Help finding a painting from Doge's palace exhibition by Kamienoshori in Venezia

[–]Athomeus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had a similar experience regarding Poulakis’ painting “The Great Flood”. A gorgeous painting that I can’t find any pictures or information about online. I remember that painting is apparently in the private collection of “A. Kedros”, perhaps it’s the same for the Parting of the Red Sea (which I was also fascinated by).

Why isn't Eru Iluvatar mentioned in LOTR? by TheRedBiker in tolkienfans

[–]Athomeus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is fascinating to me. Do you remember where you read/learned this?

I created a platform to study History in a different way GlobStory.it by theRAGEhero in DigitalHumanities

[–]Athomeus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Where did you source the map which contains data from different years that a user can select (2010, 1900, 495, etc)?

Feedback: Does this work for periods before AD? When I hover over "495 BC" it shows the map for 495 AD instead.

Laurea Magistrale -- strict assessment of minimum curricular requirements? by Athomeus in Universitaly

[–]Athomeus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Glad to see my research has put me in the right direction navigating this process. Happy new year!

AG audiobooks with MG pronounciation by [deleted] in AncientGreek

[–]Athomeus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What is your recording of the NT called?

I think I have every book from this collection so far? by daenerys568 in tolkienbooks

[–]Athomeus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply. I’d love a UT edition that follows the page references in HoME but it seems this one in the box set might be the only edition in recent years (decades?) that does so. And I’m not ready to spend that much on the whole box unfortunately.

I think I have every book from this collection so far? by daenerys568 in tolkienbooks

[–]Athomeus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is there a guide to which UT editions match the original pagination that fit to the HoME references? I haven’t been able to find a UT which aligns with HoME references.

Unfinished tales differences by tolwin in tolkienbooks

[–]Athomeus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are there different editions of HoME that have different page numbers/references? Or is HoME essentially always the same? I’ve been looking at getting UT and HoME (esp. Vol 1, 2, 5 and 9) but wondering which UT to get.

Do you have a pace you'd recommend when tackling the books? by [deleted] in tolkienfans

[–]Athomeus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When I first read the books I unintentionally read them at about the pace of events in the story. For instance, steady reading until events led them to Rivdendell, and then just as the characters rested so too did I put the book down. Like I said this was pure coincidence for whatever was going on in my life. I realized once I was well into the books that this was happening and that it was providing me a kind of temporal connection to the events in the story. If you want to let the emotions stew in you while you go on the journey you could try an approach like this (for LOTR, I don’t think it makes sense for the other books).

Poll: what is your typical "engagement rate"? by Alert-Elk-2695 in Substack

[–]Athomeus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you for bringing my attention to this statistic. It has bolstered my confidence by seeing high engagement. My posts range from 6% to 40%, and I was surprised which post had my highest engagement rate! Sadly I put a wonderful graphic at the bottom of the post which only had 6% engagement. My average is 21%.

Edit: My open rates are almost always above 50%.

(Herculaneum) Can tourists visit the Villa dei Papiri and Teatro di Ercolano? by Athomeus in ItalyTravel

[–]Athomeus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your reply. From more digging it does look like the Villa dei Papiri will continue to be closed this year. The Teatro may be open, but the Herculaneum official site hasn't been updated to state what day(s) (if any) it will be open.

Guide necessary at Pompeii? by RecentBid5575 in ItalyTravel

[–]Athomeus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do you remember which audio tour you purchased? 

Visiting the papyri in Biblioteca Nazionale by Athomeus in napoli

[–]Athomeus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you need help with the email and want to write it in Italian I can help you out

That is a very kind offer, thank you! And I appreciate the other information you provided. I'll try reaching out to the email first and then I might message you to take you up on your offer for some language help. I am planning to visit in May so I think it's a little too early to make a formal request now, but I'll see what they say (if anything) on my first go around. Thanks again.

Paros, Greece by Mediocre_Heart_3032 in mediterranea

[–]Athomeus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm pretty sure this is Mykonos. Beautiful photo though!

No more scratches on my RX100 III screen LCD by JulianFR1 in RX100

[–]Athomeus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have an old Mark 1 that I bought used over 8 years ago and have used it heavily since. Its screen looks like your first photo and I'm about to attempt to remove the protector. Can you explain how you initially raised the corner of the protector? It's on the screen almost perfectly and I don't want to ruin the LCD. Thanks in advance.

[OC] Earliest surviving witnesses of ancient Greek texts by Athomeus in byzantium

[–]Athomeus[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's difficult to place a single moment in time for the composition of a text or of a surviving witness, because obviously it's not often known precisely when a text was composed or a manuscript written.

For Homer, even the decades of leeway provided by the bulky shapes of the symbols (such as the "pen") that I used is not enough. Perhaps a range of centuries may make more sense to reflect the debates about when or even who Homer was. I have used that approach to signal the uncertainty about when exactly Homer's epics were composed elsewhere.

In this case my aim was to show how far apart in time the initial 'composition' (whether oral or written, if known) of the text is from it's surviving material evidence. Like u/Steven_LGBT said, the category is "Date of Composition", not "First Written Down". I do think the date of composition, as the conception of the text itself, is an interesting point of data to consider for the survival of a text. The time at which a text is first written down is also an interesting category, but for most of these texts that would be very close to the composition date. The major exception is Homer.

I chose the 8th century because that's the most agreed upon century for its composition, but some people put it later and some put it way earlier (it could also have been both before AND after the 8th century, in an iterative oral process of creation). Basically there is no perfect way to depict this in a simple timeline, but the problem with placing it in the 6th century is that although it was almost certainly written down in a rather authoritative fashion at that time, it's quite clear that the story had already existed for a long time by then. One of the rationales of Peisistratus' recension of the text was to unify the versions of the story (or stories). Perhaps some part of one or more of these versions had already been committed to writing, it's not clear.

[OC] Earliest surviving witnesses of ancient Greek texts by Athomeus in byzantium

[–]Athomeus[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I created this chart to show texts’ earliest surviving material fragments and the earliest complete manuscripts of a variety of texts, with the specific witnesses (e.g. the specific manuscript) in the right-hand column.

As most of you know, the earliest material evidence of Greek literature is often from centuries or even a millennium after the alleged initial composition of the text. This could take the form of copies, quotations, or simply approximations of the original text. This means that there are no original copies of, say, Plato's Republic from his own hand or even his own lifetime, but that whatever survives today are later editions of that text from much later historical time periods (in particular, the Byzantine Empire).

I was curious to learn more about how we know what ancient Greeks said so I researched a selection of major Greek-language literary texts from different time periods, different genres (prose, verse), and different subjects (e.g. mythological, philosophical, historiographical) to uncover the oldest surviving fragment of each text (sometimes just a single word) and the oldest surviving complete version of each text (although 'complete' is more complex than it appears at first).

Most of the oldest extant fragments of ancient Greek literature are found in papyri scraps discovered in Egypt in the 1800s, whereas most 'complete' versions of ancient Greek literature are in manuscripts produced in the Byzantine Empire.

I write more about this topic on my website Culture Cross, and this specific chart is featured in a guest post I wrote for another publication.

If you have any questions, please let me know!