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  1. The Aztecs of Mexico / The Etruscans: Authoritative Account of the People of Pre-Columbian Mexico and Pre-Roman Italy [2 Paperbacks] by G.C. Vaillant, M. Pallottino, 1950
  2. Ancient Engineers' Inventions: Precursors of the Present (History of Mechanism and Machine Science) by Cesare Rossi, Flavio Russo, et all 2009-05-11
  3. Ancient Engineers' Inventions: Precursors of the Present by Cesare Rossi, Flavio Russo, et all 2009-05-11

1. Archeology Roman Period
THE TEMPLE The roman empire knew many religions and religious customs. Good roadsand safe inns were essential for proper communication in the roman empire.
http://www.archeon.nl/lang_uk/park_rom.htm

2. ROMARCH: Roman Art And Archaeology
Updated 28 June 1998 Christian Catacombs of Rome includes the outline, history, and importance of the catacombs as historical evidence of the life and martyrdom of the early Church. Famous romans - information about the roman empire, roman gods and ancient Rome. on the development of the roman calendar. archeology. Archaeology in Luxembourg - Celtic and Gallo-roman
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~pfoss/ROMARCH.html
The ROMARCH pages are the original crossroads for Web resources on the art and archaeology of early Italy and the Roman world, from the earliest settlements to Late Antiquity. ROMARCH is now hosted by DePauw University, at: http://acad.depauw.edu/romarch/ . The site originated in the Department of Classics and the Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology (IPCAA) at the University of Michigan, and grew at the Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati, and at Stanford University (see credits I. TABLE OF CONTENTS material updated March 5, 1999
  • Information about how to join and use the new Internet listserv
    'rome-arch', now at ONElist from April 1, 2000 onwards
    • Backlist of electronic discussions (from April 1, 1995 - April 1 2000) Threads of bibliographies, discussions, conference, job and fieldwork announcements (from April 1, 1995 - May 1 1998)
    Geographic list and clickable map of Internet resources, including:
    • News of recent discoveries in Roman art and archaeology The Journal of Roman Archaeology Ethics Learn about archaeological ethics, and what you can do to preserve our historical heritage
  • 3. RomanSites — Gateway To 2,261 Websites On Ancient Rome
    Find a collection of links to resources related to the study of roman archeology and architecture. roman Archaeology. In this page good old Aeschylus roman Archaeology. ROMARCH roman archaeology main page GIFs of roman art (site under construction). The roman empire Student site;
    http://www.ukans.edu/history/index/europe/ancient_rome/E/Roman/RomanSites%2A/hom
    mail: Bill Thayer
    Site updated: 9 Apr 03
    Italiano
    Help
    Home Using RomanSites Search RomanSites To add a site Linking to this site Major Bibliographies, Offsite:
    Bibliografia essenziale su Roma Antica (M. Ierardi: 56 basic works, mostly in Italian)

    Classified Bibliography of Greco-Roman Antiquity (J. Poucet: about 3000 items)

    General Roman Bibliography (L. Nelson at ORB: 770 items)

    Greco-Roman Studies: Periodical Bibliography (K. C. Hanson: 1100 items)
    ...
    List of Bibliographies covering the Ancient World (Diotima: mostly women, literature, religion)
    RomanSites
    is a subsite of LacusCurtius LacusCurtius (currently over 1400 pages) is in its own right one of the main Roman resources on the Web and includes a lot of more direct information: some major Latin texts , several entire books on Roman subjects, hundreds of photographs , dozens of maps and inscriptions , etc.: often enough, judging from my mail, what you're looking for in the first place.
    RomanSites
    A catalog of websites on Roman antiquity
    websites
    If you know of a resource that belongs here (your own, for example)

    4. Archeology Middle Ages
    THE MIDDLE AGES. In 476 the roman empire was dissolved. By then mostroman legions had already left this part of the empire. With
    http://www.archeon.nl/lang_uk/park_mid.htm

    5. From Jesus To Christ: Sitemap
    Judaism. archeology, Jews, Christians, and the Grecoroman empire.Primary Sources and Commentary, Paul and the Early Christians. The
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/etc/sitemap.html
    var loc = "../../../";
    sections: Jesus' Life and Teachings Women in Early Christianity Gnostics and Other Heretics Jews and Judaism ... The Quest for the Historical Jesus and Other Issues in Scholarship color codes: testimony audio reading miscellaneous primary
    source map Jesus' Life and Teachings What can we really know about Jesus?
    Jesus' Social Class

