Free Republic 4th Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $11,664
14%  
Woo hoo!! And our first 14% is in!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: caesaraugustus

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Villa near Mount Vesuvius may be where Augustus, Rome's 1st emperor, died

    05/05/2024 7:55:53 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 17 replies
    Live Science ^ | April 30, 2024 | Tom Metcalfe
    The ruins of a Roman villa near Mount Vesuvius, discovered under the remnants of another villa built above it many years later, may have been where Augustus, the first Roman emperor, drew his last breath, archaeologists say.The earlier villa, which excavations suggest was inhabited before the first century A.D., seems to have been destroyed in the devastating eruption of Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79, and the later villa was built there in the second century...She noted that the site corresponds with writings by the Roman historians Tacitus, Suetonius and Cassius Dio, who recorded that Augustus died in A.D. 14 at...
  • Letter from Vesuvius: Digging on the Dark Side of the Volcano [Augustus' villa]

    09/21/2023 8:45:45 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 7 replies
    Archaeology mag ^ | September/October 2023 | Jason Urbanus
    The north slope of Mount Vesuvius has largely been ignored archaeologically compared to its other sides, where the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum were once located. Recent work there has shown that it was no less important than these other sites during the Roman era. Having reached his mid-seventies, Rome's first emperor, Caesar Augustus, lived out his final days in a villa near the base of Mount Vesuvius. While traveling in the Bay of Naples, he fell ill and detoured to the ancestral home of his biological father's family, the Octavii, near the city of Nola. In A.D. 14, at...
  • Joseph Farah Examines "The Forced March to Bethlehem"

    12/23/2004 4:07:25 AM PST · by Theodore R. · 8 replies · 626+ views
    WND.com ^ | 12-23-04 | Farah, Joseph
    The forced march to Bethlehem Posted: December 23, 2004 1:00 a.m. Eastern © 2004 WorldNetDaily.com Some people may interpret this column as shameless politicization of the Christmas story. I think of it as an effort to de-politicize a beautiful and important truth distorted by the prism of modernity. When I listen to certain unnamed, misguided humanist prophets use the story of Joseph, Mary and Jesus, it is often used as a segue into their phony compassion for the "homeless." You've heard them. They tell us, with a straight face, that Joseph and Mary were poor, homeless people. I've even seen...