Posted on 01/26/2004 12:59:55 PM PST by nickcarraway
SHARONVILLE - Nearly 2000 years ago a young Roman soldier wrote home, asking his father's permission to marry his girlfriend.
In another letter, he asks for boots and socks to keep his feet warm during a cold winter. And he tells how he must violently put down those who revolt and riot in Alexandria.
All this - and more - about life for Tiberianus, who lived in Roman Egypt, is being advanced through the work of a Princeton High School graduate now attending the University of Michigan.
Last fall, Robert Stephan (Class of 2001) found some papyri - ancient writings on papyrus, made from the reed plant - stored but forgotten in the university's vault. The papyri had been collected during UM excavations at Karanius, southwest of Egypt's Nile River delta, in the 1920s and '30s.
Unbeknown to today's scholars, 15 papyri collected from the original excavation had been catalogued by the university but never examined or translated. The works may never have been discovered had Stephan not begun an independent study project last fall.
Many archaeologistscall his discovery a breakthrough.
"The significance of this is that the world (did not) know that these existed,'' said Arthur Verhoogt, a UM assistant professor of papyrology and Greek. "It's an important contribution to our understanding of the Roman Empire at large.''
Stephan is spending much of his free time working with professors to translate the papyri and put the writings in context with other archaeological findings. His work will be published next year in Bulletin of the American Society of Papyrologists. Stephan also is putting together an exhibit of papyri and artifacts from Karanius for the university's museum in October.
"This is a revision of what we know,'' said Traianos Gagos, president of the American Society of Papyrologists.
"This collection of fragments is hard to read - private letters are the hardest to translate because there's not much background. The approach Rob has taken is broader. He's bringing the archaeologist into it - the way it should be studied.''
The work, Stephan said, is fascinating and unusual for an undergraduate to be doing.
"I'm trying to find out what life was like for the average Joe of this society," Stephan said. "I want to find the guy's social status and what his life was like.''
Similarly, though far less officially, the Chinese 120-round magazine for the m16 rifle, is known in some circles as the *CXX* drum....
A grunt's life has changed little in two millenium...
Prospice tibi; ut Gallia, tu quoque in tres partes dividaris.
They did the same thing to Constantinople. The boys didn't mess around in the old days!
"arch" is listed under "rogue" in my Oxford Dictionary. *g*
Ah, not a Viking, but a Valkyrie, one of those who come to the fallen heroes and fly them to Valhalla's Great Hall of Heroes.
Such a flight would of course be nothing terribly new or special for CPT Hampton, of course. Perhaps, as her legend fades and her time with the others comes to an end, she'll be reassigned to such duties herself. Or maybe she'll be one of the Eight Hundred greatest of all time, who'll fight the final fight together: Ragnarok.
The Aesir family of Gods were the chief gods of Norse Mythology...Odin, king of the gods. His two black ravens, Huginn (Thought) and Muninn (Memory), flew forth daily to gather tidings of events all over the world. As god of war, Odin held court in Valhalla, where all brave warriors went after death in battle. His greatest treasures were his eight-footed steed, Sleipner, his spear, Gungnir, and his ring, Draupner. Odin was also the god of wisdom, poetry, and magic, and he sacrificed an eye for the privilege of drinking from Mimir, the fountain of wisdom. Odin's three wives were earth goddesses, and his eldest son was Thor, the god of Thunder. Odin was worshipped under different names, throughout northern Europe. The Germans called him Wotan, and the English Woden. Thor, the god of thunder, eldest son of Odin and Jord, the earth goddess. Thor was the strongest of the Aesir, whom he helped protect from their enemies, the giants. Thunder was believed to be the sound of his rolling chariot. Also, thursday is named for Thor (Thor's day). Named after the Germanic word for thunder, Thor wielded a hammer, called Mjollnir, which represented a powerful thunderbolt. If thrown, the hammer would return to him like a boomerang.
The Valkyries, were warrior maidens who attended Odin, ruler of the gods. The Valkyries rode through the air in brilliant armor, directed battles, distributed death lots among the warriors, and conducted the souls of slain heroes to Valhalla, the great hall of Odin. Their leader was Brunhild. Freya or Freyja, goddess of love, fertility, and beauty, sometimes identified as the goddess of battle and death. Her father was Njord, a fertility god. Blond, blue-eyed, and beautiful, Freya traveled on a golden-bristled boar or in a chariot drawn by cats. She resided in the celestial realm of Folkvang, where it was her privilege to receive half of all the warriors slain in battle; the god Odin received the other half at Valhalla. In Germany, Freya was sometimes identified with Frigg, the wife of Odin. Friday originates from Frigga's day.
Maybe.............but he would have been very popular.
And people wonder why Rome fell!
I still remember when Princeton was a University! Boy, I must be getting old! ;^)
Shucks, I remember Princeton [Indiana] as the home of the Southern Railroad's shops and Roundhouse. The scrap pile there was the grandest playground a kid could ask for; amothing other things, the Southern RRs famous Engine #97, fabled in poem and song, was retired and scrapped out there.
What do you figure those fellas are, motor-rifles? [Well, motor-pilum....]
I though Marcus Aurelius disbanded them anyhow. Maybe this was why.
:-D
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