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Tuesday, August 26, 2003 Roman Lioness of Severan Period to be featured in new Cramond Interpretative Center ( 11:39 AM ) Libitina A white sandstone lioness statue unearthed by ferryman Robert Graham in the mud of the River Almond in 1997 is expected to form the centrepiece of a new £2 million interpretative center planned for Cramond, Scotland. Plans have also be proposed to restore the 1800-year-old Roman fort near Cramond Kirk and the nearby bath house.
Herbert Coutts, city director of culture and leisure, said it was one of only three permanent sites known to be associated with the Severan conquest of Scotland. The fort also played a crucial role in supplying provisions to other Roman garrisons, said Mr Coutts, while Mesolithic remains at the site were also significant. 'The post-Roman and early medieval remains are scant, but are also of national importance and high significance, not least due to the gap in knowledge about the use of the fort site following the departure of the Romans.' " # posted by Libitina mharrsch@uoregon.edu on 11:39 AM | link
Submerged Ancient Port of Agrigento Discovered
( 11:26 AM ) Libitina
Roman Legionary's Exam Certificate Unearthed in Norfolk
( 9:39 AM ) Libitina
Did Boudicca's Army Desecrate the Graves of the Vanquished in Londonium?
( 9:36 AM ) Libitina
Monday, August 25, 2003 Despised Tomb May Be Burial Chamber of Biblical Prophets ( 9:10 AM ) Libitina "For centuries passers-by have thrown rocks at an ornate tomb in Jerusalem's Kidron Valley, reviled as the traditional burial place of the biblical King David's villainous son Absalom.
But in one of those strange twists unique to the Holy Land -- where tombs can post-date by a millennium those believed buried there -- an inscription found on the crypt now points to it belonging not to Absalom but rather John the Baptist's father, Zacharias, and maybe even James, who some Christians regard as the brother of Jesus." # posted by Libitina mharrsch@uoregon.edu on 9:10 AM | link
Friday, August 22, 2003 Hadrian and wife statues unearthed at Sagalassos ( 1:23 PM ) Libitina A team of Belgian archaeologists from Leuven University uncovered a second-century fountain and five-metre statues of the Emperor Hadrian and his wife Sabina. Director Marc Waelkens explains, "We are now exposing the monumental city center and have completed, or nearly completed, four major restoration projects there. We've also undertaken an intensive urban and geophysical survey, excavations in the domestic and industrial areas, and an intensive survey of its vast territory. Whereas the former document a thousand years of occupation, from Alexander the Great to the seventh century, the latter has established the changing settlement patterns, the vegetation history and farming practices, the landscape formation and climatic changes during the last 10,000 years." # posted by Libitina mharrsch@uoregon.edu on 1:23 PM | link
Monday, August 18, 2003 2nd Century Etruscan Family Tomb in Perugia Dazzles Visitors ( 11:32 AM ) Libitina "Discovered entirely by accident in 1840 during road construction, the hypogeum in Perugia (2nd century BC), is the biggest of the 38 graves found in the surrounding Palazzone burial ground.
"A steep flight of stairs leeds to the travertine doorway, still intact, which bears a vertical three line inscription related to the construction of the tomb, owned by the Etruscan Velimna family. The layout of the rooms around the atrium is the same as in Etruscan and Roman houses, with the difference that what appear to be wooden beams supporting the roof are in fact the ceiling that has been carved out of sheer rock." "...The urn containing the remains of the head of the family, Arnth Velimna, stands at the centre on a base. The base is decorated with two winged female demons, or “vanth”, that were precursors of genii in the Roman pantheon and have similarities with what came to be known as angels for Christians. They guard the painted entrance to the Empire of Death." # posted by Libitina mharrsch@uoregon.edu on 11:32 AM | link
Thursday, August 14, 2003 Roman port from Hannibalic War revealed in Pozzuoli ( 3:52 PM ) Libitina "Excavators at Pompeii, entombed in ash and toxic debris by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79, were able to remove the volcanic material and expose the city to the open air.
But in Pozzuoli, whose beauty was such that the great Roman orator Cicero called it 'little Rome,' the ancient streets were encased in the foundations of a new city built by the Spanish in the 1500s, when they ruled what was then the Kingdom of Naples." After 10 years of excavation, the Roman city originally constructed as a seaport during the Hannibalic War (Second Punic War) has emerged. Visitors may see "well-preserved warren of Roman streets, paved with huge stones and lined with little shops, inns and houses." "Small private altars are visible in the corners of some of the shops and there are also ancient flour mills, deep wells, vaulted storage rooms and stone heads that used to be fountains." "A vast, white marble temple from the first century BC stands there, with well-preserved colonnades and walls. It also features gilded arches, a white and gold dome and fragments of religious frescoes -- the remains of a Baroque church which the Spanish built using the ancient structure." # posted by Libitina mharrsch@uoregon.edu on 3:52 PM | link
Friday, August 08, 2003 Efforts Mount to Save 1st century Venus statue ( 2:35 PM ) Libitina "The British Government has placed a temporary export ban on a Roman statue of Venus in the hope that it can be bought for the nation. The marble statue, described as being of "outstanding significance", has been dated to circa late 1st/mid-2nd Century AD and is a Roman copy of a Hellenistic original of 2nd Century BC. Known as Jenkins Venus, the statue, originally bought in Rome in 1765 , was resold at auction earlier in the year by an anonymous foreign buyer for a record £7.9m to pay for the refurbushiment of Newby Hall in North Yorkshire .
# posted by Libitina mharrsch@uoregon.edu on 2:35 PM | link
Ancient Women Used Dung, Grease as Makeup
( 2:26 PM ) Libitina
Caligula's Roman palace discovered
( 2:14 PM ) Libitina
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