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What Was Socrates' Crime?

Socrates in Marble at the Archaeological Museum in Athens

Socrates was a great thinker and teacher. He even did his civic duty, including military service. Despite his contributions to Athens he was sentenced to death by poison. What did he do to deserve the death penalty?

More on Ancient Athens

N.S.Gill's Ancient History Blog

2009 - The Year of the Gladiator

Wednesday January 7, 2009
Umberto Broccoli, head of the archaeology team on Rome's city council, says 2009 will bring the return of the gladiator to the Colosseum, according to MSNBC:
According to Broccoli's plan, modern-day gladiators will engage in realistically choreographed mock fights, wearing original costumes and the same combat gear — swords, tridents, nets and daggers — that was used 2,000 years ago.
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Wordless Wednesday - Calakmul

Wednesday January 7, 2009
Stele 51 from Calakmul on display at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City.
Stele 51 from Calakmul on display at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City.
Thelmadatter

Wordless Wednesday and About.com's Wordless Wednesday

Join the Online Book Chat

Monday January 5, 2009
Did you know that for most of the year forum co-host Irene Hahn hosts a Roman history online book chat? You can find out more about the general parameters of the chat in the Ancient/Classical History Forum.

The chat is held on the first and third Wednesdays (although I suppose in some areas of the world it may already be Thursday). Books are usually available at public libraries. Sometimes it's historical fiction and sometimes it's straightforward Roman history. Right now it's history as we return to reading T.J. Cornell's dense and often iconoclastic The Beginnings of Rome. The first chapter for Wednesday's chat is 11, which is on the 12 Tables and the Decemvirate.

Please join us. Remember to look for details here: Ancient/Classical History Forum.

The Decemvirate and the Conflict of the Orders

More from T. J. Cornell

This Day in Ancient History - Cicero

Saturday January 3, 2009
Cicero
Cicero Photo © Clipart.com
On this day in 106 B.C., the Roman orator and statesman Marcus Tullius Cicero was born in Arpinum, the son of an equestrian. Cicero was a major figure in politics during the age of Caesar. He became consul in 63 during which year he put down the Conspiracy of Catiline. He was later exiled for his heavy-handedness in executing the Roman conspirators without trial. He ran into trouble again after the assassination of Julius Caesar by supporting the losing side against the triumvirate, Mark Antony, Octavian (Augustus), and Lepidus. He was executed in 43.

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