User:QuartierLatin1968/sandbox
New-York Daily Tribune. (New-York [N.Y.]), 19 Sept. 1844. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030213/1844-09-19/ed-1/seq-2/
For Faustina the Elder:
For Valeria Messalina (empress who was never Augusta):
For Matidia (Augusta who was never empress):
For Antonia Minor:
For Agrippina Minor (both but with different predecessors/successors):
{{Celtic mythology}} New signature; thought I'd let you know. Q·L·1968 ☿ 19:21, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
Pensen en els que lluiten
[edit]- Celtic mythology (Irish mythology – Welsh mythology)
- Celtic polytheism
- list of Celtic gods
- Celt#Celtic religious patterns
- Gallo-Roman religion (Roman Gaul) – Roman Britain#Religion
- British Iron Age#Iron Age beliefs in Great Britain
Medium-term to-do list
[edit]- Hittite family tree (add page numbers), pitch to Near East project: Done, now {{Hittite tree}}
- Expand and improve Commagene article Done
- Expand and improve Faustina the Elder article Done
- Finish transition to {{sfnp}} in Treveri Done
- Expand and improve Drusus the Elder article Done
- Expand and improve Lucilla article?
- Expand and improve Sarri-Kusuh article?
- Copy edit Roman–Parthian War of 161–166—additional sources?
- Source template:Nerva–Antonine family tree
- Go through and add "Imperial rank"/"Imperial dignity"/"Roman emperor" where applicable
- Reopen discussion on empress succession boxes in teahouse
- Add Augusta succession boxes
- add gleanings re Hurrian names (e.g. Kurunta)
- clean up Airgíalla
- Maybe a Sophene-style template at the bottom for kings of Commagene and important sites?
- Translate some rugby articles into Interlingua?
- Tidy up List of Roman and Byzantine Empresses
- Suggest moves from (mythology) to (deity)/(god)/(goddess) where appropriate
- New page for Great King (of Hatti, Mitanni, Yamhad, Egypt, Babylon...)? Meh, no need
- Create/update Irish distillery articles? Echlinville, Derry, Teeling, etc.
Citations
[edit]- Nicole Jufer & Thierry Luginbühl (2001). ''Les dieux gaulois : répertoire des noms de divinités celtiques connus par l'épigraphie, les textes antiques et la toponymie.'' Paris: Editions Errance. ISBN 2-87772-200-7. {{fr icon}}
- Greg Woolf (1998). ''Becoming Roman: The Origins of Provincial Civilization in Gaul.'' Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-78982-6.
- Jeannot Metzler. "Le Luxembourg avant le Luxembourg." In ''Histoire du Luxembourg : Le destin européen d'un « petit pays »'' (ed. Gilbert Trausch, 2003). Toulouse: Éditions Privat. ISBN 2-7089-4773-7. {{fr icon}}
- Jean-Louis Brunaux (2006). ''Les Druides : Des philosophes chez les Barbares.'' Paris: Éditions du Seuil. ISBN 2-02-079653-8. {{fr icon}}
- <ref name="Wightman">Edith Mary Wightman (1970). ''Roman Trier and the Treveri.'' Rupert Hart-Davis, London.<ref>
- To cite GeoffMGleadall's lexica
- <ref name="CAWCS">[http://www.wales.ac.uk/documents/external/cawcs/PCl-MoE.pdf Proto-Celtic—English lexicon] and [http://www.wales.ac.uk/documents/external/cawcs/MoE-PCl.pdf English—Proto-Celtic lexicon]. [[University of Wales]] Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies. (See also [http://www.wales.ac.uk/newpages/EXTERNAL/E4504.asp this page] for background and disclaimers.) Cf. also the [http://www.indo-european.nl/cgi-bin/query.cgi?root=leiden&basename=%5Cdata%5Cie%5Cceltic University of Leiden database].</ref>
Celtic cleanup project
[edit]Be suspicious of Celtic religion articles contributed by User:TUF-KAT in mid-September 2002. I think he closely followed www,gallica.co.uk, a site with plenty of useful stuff, but their section on 'gods' is mostly patent nonsense.
(Use subst {{tl}} from now on.)
Orphaned articles that probably deserve parents
[edit]In need of cleanup
[edit]- Áine
- Danu (Irish goddess)
Erecura- Maponos
- Mogons – very seriously GeoffMGleadalled
Toutatis (horrible! horrible! multiple blatant falsehoods, also repeated on the page of the corresponding asteroid)- Veteris
In desire of maps
[edit]Create-worthy
[edit]Antonine family tree
[edit]- (1)=1st spouse
- (2)=2nd spouse (not shown)
- (3)=3rd spouse
- SMALL CAPS=posthumously deified (Augustus, Augusta, or other)
NERVA | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MARCIANA | TRAJAN, adoptive son | PLOTINA | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
L. Scribonius Libo Rupilo (3) | MATIDIA | L. Vibius Sabinus (1) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rupilia Annia | M. Annius Verus | Rupilia Faustina | SABINA | HADRIAN, adoptive son | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Domitia Lucilla | M. Annius Verus | M. Annius Libo | FAUSTINA | ANTONINUS, adoptive son | L. Aelius Caesar, adoptive son | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cornificia | MARCUS AURELIUS, adoptive son | FAUSTINA Iunior | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VERUS, adoptive son | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fadilla | Cornificia | COMMODUS | nine other children | Lucilla | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
User:QuartierLatin1968/Hittite tree
Palladian public buildings?
