The Partial Historians🏺 (@p_historians) 's Twitter Profile
The Partial Historians🏺

@p_historians

After surviving exposure at birth, these unconventional academics realised they were destined to found the greatest Ancient Roman History podcast! 🏛📯⚔️

ID: 2914724262

linkhttps://linktr.ee/ThePartialHistorians calendar_today30-11-2014 13:29:01

32,32K Tweet

16,16K Followers

6,6K Following

The Partial Historians🏺 (@p_historians) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This #MosaicMonday we recognise the recent passage of the winter solstice (for those in the north) and the summer solstice (for us in the hot antipodes). This depiction of winter is looking somewhat grumpy and we hope their days (and yours!) are looking better soon ☀️

This #MosaicMonday we recognise the recent passage of the winter solstice (for those in the north) and the summer solstice (for us in the hot antipodes). 

This depiction of winter is looking somewhat grumpy and we hope their days (and yours!) are looking better soon ☀️
Anthony Majanlahti (@antmoose) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For #EpigraphyTuesday something not related to Christmas Eve, because I'm sick of the whole holiday already: a beautiful late #JulioClaudian #inscription from #Pompeii, now in #Naples, with its own tiny history of a nobleman's downfall.

For #EpigraphyTuesday something not related to Christmas Eve, because I'm sick of the whole holiday already: a beautiful late #JulioClaudian #inscription from #Pompeii, now in #Naples, with its own tiny history of a nobleman's downfall.
The Partial Historians🏺 (@p_historians) 's Twitter Profile Photo

💫New Episode ~ From Delphi, with Love💫 In 398 BCE the Romans have received some worrying signs from the gods. What could this mean for their fortunes in the ongoing siege against Veii? As the year rolls over into 397, Rome decides they need answers! partialhistorians.com/2024/12/26/epi…

Anthony Majanlahti (@antmoose) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#SpoliaSunday takes us back to the golden days of #spolia in the early #Renaissance in #Rome, when if you were an important #cardinal you could override the civic authorities and use even the most prestigious ancient sites as your own private #marble quarry.

#SpoliaSunday takes us back to the golden days of #spolia in the early #Renaissance in #Rome, when if you were an important #cardinal you could override the civic authorities and use even the most prestigious ancient sites as your own private #marble quarry.
The Partial Historians🏺 (@p_historians) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#MosaicMonday Well, we’re deep within a period of feasting and we hope you too are breaking bread and relaxing in the company of good people. This C2nd CE mosaic comes from a villa at Tor Marancia, near the Catacombs of Domitilla. A good feast was the Roman way as well!

#MosaicMonday 

Well, we’re deep within a period of feasting and we hope you too are breaking bread and relaxing in the company of good people. 

This C2nd CE mosaic comes from a villa at Tor Marancia, near the Catacombs of Domitilla. A good feast was the Roman way  as well!
Anthony Majanlahti (@antmoose) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#MosaicMonday brings us (📸 CSR Restauro Beni Culturali) back under the #BathsofTrajan in #Rome to see a marvel discovered in 2011, a detail of a huge wall #mosaic, probably #Flavian, from the exterior of a large public building buried by order of #Trajan.

#MosaicMonday brings us (📸 CSR Restauro Beni Culturali) back under the #BathsofTrajan in #Rome to see a marvel discovered in 2011, a detail of a huge wall #mosaic, probably #Flavian, from the exterior of a large public building buried by order of #Trajan.
The Partial Historians🏺 (@p_historians) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Wishing you and yours a very happy #NYE and all the very best for the year ahead! Yes, the ancient Romans had quite a different calendar. The early Romans started their year around March and dabbled in a ten-month cycle.

Wishing you and yours a very happy #NYE and all the very best for the year ahead! 

Yes, the ancient Romans had quite a different calendar. The early Romans started their year around March and dabbled in a ten-month cycle.
Anthony Majanlahti (@antmoose) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#ReliefWednesday takes us all over #Rome, from the #CentraleMontemartini where this splendid relief is displayed, to the #Colosseum where it was discovered, and possibly all the way to the #theatre of #Balbus from which it originated. The indifferent ferocity of the lime kilns.

