From my own personal Mt. Olympus (aka my living room), let’s take a look at the new and notable in the world of antiquity on-line:
- Sortes Vergilianae & Sibylline Oracle for iOS! “This app provides to you the same opportunity as the Romans, except now it’s truly random: press a button and you’ll be presented with one passage from the Aeneid or from the Sibylline Oracles. What does it mean? That’s for you to decide, but if you don’t like it just press the “burn it” button to get a new prophecy!”

- Ovid’s Metamorphoses & Art History (via The Guardian): “The National Gallery is putting on its show Metamorphosis to celebrate the two great Titians it has purchased in partnership with the National Gallery of Scotland. Diana and Callisto and Diana and Actaeon both depict scenes from Ovid. But if Titian was the greatest visualiser of Ovid he had a lot of competition. Such marvels of art as Correggio’s Jupiter and Io, Michelangelo’s Fall of Phaethon, and Carravaggio’s Medusa all draw heat from Ovid’s imaginative fire. The exhibition Metamorphosis, an Olympic special tied in with new opera productions, involves works by contemporary British artists – including Chris Ofili and Mark Wallinger – that respond to Ovid’s myths. The gallery is also publishing newly commissioned poems after Ovid by writers who include Seamus Heaney….”
- David Bianculli talks “I, Claudius” on the occasion of its 35th anniversary: “The miniseries boasts impressive performances from several key British actors. Patrick Stewart, long before Star Trek: The Next Generation, shows up here. So does John Hurt, as a memorably unhinged Caligula. And the women, including Sian Phillips as Livia and Sheila White as Messalina, are deadlier, and even more fascinating, than the men. John Hurt (Caligula) and Derek Jacobi (Claudius) square off in the miniseries I, Claudius.Except, that is, for Claudius himself. Played by Derek Jacobi, it’s a performance that spans wide-eyed youth and weary old age…”
- A nifty collection of podcasts about ancient medicine (via Love of History Blog)
- Taylor S. (BMC ’14) reviewed Anne Carson’s memorable performance at Haverford last week.
Felix Dies Natalis, Roma!
- Daniel Mendelsohn and his father retrace the steps of Odysseus: “In the end, we never got to Ithaca—never followed “in the wake of Odysseus,” as the brochure for the cruise had promised; at least, not all the way to this most famous of literary destinations, Ithaca (Itháki in modern Greek), the small and rocky island of which Homer sings, and where Odysseus had his famously gratifying homecoming. We saw much that he had seen….” Look for the cameo by Haverford alumnus Brian Rose!
- Speaking of Brian Rose, he tackles the mystery of Atlantis in this new video on “Great Riddles in Archaeology, Atlantis: The Lost Continent?“ by the Penn Museum.
- Emily Temple has thoughtfully put together a mix tape for Odysseus. [ed. don't we call it a playlist now? I guess the archaism is appropriate]
- Latin Tattoos! Some clever, some… unfortunate: https://twitter.com/#!/LatTat
- Looking for some pleasant summer? Author Tom Holland (most recently of a history of early Islam) picks his 5 favorite treatments of the Fall of the Roman Empire.
- AppWatch: Grammaticus, brings searchable and browsable versions of Smyth’s Greek Grammar, Allen and Greenough’s New Latin Grammar, and Goodwin’s Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb for iPhone and iPad.
- Herodotus TruthWatch: Scientists from the RWTH Aachen University have found evidence that a tsunami struck Potidea in the fifth century BC. Herodotus observed that the Persian siege of Potidea was broken in 479 BC when the Persian army was overwhelmed by a large flood (Hdt. 8.129.1-3). Via Rogueclassicist, who has much more about ancient tsunamis.
An exciting week around and about the World o’ Classics!
- The Virtual Tour of the Acropolis “is an interactive website that allows various aspects of the historical site to be explored in a unique way. It consists of high-resolution gigapixel images and panoramas of the four main monuments – the Parthenon, the Propylaia, the Erechtheion and the Temple of Athena Nike – as well as a detailed photographic representation of the inner and outer ancient walls surrounding the hill, all accompanied by historical information and a descriptive map.” h/t Austin!
- Via Boingboing: Lapham’s Quarterly has an interesting (and saucy!) “collection of rude and complaining messages left by monks in the margins of medieval manuscripts… Depictions of sexual consort are frequent, among men and women, among various species of animals, and enough other combinations to make even contemporary readers blush.”

I thought I might pass along a few of the Classical news, notes, and features that caught my attention this week during my perambulations around the internet (aka the intertextus internationalis instrumentorum computatoriorum (LRL) or interrete, if you prefer).
- Phone Homer: “Noted video and performing artist Michelle Ellsworth unleashes a one woman, multimedia portrayal of Clytemnestra, the woman left behind as her husband Agamemnon serves as leader of the Greeks in Troy. In Phone Homer she uses series of instructional videos, Skype calls with characters from The Iliad, a kinetic alphabet modeled after the Kinect, hamburger sacrifices, and an entire internet constructed specifically for this show to interpret this mythic character…”
- Santiago Ortiz visualizes the relationships between characters in the Iliad as a network diagram and a streamgraph (below). Check it out!
