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quodnonnecatemunit · 4 months
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Tenerani Spina - Exhibition at 'Museo di Roma', in Piazza Navona. I am quite sure I've already seen something like this in Fallout
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quodnonnecatemunit · 5 months
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"The Caffarella Valley borders the Latin way (via Latina) to the north and the ancient Appian Way to the south. It extends lengthways from the ancient Roman Aurelian’s Wall up to via dell’Almone. Today it is an oasis amidst sprawling high-rise buildings comprising a fascinating mix of archaeological and ecological wonders set in a picturesque rural landscape. This includes green fields, ancient monuments, old farm buildings, woods and ponds all merging into a single, unifying complex of uppermost importance not only for its immediate neighboring communities, but for the community as a whole as well as for scientists worldwide."
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quodnonnecatemunit · 5 months
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Help needed!!
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Hey so I've been kind of stuck in a hole. My regular banking account has 12 dollars in it, and I need to pay this off in my credit card.
I've been looking for employment but have had little luck so far. Most of this is built up over a few months of having to buy food pretty much every day in order to not starve, with a couple of other purchases thrown in.
Literally anything helps, even reblogs.
Only got pay-pal, sorry
0/617
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quodnonnecatemunit · 7 months
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Non-Catholic Cemetery, Rome, Italy. It is near Porta San Paolo and adjacent to the Pyramid of Cestius, a small-scale Egyptian-style pyramid built between 18 and 12 BCE as a tomb and later incorporated into the section of the Aurelian Walls that borders the cemetery. It has Mediterranean cypress, pomegranate and other trees, and a grassy meadow. It is the final resting place of non-Catholics including but not exclusive to Protestants or British people. The earliest known burial is that of a Dr Arthur, a Protestant medical doctor hailing from Edinburgh, in 1716. The English poets John Keats and Percy Bysshe Shelley, as well as Russian painter Karl Briullov and Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci are buried there. Since the norms of the Catholic Church forbade burying on consecrated ground non-Catholics – including Protestants, Jews and Orthodox – as well as suicides (these, after death, were "expelled" by the Christian community and buried outside the walls or at the extreme edge of the same), burials occurred at night to avoid manifestations of religious fanaticism and to preserve the safety of those who participated in the funeral rites.
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quodnonnecatemunit · 8 months
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Palazzo Massimo - Rome Inspired by the magnificent palaces of the 16th century, Palazzo Massimo was built between 1883 and 1887 by the Jesuit priest Massimiliano Massimo, based on a design by Camillo Pistrucci, to house the new Jesuit school. In 1981, the Palazzo was acquired by the Italian Government to become one of the new sites for the National Roman Museum. A radical renovation of the building was entrusted to Costantino Dardi and the Palazzo opened to the public in 1998. Since then, the original installation has been revised and adjusted on a number of occasions, interweaving the various threads of the exhibition using a design based on chronology and theme. By referring to the contexts in which the artefacts were found, this creates the suggestion that different works are jumbled together as in the bustling collections of the 16th century. Now, moving through the rooms of the Palazzo Massimo is like leafing through the pages of a wonderful book. Its four floors contain some of the greatest masterpieces of the entire artistic output of the Roman world: sculptures, reliefs, frescos, mosaics, stuccoes and sarcophagi, originating, like all of the treasures of the National Roman Museum, from excavations undertaken in Rome and the surrounding region from 1870 onwards. The route of the visit begins with the theme of the portrait and its evolution, from exclusive use by the most illustrious citizens in the Archaic Period to the widespread use of portraits among freedmen, from portraits of Greek origin, such as those of Alexander the Great, to those of simple Roman citizens eager for self-celebration at the end of the Republic, like the Tivoli General, and new forms of portraiture linked to the birth of the Empire, such as Augustus dressed as the Pontifex Maximus. Greek originals in marble, such as the Niobid from the Horti Sallustiani (Gardens of Sallust), and in bronze, including the Boxer at Rest and the Hellenistic Prince from the Baths of Constantine, are typical examples of the models of Greek art that came to Rome with the wars of conquest. Continuing the history of portraits in the Imperial Age, the first floor displays the Roman taste for reworkings and copies of ideal sculptures, like the Discobolus of Myron, presented in two well-known reproductions – the Lancellotti Discobolus and the Discobolus of Castel Porziano -, the Sleeping Hermaphroditus, the Aphrodite of Menophantos, and innumerable works depicting gods and mythological figures. However, sculpture also became a means of expression for celebrating victories at the borders of the Empire, such as the monumental Portonaccio sarcophagus, and a method for paying tribute to the greatness of well-known figures in the society of the late Roman Empire, as can be seen from the Acilia and Annona Sarcophagi. The second floor of the Palazzo is dedicated entirely to frescos, stuccoes and mosaics. One element that is fundamental in fully grasping the taste and aesthetic sense of the Roman aristocracy is the superb wall decorations of major archaeological complexes, such as the Villa di Livia in Prima Porta, the Villa Farnesina in Trastevere and the Villa di Termini. The basement level offers a selection from the collections from the National Roman Museum’s Coin and Medal Collection and is dedicated to the economy and the use of money, interpreted through an exhibition of coins, jewellery, precious ornaments and documents relating to the daily cost of life.