    Audio Excerpt: Recent archeological findings require scholars to rethink Jesus' socio-economic background

    He was born, lived, and died a Jew
    ...
    Death and Resurrection
    Women in Early Christianity The Roles for Women
    Women in Ancient Christianity, by Karen King

    The Acts of Paul and Thecla

    The Martyrdom of Saints Perpetua and Felicitas
    ...
    Thunder, Perfect Mind
    Gnostics and other Heretics Gnostics and Other Heretics The Gospel of Thomas The Gnostic Gospels, by Elaine Pagels More about Q and the Gospel of Thomas, by Marilyn Mellowes ... Thunder, Perfect Mind color codes: testimony audio reading miscellaneous primary source map Jews and Judaism Judaism's First Century Diversity Jews and the Roman Empire Temple Culture The Essenes and the Dead Sea Scrolls ... From Hebrew Bible to Christian Bible: Jews, Christians and the Word of God, by Mark Hamilton Archeology Biblical Archeology The Credibility of Josephus, by Shaye Cohen

    6. TOPIC THE ROMAN EMPIRE
    REFERENCE BOOKS roman empire. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE roman empire. New York, NY Facts on File, Inc., on art and archeology of early Italy and the roman world, provided by
    http://library.luther.edu/paideia/section16.pdf

    7. NOVA | Lost Roman Treasure | About The TV Program | PBS
    At the height of the roman empire an opulent city stood at the its opposite banks,the city disappeared into history after the empire fell LastDitch archeology,
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/zeugma/about.html
    About the TV Program
    Original PBS Broadcast Date: October 8, 2002
    Back to Lost Roman Treasure Homepage
    At the height of the Roman Empire an opulent city stood at the eastern frontier on the most important crossing of the Euphrates River. Called Zeugma ("Junction") after the bridge that linked its opposite banks, the city disappeared into history after the empire fell. Now its remains are about to disappear beneath a mammoth reservoir. This program records the frantic scramble to recover the glory that was Zeugma. Buried by centuries of silt and dirt, Zeugma was long neglected by archeologists, until the rising edifice of a nearby hydroelectric dam forced them to act quickly before the site was flooded. What they found dazzled them. NOVA's film team was on the scene to record how the traditionally painstaking work of excavation had to yield to emergency measures. With only six weeks to finish a dig that would normally take years, researchers made a rough-and-ready map of the site by measuring magnetic fluctuations at the surface, revealing faint traces of ruined walls, streets, and houses below.

    8. Roman Archeology
    Friday, August 30, 2002 Posted 928 AM by Sextus Apollonius Scipio The Malta Independent Daily Website roman archeology. Archive. Provincia Gallia. Nova Roma and commerce in antiquity, especially the heyday of the roman empire. But long ago, the relentless desert buried their
    http://www.fr-novaroma.com/Archeology/2002_07_14_Archive.html
    Roman Archeology Bibliotheca Apollonia
    Archive
    Roman archeology weekly news Devenez un citoyen Romain!!
    Become a Roman citizen!!

    Friday, July 19, 2002 Posted 6:23 PM by Sextus Apollonius Scipio
    Athens News
    TWO MARBLE Roman-era statues and one marble head were spotted on July 10 by members of a private contractor at the central Olympiados street in the northern port city of Thessaloniki. jul02w3 Posted 6:19 PM by Sextus Apollonius Scipio
    Independent News
    Remains of Roman town threatened by plough. jul02w3 Sunday, July 14, 2002 Posted 6:45 PM by Sextus Apollonius Scipio
    Roman-era marble statues dug up in Thessaloniki

    Two marble Roman-era statues and one marble head were spotted on July 10 by members of a private contractor at the central Olympiados street in the northern port city of Thessaloniki. jul02w2 Posted 6:35 PM by Sextus Apollonius Scipio
    Archeologists have discovered an ancient example of marketing, a label on a jar of Roman fish paste.