#ReliefWednesday takes us all over #Rome, from the #CentraleMontemartini where this splendid relief is displayed, to the #Colosseum where it was discovered, and possibly all the way to the #theatre of #Balbus from which it originated. The indifferent ferocity of the lime kilns.
INACTIVE - workingclassicists.bsky.social (@workclassicists) 's Twitter Profile Photo

ANNOUNCING... A Periodic Table of Greek Mythology - our first book! 🎉 📅Available 5th Feb 2025 (but you can preorder now) 🤝 In collaboration with Contubernales Books ✍️ 117 different writers 🖼️ Periodic Table Poster by Dr Cora Beth Fraser 👇 Read more...

ANNOUNCING...

A Periodic Table of Greek Mythology - our first book! 🎉

📅Available 5th Feb 2025 (but you can preorder now)
🤝 In collaboration with <a href="/contubernales2/">Contubernales Books</a>
✍️ 117 different writers 
🖼️ Periodic Table Poster by <a href="/drcorabeth/">Dr Cora Beth Fraser</a>
👇 Read more...
Dr Hugh Thomas (@hughs_news) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Seeing as everyone is loving Greek archaeology, how about we delve into one of my favourite topics- SCULPTURE! Greek sculpture had a massive impact on the evolution of art, but not many people know how it developed or who the main artists were. So, let’s dive into it! 🧵1/

Seeing as everyone is loving Greek archaeology, how about we delve into one of my favourite topics- SCULPTURE! Greek sculpture had a massive impact on the evolution of art, but not many people know how it developed or who the main artists were. So, let’s dive into it! 🧵1/
The Partial Historians🏺 (@p_historians) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#FrescoFriday Hera and Zeus decide to make a go of things with a wedding. Let’s not ruin the magic of their special day by telling them just how things are going to turn out! 📍House of the Tragic Poet, Pompeii 🏛️MAN Napoli 📸Chapps

#FrescoFriday

Hera and Zeus decide to make a go of things with a wedding. Let’s not ruin the magic of their special day by telling them just how things are going to turn out!

📍House of the Tragic Poet, Pompeii
🏛️MAN Napoli
📸<a href="/chapps/">Chapps</a>
INACTIVE - workingclassicists.bsky.social (@workclassicists) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In case you missed it… Here are some of the stats from our upcoming book. We’ve platformed 117 writers, 79.5% of whom identified as working class, and 81.2% went to a state school. For many, this is their first physical publication. We’re so proud of them all!

In case you missed it…

Here are some of the stats from our upcoming book. We’ve platformed 117 writers, 79.5% of whom identified as working class, and 81.2% went to a state school. 

For many, this is their first physical publication. We’re so proud of them all!
Anthony Majanlahti (@antmoose) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#SpoliaSunday this week leads us through the hordes in the #Colosseum in #Rome to find a quiet corner devoted to #spolia in the #Flavian #amphitheatre. Part of the marble seating was prised up, its top hollowed out to serve as a container for holy water in a now-lost church.

#SpoliaSunday this week leads us through the hordes in the #Colosseum in #Rome to find a quiet corner devoted to #spolia in the #Flavian #amphitheatre. Part of the marble seating was prised up, its top hollowed out to serve as a container for holy water in a now-lost church.
The Partial Historians🏺 (@p_historians) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#MosaicMonday This mosaic appears to be a portrait and is thought to date to the early-mid imperial period. Maybe it’s the neatness of the piece but I’m curious about full provenance which is not provided by the Brooklyn Museum.

#MosaicMonday 

This mosaic appears to be a portrait and is thought to date to the early-mid imperial period. Maybe it’s the neatness of the piece but I’m curious about full provenance which is not provided by the Brooklyn Museum.
Anthony Majanlahti (@antmoose) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For #MosaicMonday we're back at the #LateranBaptistery in #Rome to look closely at the gorgeously restored C5 #mosaic of one of the apses of the entrance porch. Some think that the strange central element refers to the lance of St Longinus, but I'm not having it.

For #MosaicMonday we're back at the #LateranBaptistery in #Rome to look closely at the gorgeously restored C5 #mosaic of one of the apses of the entrance porch. Some think that the strange central element refers to the lance of St Longinus, but I'm not having it.
The Partial Historians🏺 (@p_historians) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#ClassicalReception ‘A Coign of Vantage’ (1895) by Lawrence Alma Tadema. The imagined scene shows elite women gathered at a great height gazing down at the vessels on the water far below or out towards some far (presumably azure) horizon.

#ClassicalReception

‘A Coign of Vantage’ (1895) by Lawrence Alma Tadema.

The imagined scene shows elite women gathered at a great height gazing down at the vessels on the water far below or out towards some far (presumably azure) horizon.