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quodnonnecatemunit · 8 months
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quodnonnecatemunit · 8 months
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quodnonnecatemunit · 8 months
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Torre Argentina in Rome: a sanctuary for history and cats. (Extrapolated from Roman Cats Torre Argentina Cat Sanctuary official site https://www.gattidiroma.net/web/en/ )
The workers that in 1926 were busy demolishing the crumbling Medieval houses in the area of via San Nicola de’ Cesarini would not have fancied finding themselves in front of the austere face of a huge statue of a goddess. A fierce dispute between the owners of the area and the archaelogists, who wanted to go on with the excavations and with the conservation of the area, soon turned on and only in 1928, thanks to the Head of Government at the time, the dispute was solved in favour of the Ministry of Fine Arts.
The name “Argentina” does not refer either to the nation or to the metal, it comes from the Latin name of a tower that had been built in the 15th century by Johannes Burckardt, Master of Ceremonies of Pope Alessandro VI Borgia, who was born in Strasbourg….that is Argentoratum! And for the inhabitants of Rome, it’s a short step to go from Argentoratum to Argentina!
Now the tower is not there to be seen any more, since it has been incorporated in buildings that showed up later on.
1929 was the year the sacred area of Torre Argentina was excavated. This was also the year the history of the cats' residency began. Stray and abandoned felines took refuge in the protected area below stree​t level. From 19​​29 until 1993, the cats were more or less regulary fed by a succession of cat ladies or "gattare".
One of the most famous of these cat lovers was the great Italian filmstar Anna Magnani. While working at Teatro Argentina which borders the ruins, Ms. Magnani would spend her breaks feeding her four legged friends. This film legend, famous for her heart-tugging performances, died in the 1960's.
Lia and Silvia started working with the cats in 1993 when they began helping a woman who was running the show alone: feeding, spaying and neutering all the cats. Her generous efforts put her on the verge of an economic and emotional collapse. Soon Lia and Silvia realised there was a lot more work than the three women could manage. In that year the cat population was 90 and growing due to the irresponsibility of people abandoning their cats and kittens, perhaps to go on vacation. And so, Torre Argentina Cat Sanctuary was born.
Working conditions were primitive to say the least. A cave like area under the street had been unwittingly created by the construction of the street and the pillars that sustain it long before the cat shelter began. It had a floor space of about 100 sq. meters and it began as a night shelter for the cats and as a storage place for cat food. It was a difficult and frustrating job. Caring for more than 90 cats in a damp underground space, in many places so low that one cannot stand up and no electricity or running water. For almost a year and a half Silvia and Lia worked under these conditions, hoping for a breakthrough or a guide through this dark period.
Their prayers were answered in 1995 when a savior arrived: an English woman named Molga Salvalaggio. She told Silvia and Lia about the wonderful achievements of certain English organizations who worked in animal protection and she put them in contact with A.I.S.P.A. (Anglo-Italian Society for the Protection of Animals). A.I.S.P.A. was the first organisation to give material as well as moral support. In addition, they introduced Silvia and Lia to English resources concerning stray cats and solutions to frequent problems who studied this invaluable information and began the slow process of imitating English role models.
The first job was to raise desperately needed funds. The primitive location had one great advantage; it was a tourist attraction because of the historical and archaeological significance of the ruins. Painfully swallowing pride and embarrassment Silvia and Lia started approaching tourists who seemed more interested in the cats than the ruins and asked for donations. Unbelievably it worked! Not only did they collect needed cash, they also managed to attract a certain number of volunteers; mostly women of many different nationalities, Italian, French German, American, English, Brazilian, and Dutch. Torre Argentina became a sort of United Nations for cats. To raise more money they started organizing fundraising dinners, raffles and flea market sales.​
In September of 1998, a Captain of the U.S. Navy, John Henriksen and his wife Cheryl generously opened their home to 120 people for a dinner, auction and raffle, our first Gala. Later, Alexandra Richardson, wife to the British Ambassador allowed the volunteers to hold a fundraiser/Gala at her residence. Several more Gala’s followed the following years and provided badly needed funds.
With the newly found income, TA could afford cat food of better quality and the new burst of enthusiasm also motivated Silvia, Lia and their team of volunteers to become more professional and organized in daily operations.  Now their cats, in addition to ALL being dutifully neutered, are also ALL vaccinated, tested and free from internal and external parasites. What remains after having provided for the animals is shared with other less fortunate colonies here in Rome.