[edit]Mercury
[edit]Old World
[edit]New World
[edit]Gods of Nemrud
[edit]- Smith, R. R. R. (2012). Gods of Nemrud: The Royal Sanctuary of Antiochos I & the Kingdom of Commagene. Photographs by Ahmet Ertuğ. Ertuğ & Kocabıyık. ISBN 978-0-9548077-4-0.
- p10: Commagene under Tigranes' rule from about 90 to 70 BCE
- p10: one of the "compliant client-kingdoms to act as buffers between her [Rome's] own sphere and that of Parthia, the new great power in the East"
- p10: Zeugma and Samosata the kingdom's two Euphrates crossings
- p10: "occupied a strategic liminal position between the Roman and Parthian spheres of power, analogous to that of Armenia to the north and Cilicia and northern Syria to the south"
- p12: "Antiochos' full official title was: Basileus Megas Antiochos Theos Dikaios Epiphanēs Philorhomaios kai Philhellēn – 'Great King Antiochos, God, Just, Manifest, Friend of the Romans and Friend of the Greeks'."
- p12: "he wrote (and surely spoke) in Greek, but by using Philhellēn he showed immediately he did not consider himself actually to be a Greek."
- p13-14: contrast hierothesia or tomb-sanctuaries (viz. Arsameia on the Euphrates = Gerger, Arsameia on the Nymphaios = Arsameia, and Nemrud Dağ) with temenē without tombs
- p14: at Sofraz Köy was "a temenos dedicated to Apollo and Artemis Dictynna"
- p14: four other enthroned gods "are called synthronoi theoi, or 'throne-sharing gods'", viz. (1) himself, (2) Kommagene, (3) Zeus-Oromasdes, (4) Apollo-Mithras-Helios-Hermes, and (5) Artagnes-Herakles-Ares
- p14: Ahura Mazda supreme deity in Zoroastrianism, Mithras and Artagnes "were minor Mazdaean deities, subordinates and aides of Ahura Mazda. They [= presumably all five synthronoi theoi] appear here for the first time in these combinations."
- p14: "Roman Mithraic mysteries are a long way off, and Commagene probably has little to do with them."
- p15: text of the inscriptions published in D. H. Sanders (1996). Nemrud Dağı. The Hierothesion of Antiochos I of Commagene. Results of the American Excavations Directed by Theresa B. Goell. Winona Lake.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - p16: his kingdom "'the common dwelling place of all the gods'"
- p18: "Antiochos' cult is the very best documented example of a centrally organized Hellenistic royal cult."
- p18: "cult statues, festivals, sacrifices, and meals in honour of the king and gods. The ritual is perhaps a little colourless. There is no mention of hymns, games, competitions, nor of special clothes or wreathes, or exciting taboos for the participants"
- p18: priests must wear Persian dress, though "Some of the main elements of the cult and its ritual as described in the texts are Greek in character"; outdoor worship on a mountain-top, with open-air cult statues, also "local and Iranian elements". But no fire altars, no soma, no good-versus-evil dualism. "In the inscriptions, the cult ideas then are mainly Greek with some eastern overlay. The eastern component emerges more strongly in the images."
- p19: "These syncretic gods probably had no independent life in Commagene (or elsewhere) outside the royal cult – they were explicitly basilikoi daimones, 'royal gods'."
- p19: "Antiochos' monuments are not much like anything earlier, and they are entirely without artistic progeny in this precise manner later."
- p19: "The scale and method of construction are clearly of Pharaonic inspiration."
- p20: combination of five-pointed crown (kitaris or tiara) and clean-shaven look are copied by Antiochus from Tigranes' style; also wears diadem (white cloth band tied around head), tunic, leggings, cloak, skirt, and has sceptre: "probably the contemporary horse-riding costume of the Armenian and Parthian elite"
- p20: in dexiosis images, Artagnes-Herakles "is entirely Herakles" (club, lion skin, etc.)
- p20-21: Kommagene has a modius and cornucopia; Zeus-Oromasdes and Apollo-Mithras-Helios-Hermes wear conical "so-called 'Persian' tiara" or Phrygian cap (radiate in dexioseis); Artagnes-Herakles-Ares has a club; bundles of tamarisk twigs born by the three Olympian synthronoi
- p21: "There is no trace of the time-honoured iconography of Mesopotamian or Iranian divine power: no horned, winged, or animal-headed deities, no busts in winged discs."
- p22: carvers perhaps displaced artisans from Seleucid kingdom, now kaput
- p23: "Antiochos could not know that he was not going to found a long and glorious kingdom and a model of Persian-Greek style that would last for centuries. [...] in Antiochos' monuments, a strong blazing light is shone on one of history's many dead-ends and roads not taken."
- p23: "flirted with Parthian allegiance three times – in 69, 64, and 38 BC [sic] – but Lucullus, Pompeius, and Antonius, respectively, put paid to such ambitions."
- p23: no evidence of popular votives at the sanctuaries
- p24: "one of the best-documented case-studies of advanced megalomania in the ancient world"
- p24: Vespasian exiles the royal family in 72 CE