Catullus’ life was akin to pulp fiction. In Julius Caesar’s Rome, he engages in a stormy affair with a consul’s wife. He writes her passionate ...
Continue Reading →“The father of history,” as Cicero called him, and a writer possessed of remarkable narrative gifts, enormous scope, and considerable charm, Herodotus has always been ...
Continue Reading →In this introduction, Christina Riggs explores the visual arts produced in Egypt over a span of some 4000 years. Describing the context and ...
Continue Reading →Following the invention of the daguerreotype and calotype processes in 1839, views of ruins, classical statuary, and the antiquities of the Mediterranean and ...
Continue Reading →From ancient forts in New Zealand to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., Earth Architecture ranges across the globe, covering more than ...
Continue Reading →The six chapters are headed, 1. Sicily; 2. Syracuse; 3. Agrigentum; 4. Selinus; 5. Ægesta [sc. Segesta]; 6. Posidonia, Or Paestum. The Appendix ...
Continue Reading →A treatise on ancient painting, containing observations on the rise, progress, and decline of that art amongst the Greeks and Romans; the high ...
Continue Reading →This influential work of 1818 by dilettante and critic Richard Payne Knight (1751-1824) has stood the test of time. The study investigates the ...
Continue Reading →Excerpt: Whether we regard the Grecian attire of the head or of the body, it is precisely that of the earliest and rudest ...
Continue Reading →Excerpt from Dactyliotheca Smithiana, Vol. 1: Gemmarum Ectypa Et Antonii Francisci Gorii Enarrationes Complectens Aòfiulit atm diu, (s’ funere merfit acerbo. Hifioriam ergo ...
Continue Reading →