    The hand-written clay label was attached to a jar of 1st century tuna fish relish, shipped from Spain to a fort on the northernmost edge of the Roman Empire. The words "excellent" and "top quality" are still clearly visible written in sooty ink. jul02w2
    Home

    9. Writers' Research Index > History And Archeology > Time Periods
    Top History and archeology Time periods. Links. The roman empire (http//www.pbs.org/empires/romans/).PBS's Infromation on the roman empire, the First Century.
    http://www.hollylisle.com/community/dcd/History_and_Archeology/Time_periods/inde
    Writers' Research Index
    t he Forward Motion Community's recommended sites for writers Search for: Featured Novels breadCrumbs("hollylisle.com",">>","index.html","None","None","None","0");
    Writers' Research Index
    Top Top Resources What's New Search ... History and Archeology Time periods
    Links
    The History Net
    (http://history.about.com/) Great research site with its own search engine to find just about anything about any time-period on Earth. Jaslia 6.50 rating Rate it!
    The Islmaic World to 1600
    (http://www.ucalgary.ca/applied_history/tutor/islam/index.html) A tutorial and multimedia introduction to the first millennium of Islamic history, developed by the Applied History Research Group, Dept. of History, University of Calgary. It outlines Muslim beliefs and practices, as well as the history of the Islamic world from the 7th to the 17th centuries, including the expansion of the Islamic empires of Asia, Africa, and Europe. astlin Rate it!
    The Labyrinth
    (http://labyrinth.georgetown.edu/) Another wonderful internet database of information about the medieval period.

    10. Writers' Research Index > History And Archeology
    Time periods 78 links From Hellenic Greek to roman empire to Byzantine to Pre havewe learned or relearned about the history of the world, archeology, and our
    http://www.hollylisle.com/community/dcd/History_and_Archeology/
    Writers' Research Index
    t he Forward Motion Community's recommended sites for writers Search for: Featured Novels breadCrumbs("hollylisle.com",">>","index.html","None","None","None","0");
    Writers' Research Index
    Top Top Resources What's New Search ... Top History and Archeology Categories
    Time periods

    78 links
    From Hellenic Greek to Roman Empire to Byzantine to Pre-Columbian, links to background on civilization by time period Costume and Dress
    53 links
    Ancient to current, costume and dress from around the world. Plus costuming, techniques, tools, period construction and details. Events and Timelines
    38 links
    What happened, where and when, and in relation to what else? Sites with dates and timelines, historical events in context with the movement of the rest of the world. Great People
    26 links
    The great men and women of history, from the ancients to today Errors and Blunders 2 links What did we think we knew? What have we learned or relearned about the history of the world, archeology, and our past The Work of History 7 links Great historians, researching history, tools and techniques, careers in history

    11. A General Survey Of Coinage In The Roman Empire A.d. 294-408 And Its Relationshi
    from 135 archaeological sites across the empire. supplement existing evidence forRoman military activity 1995 Subject Areas archeology Anthropology, Europe
    http://www.mellenpress.com/emp/mellenpress.cfm?bookid=2979&pc=9

    12. Mellen Subject Area: Archeology - Anthropology
    Displaying 1 to 7 of 7 Books in archeology Anthropology in order of PublicationYear, 2. A General Survey of Coinage in the roman empire Ad 294-408 and Its
    http://www.mellenpress.com/emp/mellenpress.cfm?catkey=8&pc=8

    13. Archeology Reference Resources
    Periphery? Origins of Celtic Art The Best of Gibbon's Decline andFall of the roman empire Beyond Alexander. Byzantium 1200. C.
    http://home.worldonline.cz/~cz307421/ref-arch.asp.htm
    Afrika Austrálie a Pacifik Blízký a Støední Východ Britské ostrovy ... E-MAIL
    Zprávy
    A Age, Gender and Status Divisions at Mealtime in the Roman House
    Alexander the Great's Home Page

    Alexander the Great on the Web

    The Amazing Ancient World
    ...
    Avillium

    B Babylonian and Egyptian Mathematics
    Barbarians on the Greek Periphery? Origins of Celtic Art

    The "Best of" Gibbon's
    Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire ...
    Byzantium 1200