Obviously sterilization is the top priority. People who manage cat sanctuaries can have help for the sterilization of their cats from the veterinarians affiliated with the Torre Argentina sanctuary and are also able to help private citizens who are not well-off.
The reduction of feline stray animals is the main purpose of the activity of the Torre Argentina sanctuary which wants to be known above all as a Center for the Promotion of Sterilization and not as a reception center for stray cats in difficulty. But the popularity of the colony also among the Romans means that the requests for hospitality are always higher than the real possibilities of the organization itself. They are therefore forced to severely limit the access of new animals only to those cases that offer no other possibility of solution. However, mutilated, blind or variously suffering from disability cats are welcomed with absolute precedence.
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quodnonnecatemunit · 9 months
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In 1555 Pope Paul IV established the ghetto, a run-down district where Jews were forced to live apart from the rest of the population. It wasn't the healthiest of places, since it often was submerged in water due to Tiber floods. Finally in 1870 Jews were free and in the next decades the whole area will be demolished and rebuilt over the level of the river. The new neighborhood as we see it nowadays extends over an area of four city blocks, crossed by Via Catalana and Via del Tempio; it is delimited on one side by Via Portico d’Ottavia and on the other by the Tiber river. Expert tour guides from the Museum will accompany you on a pleasant walk through the picturesque lanes, streets and piazzas of the Jewish neighborhood. From Lungotevere De’ Cenci, to San Grgorio’s Church, Largo 16 Ottobre, passing trough Via del Portico d’Ottavia, Via della Reginella, Piazza delle Cinque Scole and Largo Stefano Tachè. The “Jewish Ghetto” is a lively showplace of a modern and ancient Rome. Even though most of the original area desappeared, there are still visible evidences and tangible testaments of its history. In 1870, with the breach of Porta Pia, the Italian Army conquered Rome and the city, with all its territory, was absorbed into the Kingdom of Italy: the temporal power of the popes had ended. Later on, Rome was declared as the capital of the Kingdom. In the nineteenth century the Jews reached, as in the rest of Europe, full emancipation and equal civil rights. From then, the Jewish communities were able to erect, after centuries of limitations, their monumental synagogues. The Jews decided to build the most impressive synagogue in the city, the Great Synagogue, in the same neighborhood where, for centuries, they used to be locked up. The building stands in the area of ​​the former ghetto, which had been demolished and reclaimed, by following the 1888 town plan. The winners of the public competition for the new synagogue project were Osvaldo Armanni and Vincenzo Costa. The Synagogue was inaugurated in 1904. The monumental building is surmounted by a square-based dome, which is covered in aluminum. The interior, with its bimah (pulpit) placed in a way that does not exactly conform to the tradition of the “Roman rite”, is richly decorated in art nouveau style.
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quodnonnecatemunit · 9 months
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The Jewish Museum of Rome is located in the Great Synagogue monumental complex. Walking across the different rooms you can see a reconstruction of Jewish life in Rome since the earliest settlement in the second century before the Common Era.
The Jewish community has been living continuously in Rome for 2,200 years, making it one of the oldest communities outside of Israel. The exhibits on display in the museum date back principally to the ghetto period (1555-1870) and all come from the original ‘Five Synagogues’ building. The rich collection includes liturgical furnishings, manuscripts, incunabula, historical documents, records and marble works. Since 1960, the museum displayed its treasures in a single room, but the study and cataloguing of all the works required a larger display area. The new exhibit was inaugurated in 2005. The museum covers an area of 700 square meters and unfolds through seven rooms with different themes. It offers a reconstruction of the Jewish people life in Rome and shows us how they managed to integrate into the socio-economic structure of the city, while they maintained their own identity.
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quodnonnecatemunit · 9 months
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Trajan's Market - Rome
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quodnonnecatemunit · 9 months
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Rome Appreciation Post 1
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quodnonnecatemunit · 9 months
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Romanitas - Part 2
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quodnonnecatemunit · 9 months
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Romanitas - Part 1.
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quodnonnecatemunit · 11 months
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Sulla also destroyed the roman constitutional system through the civil war and gave an example of how order could only be brought back by a militarized party. Way to go!
Elon Musk just announced he's an unironic Sulla fanboy and I'm devastated
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this is so embarrassing for him honestly. like where even to start. what do you think that he likes most about sulla. like is it inventing civil war? writing his own personal hit list and then having hundreds of people killed? most of his reforms being reversed by his own supporters within like ten years? partying himself to death?
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quodnonnecatemunit · 1 year
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Rome, Capitol Hill, Musei Capitolini [3] #rome #capitolhill #museicapitolini #history #art #statue
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quodnonnecatemunit · 1 year
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Rome, Capitol Hill, Musei Capitolini [2] #rome #capitolhill #museicapitolini #history #art #statue
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