Antiquity Journal - 0 views
Carte interactive des lieux d'histoire de France - La Maison de l'histoire de France - 3 views
Antiquity Journal - 0 views
Flickr: ANCIENT GREECE ! GRECE ANTIQUE ! - 1 views
Flickr: "History & Antiquities (Post 5 - Award 3)" - 0 views
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This is a flickr group devoted to images of ancient sites, artefacts and churches. They are making an effort to make sure that people correctly tag and date the images so might be useful for you. There are squillions of flickr sites for history images - I won't save them all to the group. If you're looking for images though for your classes, perhaps take a look...
WikiArc - 4 views
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"WikiArc is intended as an online toolkit for professionals, students and other people interested in the fields of archaeology, classical antiquity, palaeoanthropology, forensic anthropology, cultural heritage studies, and Quaternary sciences."
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Has a searchable database of open-access journals to do with archaeology, anthropology and ancient history.
Play Caesar: Travel Ancient Rome with Stanford's Interactive Map | Open Culture - 26 views
shared by International School of Central Switzerland on 19 May 12
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David Hilton liked it
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Scholars of ancient history and IT experts at Stanford University have collaborated to create a novel way to study Ancient Rome. ORBIS, a geospatial network model, allows visitors to experience the strategy behind travel in antiquity. (Find a handy tutorial for using the system on the Web and YouTube). The ORBIS map includes about 750 mostly urban settlements of the Roman period
Egyptologist risks life, career to expose looting | TribLIVE - 2 views
Turkey's Efforts to Repatriate Art Alarm Museums - NYTimes.com - 1 views
- Presevation - 0 views
Archaeological Service - 0 views
Romans in Sussex - 0 views
Antique Roman Dishes - Collection - 0 views
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What an excellent find! Ancient Roman recipes. I couldn't find any containing the infamous garum (fermented fish oil) but there was still some weird stuff. Guess every country has its weird food (kimchi for Koreans, Vegemite for us). Anyway thank God the Europeans discovered the Americas or we'd still be eating this stuff. Yuck.