    C La Casa Romana
    Catapults in Greek and Roman Antiquity
    Chaironeia: Plutarch's Home on the Web The Christian Topography of Cosmas Indicopleustes ... Christus Rex et Redemptor Mundi. In addition to being overtly religious, this site has many good images. Classical Myths, The Ancient Sources Classical Text Editor Clemens' Canonical List of Romans Conservation On-Line ... Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt. From Boston University. Curculio: Home Page of Michael Hendry D D. Anthony Storm's Web Site on Plato

    14. Far East Archeology
    Regional Research Consortium. L. Late roman Delphi Lepcis Magna. Theroman empire in North Africa Levant L'Isola Virtuale. M. Magic in the
    http://home.worldonline.cz/~cz307421/Klas-arch.asp.htm
    Afrika Austrálie a Pacifik Blízký a Støední Východ Britské ostrovy ... E-MAIL
    Klasická archeologie
    The 1995 Excavations of the Megaron at Midea
    A Ager Salonitanus Project
    The Akkadian Language

    Alexandria: shining pearl of the Mediterranean

    The Amphoras Project
    ...
    AncientSites
    . Virtuální pou po Athénách a Øímì.
    Antiquity

    Apollonius Rhodius: An Electronic Bibliography

    Apuleius,
    Apology ...
    Ariadne.
    Hellenic Civilization
    Arion
    Aris and Phillips. Specialist Humanities Publishers Armamentarium: the Book of Roman Arms and Armour Assemblage ... The Atrium . Pro nadšence starého Øecka a Øíma. B Babylonian Texts of the First Millennium BC A Bibliographic Guide to Vergil's Aeneid A Bibliography of Roman Domestic Architecture The Bova Marina Project, Italy ... Byzatine Studies Conference C Cassiodorus Chloris. Bibliografie archeologie doby bronzové v Øecku a na Krétì. The Chrisitan Catacombs of Rome Chronicle of Higher Education's Job Listings in Classics Le Cirque Romain d'Arles ... Combined Caesarea Excavations.

    15. Arch-Christianity
    The Catacombs of Rome Overview Art - archeology - Bible History - Inscriptions- Religion. Israel, C1 AD The Jewish Diaspora C1 AD roman empire (clickable for
    http://pirate.shu.edu/~cottereu/arch-chr.htm
    Eugene Cotter
    Seton Hall University Home Archeology
    (CAST 3290, CLAS 3290, ARCH 3290)
    Wed 5:45- 8:15 Cotter If enrolled, E-Mail immediately to cottereu@shu.edu
    Your Name, address(es), phone(s), year, major Texts (Bookstore)
    Joseph Kelly, The World of the Early Christians (Liturgical Pr Collegeville 1997)
    Claude Moatti, The Search for Ancient Rome (Harry Abrams 1993)
    J. Stevenson, The Catacombs,
    G. A. Williamson (tr), Eusebius, The History of the Church (Penguin, rev 1989)
    *Early Christian Writers (Penguin) optional
    Web Sites
    History Inscriptions Chronology ... Bibliography COURSE OUTLINE Introduction Archeology : an introduction to and survey of the discipline. Learning to Read Rome's Ruins I. Methods - Sources II. CHRONOLOGY From origins of Christian civilization in the midst of the Greco-Roman world, to the 6th century, the Early Chistian Period. III. TOPOGRAPHY - Rome - the Roman World IV. OBJECT OF CHRISTIAN ARCHAEOLOGY. 1. Early Christian

    16. Yeshiva University Prof. Featured In Biblical Archeology Review
    research was published in the July/August 2001 edition of Biblical archeology Reviewas in 70 CE by the romans, was stripped and sold to fund the roman empire.
    http://www.yu.edu/news/pressreleases/fall01/feldman.html
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Contact: Esther Finkle
    finkle@ymail.yu.edu YESHIVA UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR LOUIS FELDMAN PRESENTS EVIDENCE THAT SPOILS FROM THE JERUSALEM TEMPLE FINANCED THE ROMAN COLOSSEUM New York, NY, September 6, 2001 — The extraordinary revelation that the Roman Colosseum was financed by spoils from the Jerusalem Temple was made by distinguished scholar Louis H. Feldman, Abraham Wouk Family Professor of Classics and Literature, Yeshiva University. Dr Feldman's research was published in the July/August 2001 edition of Biblical Archeology Review as a cover story titled "Financing the Colosseum." Dr. Feldman's article discloses that parts of the actual structure of the Colosseum reveal direct proof that the Jerusalem Temple destroyed in 70 CE by the Romans, was stripped and sold to fund the Roman Empire. The immense structure that has symbolized the Roman Empire for nearly 2,000 years was conceived as a colossal theater for gladiatorial games and other spectacles enjoyed by Roman emperors. Built by Vespasian and expanded by his son Titus, the Colosseum once bore a dedicatory inscription that commemorated each emperor's triumphs. The inscription consisted of metal letters held in place by pegs on a block of stone, but the letters have since been missing.

