• Contacting the rogueclassicist …

Greece Pondering Buying the Marbles Back!

By rogueclassicist on | 1 Comment

The salient bits from a very interesting AFP item:

Greece’s Bavarian-born King Otto considered offering Britain cash or antiquities in the 19th century in exchange for marbles removed from the Acropolis, previously unpublished historical files have shown.

“There is a document to the foreign ministry, subsequently forwarded to Otto’s minister in London, with instructions on how to request the marbles back,” Acropolis Museum director Demetrios Pantermalis told a conference on Monday.

“There was a discussion on what should be offered in exchange, and the throne asked how much the marbles would cost on the European art market, possibly with the notion of purchasing them,” Pantermalis said, according to the semi-state Athens News Agency.

The talks involved the return of architectural elements from the Parthenon and Athena Nike temples dedicated to Athens’ protecting goddess, which had been removed some four decades earlier on the orders of British ambassador Lord Elgin.

“There was a royal proposal for Greece to offer some antiquities of secondary importance in return for the Athena Nike sculptures,” Pantermalis said.

The official documents, dating from between 1834 and 1842, were penned two years after Otto ascended the Greek throne under supervision of Britain, France and Russia, who had earlier helped liberate the country from the Ottoman Empire.

  • via Greece mulled buying Acropolis marbles from Britain (AFP)

… hmmm … that might have implications in an ownership dispute ….

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    This Day in Ancient History: ante diem xii kalendas apriles

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment

    ante diem xii kalendas apriles

    • Festival of Mars continues (day 21)
    • Quinquatrus continues (day 3) — originally a one-day festival with rites in honour of Minerva, by Ovid’s day it had been increased to five days, with the last four involving gladiatorial bouts
    • 1766 — death of Richard Dawes (Classical scholar)

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    Blogosphere ~ Ovid, The Poet Exiled for a Song and an Error

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment

    About.com Ancient / Classical History: Ovid, The Poet Exiled for a Song and an Error.

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    Blogosphere ~ From Birth to Burial: the Curious Case of Easter Eggs

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment

    Powered By Osteons: From Birth to Burial: the Curious Case of Easter Eggs.

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    Blogosphere ~ Myth of the Week: Centaurs

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment

    Madeline Miller: Myth of the Week: Centaurs.

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    Blogosphere ~ Portrait of a woman in himation in the National Museum of…

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment

    Classical Archaeology News: Portrait of a woman in himation in the National Museum of….

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    This Day in Ancient History: ante diem xiii kalendas apriles

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment
    ante diem xiii kalendas apriles

    • Festival of Mars (day 20)
    • Quinquatrus (day 2) — second day of a five-day festival (although the name originally came from the fact that it came five days after the Ides, apparently) sacred to Mars but also somehow connected to Minerva; it was also apparently a ‘school holiday’, so no doubt we’ll soon be reading about how the Romans invented Spring Break [I've written that for three or four years now; no one's taken the bait!]
    • 43 B.C. — Birth of Ovid (by one reckoning)
    • 268 A.D. — assassination of Gallienus

      spacer

      Deutsch: Publius Ovidius Naso. Holzschnitt aus der Schedel'schen Weltchronik, Blatt 93 verso English: Woodcut from the Nuremberg Chronicle (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    spacer

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    DIG: “Villa of the Antonines”

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment

    Seen on the Classicists list:

    I’d like to add to a previous announcement about the Montclair State University archaeological field school at the "Villa of the Antonines" in Genzano di Roma, Italy, directed by Deborah Chatr Aryamontri and myself. The generosity of a private donor has enabled us to offer two $1,000 scholarships to help defray the cost to students. The site, an Antonine-era villa complex once decorated with luxurious marbles and multi-colored mosaics, is located in ancient Lanuvium and is close to Rome as well as to places in the Alban Hills that traditionally have been of central interest to classicists: The sanctuary of Diana at Aricia, the Museum of the Ships of Caligula at Nemi, and the Alban Lake.
    Dates: July 1-28, 2012. Cost: $3,500 plus tuition (variable according to undergraduate/graduate status and residency inside or outside of New Jersey) plus airfare. Previous field experience not required. Includes introduction to excavation, artifact analysis, basic surveying, and drawing. Weekend field trips to Rome, Ostia, Alban Hills.

    Details at: https://montclair.studioabroad.com/index.cfm?FuseAction=Programs.ViewProgram&Program_ID=26632
    or chss.montclair.edu/archaeology/

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    ED: Cambridge Epigraphic Saturday

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment

    Seen on the Classicists list [I wish there were more things like this closer to home!]

    For many year Cambridge has devoted one Saturday each spring to the study of inscriptions. This year that will be on March 31st.
    Proceedings will take place in Room G 21, Faculty of Classics, starting at 11 a.m. with a paper by Jean-Louis Ferrary on "Aphrodisias and Claros".
    The afternoon, beginning at 2.15 p.m., will be an ‘epigraphic workshop’. This is an opportunity for graduate students, in particular, to get expert assistance with puzzles that they may have about epigraphic texts.

    Anyone wishing to attend should let Robin Osborne know: (ro225 @ cam.ac.uk).

    Anyone wishing to present an epigraphic problem or issue in the workshop session (giving a presentation of up to 10 minutes) should indicate the text or the problem to allow sensible scheduling.

    Robin Osborne

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    CONF: Thucydides our Contemporary? 28th-29th June 2012

    By rogueclassicist on | Leave a Comment

    Seen on the Classicists list:

    University of Bristol
    Thursday 28th – Friday 29th June 2012
    Thucydides our Contemporary?

    A major international conference on the reception and influence of Thucydides in the modern world

    Including a public lecture on Friday 29th by: Hunter R. Rawlings III, President of the Association of American Universities: "A Possession for All Time: why Thucydides matters so much"

    The Athenian historian Thucydides (c.460-c.395 BCE) claimed that his account of the Peloponnesian War would be ‘a possession for ever’, valued by posterity more than by his contemporaries. The history of his text’s reception since the Renaissance has proved him entirely correct; not only has his work continued to be read, by historians, political thinkers, philosophers, international relations theorists and many others, but Thucydides himself has been seen as ever more prescient and modern. This international conference, part of the work of the AHRC-funded research project on ‘Thucydides: reception, reinterpretation and influence’, will explore the way his work has shaped ideas about how to understand the world, and his continuing role as an authority on history, politics and war.

    Keynote Speakers: Clifford Orwin (Toronto); Arlene Saxonhouse (Michigan)

    Key Themes: Translation and Education; History and Historiography; International Relations; Politics and Political Theory

    Speakers: Greg Crane, Jon Hesk, Edward Keene, Christine Lee, Aleka Lianeri, Gerry Mara, Jeremy Mynott, Claudia Rammelt, Liz Sawyer, Oliver Schelske, James Sullivan, Thom Workman.

    Numbers on the conference are strictly limited: please contact Neville Morley (n.d.g.morley AT bris.ac.uk) as soon as possible to reserve a place.

    There will be a conference fee of £25 (£10 for graduate students) to cover lunch and refreshments.

    The public lecture is free to attend, but we do ask that you let us know if you are intending to come.

    Further information will be available at: www.bris.ac.uk/classics/thucydides/events/

    Supported by the Arts & Humanities Research Council and the Bristol Institute for Greece, Rome and the Classical Tradition

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