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Name: Bill LaLonde, or a reasonable facsimile
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Comments are welcome and encouraged. If making an "anonymous" comment, please provide a name by which you may be addressed (it need not be your real name; pseudonyms are fine).Here's some common sense legal stuff:
By posting comments to this blog, you warrant and represent that you either own or otherwise control all of the rights to that content, including, without limitation, all the rights necessary for you to provide, post, upload, input or submit the content, or that your use of the content is a protected fair use. You agree that you will not knowingly and with intent to defraud provide material and misleading false information.
You acknowledge that comments are not regularly reviewed, but that I shall have the right to remove at my sole discretion any content for any reason whatsoever.
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(Via Proceedings of the Athanasius Kircher Society) Derinkuyu, or: The Allure of the Underground CityMy friend Robert and I finished reading Alan Weisman's The World Without Us almost simultaneously – and we both noted one specific passage. Before we get to that, however, the premise of Weisman's book – though it does, more often than not, drift away from this otherwise fascinating central narrative – is: what would happen to the Earth if humans disappeared overnight? What would humans leave behind – and how long would those remnants last? These questions lead Weisman at one point to discuss the underground cities of Cappadocia, Turkey, which, he says, will outlast nearly everything else humans have constructed here on Earth... Cool article, cool pictures, cool place... made me think of Midian, though. Tags: ancient_world, world Current Mood: curious
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Via Archaeoblog: Ancient Brothel RestoredThe "wolves' lair" - ancient Pompeii's biggest, best planned and most richly decorated brothel - yesterday reopened to the public after extensive restoration.
The two-storey building, which was built at about the time Spartacus was leading his slaves' revolt, had been closed for almost a year. Its explicit wall paintings have long been a popular attraction for tourists visiting the site of the classical world's best-preserved city.
The busy port of Pompeii was packed with bordellos. At least 25 have been identified. But most occupied a single room, usually above a wine shop. Though sited, like all the others, at the junction of two side streets, the "Lupanare", was different.
Archaeologists believe it was the ancient city's only purpose-built whorehouse. So-called because, in Latin, lupa (she-wolf) was a common term for a prostitute, it consisted of 10 rooms and a latrine beneath the stairs. Set into the wall of each of the women's rooms was a stone bed covered with a mattress.
Researchers believe the Lupanare's celebrated wall paintings, each depicting a different position, were intended to advertise the various specialities on offer. The more elaborately painted upper floor, which had a separate entrance, is thought to have been reserved for better-off clients. The prostitutes were slaves, usually of Greek or Eastern origin. Their earnings were collected by the owner or manager of the brothel. You know, when I first saw this article I thought that they meant the brothel was restored and functioning. Then I thought about it, and realized it was probably just open to tour. Then I thought about it again, and realized that the article doesn't really specify. If it really is "reopened to the public", I hope they at least freed the Greek and Eastern slaves. Tags: ancient_world, archaeology, frolic, sex, world Current Mood: curious Voices in my Head: "Simple Creed" by Live
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