    17. Roman Empire
    Welcome to The roman empire provides information on the roman empire in a to JuliusCaesar - background on the development of the roman calendar. archeology.
    http://www.xs4all.nl/~xenophon/history/romanempire.html
    Roman Empire
    Updated 28 June 1998
    General
  • Christian Catacombs of Rome - includes the outline, history, and importance of the catacombs as historical evidence of the life and martyrdom of the early Church. Forum Romanum - with offerings ranging from toga etiquette to a virtual tour of the Forum Romanum, this site is devoted to celebrating and explaining ancient Rome. 2750th Anniversary of Rome - spreading awareness of the 2750th Anniversary of Rome, April 21, 1998. Ancient Contraception - unnoticed allusions to contraception in a poet and a princeps? Ancient Greece - Ancient Rome - student generated dealing with mythology and daily life of both Greece and Rome. Ancient Roman History Timeline - historical content and chronological index of links to sites on Ancient Rome. Emphasis is placed upon the use of primary sources and new perspectives upon the roles of women. Ancient Source - essays, maps and notes covering Rome (133BC-14AD) and Greece (490BC-403BC). Armamentarivm: The Book of Roman Arms and Armour Atlas of the Greek and Roman World - overview of the project which is producing an "Atlas of the Greek and Roman World".
  • 18. Archaeology Links
    Egyptian. Romarch (The roman empire) The roman empire organized by mapsand numerous links. Egypt. Institute of Egyptian Art and archeology,
    http://www.clonlara.org/index082.html
    Educational Sites on the Internet
    Archaeology (see also World History)

    19. Roman News And Archeology
    roman News and archeology. vino, veritas back to roman era Back to Start of ArticleUgernum, TransAlpine Gaul The business of the roman empire continues to
    http://www.fr-novaroma.com/Archeology/
    Roman News and Archeology
    Roman archeology weekly news
    Gallia

    Nova Roma

    Archives
    Friday, March 28, 2003 Cleopatra: from history to myth
    Cleopatra is an iconic figure, her legend fed by the writings of Plutarch, Chaucer, and Shakespeare, and the many film versions of her story.
    posted by Sextus Apollonius Scipio at 5:27 PM
    International hunt for stolen statue

    Police have recovered fragments of an ancient Roman ivory statue of Apollo that were illegally excavated several years ago near Rome.
    posted by Sextus Apollonius Scipio at 5:26 PM On the trail of Caesar's killers One of history's most notorious murders - the killing of Julius Caesar - is being investigated by a Warwick University professor 2,000 years on. posted by Sextus Apollonius Scipio at 5:16 PM Overlooked Women of Ancient Times "Silent populations" was a term used by Natalie Boymel Kampen, an historian of ancient Roman art, for all the people who barely made it into the visual record centuries ago. (needs free registration) posted by Sextus Apollonius Scipio at 5:14 PM Lives of Famous Men The Lost Frescoes A scholar on the trail of Petrarch has discovered two rare books containing hand-drawn images that offer a glimpse of the lost fourteenth-century frescoes from the Hall of Famous Men. The frescoes, destroyed by fire, were commissioned to accompany Petrarch’s book of Roman heroes, Lives of Famous Men.

    20. DreamWorks SKG Fansite Gladiator - Bulletin Board - Archeology Thread
    are those who enjoy my posting of articles related to the archeology in Europe ifan adventurous merchant from the eastern part of the roman empire might have
    http://www.spielberg-dreamworks.com/gladbb/showthread.php?threadid=8557&pagenumb

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