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Princeps

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Posts posted by Princeps

  1. Me (formerly Trajan) and Longbow are also around the area. I'd give it some thought, it would depend on a fair few variables.

     

    I would love to see some of Neil's stuff. I was a very enthusiastic modeller (small link below my signiatue image), I am just getting back into the modelling game (paintnig is the main aim, but modelling is nice also).

  2. Could you imagine the likes of Terry butcher and Graeme souness rolling around like todays players do? ;) LOL.

     

    I really don't like Souness at all. No, infact I didn't like him before he became Newcastle boss. I really dislike him now. And he was a right **** as a player too, I'm suprised he didn't end a few careers along the way.

  3. Quite amusing football clip. It's a team practice.

     

    http://gprime.net/video.php/soccerpractice

     

    Well from tomorrow the real world cup begins when the elimination round starts.

     

    Here's my predictions:

     

    Round 16 winners - Germany, Argentina, Italy, Switzerland, England, Netherlands, Brazil, Spain.

     

    QuarterFinals winners - Argentina, Italy, Netherlands, Brazil.

     

    SemiFinals winners - Argentina, Brazil

     

    Finals winner - I don't know, but I'll go with Argentina, thats my team.

     

    I'de like to hear your predictions?

     

    I think England have a chance against Portugal now that they have a couple of players out.

  4. ...

    Reading this I was reminded how stirrups were still not invented yet. I have to wonder exactly how heavy cavalry worked in antiquity when you had to use interlocking straps of some sort, then add the armor and the armor for the horse...

     

    I wish I could remember where I had read this, but I recall an article on cavalry in general and comments on saddles in the Roman-Parthian world. Someone had recreated a version of what it may have been like and found it to be a surprisingly stable platform for a rider enabling them to engage in things like archery, lancing, etc.

     

    There have been a few experiments. I mentioned one of them in this thread

     

    http://www.unrv.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=2867&hl=saddle

  5. Thomas Paine wrote Common Sense, and neither Paine, nor Einstein, nor Oppenheimer, nor Ford, nor Stephenson, nor Jesus were political leaders like the OP asks for.

     

    Sorry, I don't know what OP means, but the question asks for historical leaders, which could include industrial leaders. Besides which, Paine was definately political, as was Jesus.

  6. FLavius Valerius Constantinus - I think the difference between Fermi and Gutenberg can kind of be explained by Primus Pilus' theory (above this post).

     

    Others for the list-

     

    Jesus

    Openheimer

    Einstein

    Henry Ford

    George Stephenson

    The Guy that wrote "common sense" (can't remember his name, no time to google atm)

    Marconi

  7. there is a novelist called allan massie who has wrote a book on caligula, it paints him in a different light than the usual "madman" one, he has also written books on caesar, augustus and tiberius, they are all very interesting books and stick very closely to the truth

     

    maximus

     

    I read Massie's "Caligula". It was quite good, overall. One thing that I did not like was the frequent utterance by the novel's main character (Lucius, the narrator), "What could I say to that?" or "How could I reply to that?" This suggested a lack of imagination, not on the part of Lucius, but the novel's author. Still, an ok book, but I don't think we should rely on his opinion of Caligula, I think he got him all wrong.

  8. I like it. They're currently showing it on sky3 in the UK. Ian McShane is awesome. Unfortunately I missed last week's episode, I tuned in this week to discover that Wild Bill Hicock had been shot down! How did that happen Germanicus? Surely not in a straight up duel.

  9. Fortune sometimes breaks off completely, sometimes merely delays, the execution of mens plans.

    --Velleius Paterculus

     

    The most common beginning of disaster was a sense of security.

    --Velleius Paterculus

     

    What is truth?

    --Pontius Pilate

     

    A man must be either frugal, or Caesar.

    --Caligula

     

    The man was a teacher of a peculiar sect of his own, and was not like the rest of their leaders.

    --Josephus

  10. I can't find any of the Rome stuff, are you sure it's the correct link?

     

    Oh, ok. From this one bit on Rome, I agree with Primus Pilus. In fact I'd go further, and say it's blatantly false.

     

    Rome would continue to grow, and in time it would come to absorb the classical Greek civilization as well. Rome too, would establish a great civilization with many great kings. One king of particular note is Constantine (271-337 A.D.), though not the greatest of the Roman kings, Constantine would have to be considered the most influential - His conversion to Christianity, facilitated the creation of the largest religious institution the world has ever known - the Holy Roman Catholic Church.

     

    The people of the Eurasian plains would not stop here, they continued their outward migration until they had populated all of Europe, the middle-east, India, and the Americas. Over time, great civilizations would spring-up in each place that they settled. In Europe it is assumed that they cross-bred with, and absorbed, the Cro-Magnon Humanoids who still existed there.

     

    One great mystery of Europe is Stone Henge in Britain. Did the European Cro-Magnon evolve to the point where he could build monumental structures - that seems unlikely. Or did people from one of the original Mediterranean countries, or even Egypt build it?

  11. It's not on the bbc or anything yet, so there is no link for you guys, I'll have to just quote the article (from my trusty 'metro' free paper).

     

    "A bronze and silver brooch decorated with a picture of Mars, the God of war, was shown off yesterday after being found at the Vindolanda Roman fort on Hadrian's wall...it belonged to a Roman soldier called Quintus Sollonius"

     

    Looks very nice. ABout the size of a

  12. I love both Braveheart and Gladiator. True, neither is astonishingly accurate, but they're both still excellent. Both still manage to bring a tear to my eye in the end, if I'm in the right mood. That's saying a lot, considering my world weary, jaded outlook on life these days :)

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