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Racisme: comment le mythe des statues grecques a alimenté la fausse idée sur la supériorité européenne

Racisme: comment le mythe des statues grecques a alimenté la fausse idée sur la supériorité européenne
bbc.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bbc.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Cómo el mito de las estatuas griegas blancas alimentó la falsa idea de la superioridad europea

Cómo el mito de las estatuas griegas blancas alimentó la falsa idea de la superioridad europea
bbc.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bbc.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Roman Propaganda techniques and the Story of Emperor Caligula

Roman Propaganda techniques and the Story of Emperor Caligula By Agha Iqrar Haroon  “Kill him, kill them all. Nobody shall place two coins for boatman on Senator’s eyes. Let him die without the opportunity of sailing out of this world and return back”. These words are cited referring to the brutality of Roman Emperor Caligula. The writer of these words was historian Suetonius who said that Caligula was exceptionally ruthless and he showed no mercy even to his deceased opponents. Placing two coins on eyes is a myth of Charon and the deceased had a moral right of having two coins on his eyes in Roman culture because when he would wake up out of the dream of death, he would give one coin to the sailor of life to bring him back to the human world.

Archaeologists Have Found the Roman Emperor Hadrian s Palatial Breakfast Chamber, Where He Dined Before Servants on a Marble Throne

The emperor started each day with an impressive display of power. February 10, 2021 Maritime Theater, Hadrian s villa (UNESCO World Heritage List, 1999), Tivoli, Lazio, Italy. Roman civilisation, 2nd century AD. (Photo by DeAgostini/Getty Images) Archaeologists working at the sprawling 200-acre site of Hadrian’s Villa in Tivoli have discovered a breakfast room where the Roman emperor would dine with his wife, Vibia Sabina. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the estate was constructed around 120 AD and served as a retreat for the emperor when he wanted to relax outside of his Palatine Hill palace residence in Rome. Some nine years later, Hadrian began living full time at the villa, ruling and from 20 miles east of the capital. 

Archaeologists discover table where Roman emperor Hadrian held power breakfasts at foot of Apennines

Archaeologists studying a villa owned by the Roman emperor Hadrian have found a breakfast room they believe was used to display imperial power.From the moment he got up in the morning Hadrian was on

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