Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Troy. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Troy. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 28 de agosto de 2020

Rome, the eternal (part 2).

 

The Legend.


Anaeas carrying Anchises. Black figures oinochoe, ca. 520-510 bC.
Photo: Bibi Saint-Pol, 2007. Louvre Museum, Paris, France.

On the banks of the Tiber, something unusual disrupted the monotony of the day. A basket was hardly floating over the turbulent water, till it got stuck at a crook of the river. Curious, the first to get close, was a she-wolf, whose cubs were surely waiting for her. Drooling greedy, stared at two new born babies. For a merciless hunter, it meant the chance of having an easy feast. However, an invisible force stopped the beast, and was stronger than her instinct! Since that moment, stranger as it may seem, the wolf took care of both infants and feeded them as her own cubs. Obviously, the children were under the protection of the gods. But, who were them? Why had someone given them to the waters of the river?

lunes, 24 de agosto de 2020

Rome, the eternal (part 1).


Maquette of Rome, Times of Constantine, by Italo Gismondi, ca. 1937.
Photo: Annie Dalbera, 2011. Lic. CC BY 2.0

Rome exerted an undeniable influence over the so called "Western culture". For several centuries, they imposed an omnimode power, ruling most part of the known world. In History, it would never happen again... The Pax Romana, despite all its faults, induced a cultural unit trending, along their vast domains. Of course, that finally brought interesting consequences. Later, when the roman empire decayed and fell, came stagnation times. But, the human spirit carried their good seed.