 10 minutes for every 3 pages. Not worth the effort. The one thing I have to give Iggulden's books, however, is that they have cool covers. But I doubt the author had much say in that.

  4. I read Rubicon last year and absolutely loved it. Holland's style was easy to read but didn't sacrifice scholarly seriousness. I found that he put it just enough "fun facts" to keep interest always at a high without getting carried away on a did- you- know rabbit trail. I was quite engaged throughout the whole reading and learned quite a bit of things that no doubt would have slipped by me. The book certainly put Holland into my growing retinue of scholars to pay attention to.

  5. I just completed a course this last semester on Roman baths and bathing and was quite enlightened to this area of Roman life. I was wondering if anyone had some good on-line resources I could use to lull my curiosity on the subject, or wanted to discuss?

  6. I am trying to find information on a city that was quite Hellenized in Israel just up the way from Nazareth. The name of the city is Sophoras (or Sophorus, or something of the like. I don't know the exact spelling). I've done some preliminary research and haven't been able to find too much on it. I am away from my university resources which is really frustrating me but if anyone knows anything about this city or where I could find something, the information would be very welcomed. Thanks!

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