Random books from rcss67's library
The Age of Capital, 1848-75 by E.J. Hobsbawm
The Legacy Of Rome: Scotland's Roman Remains by Lawrence Keppie
THE PENGUIN DICTIONARY OF MODERN HUMOROUS QUOTATIONS by Fred Metcalf
A History of Venice (Vintage) by John Julius Norwich
The Informers by Bret Easton Ellis
History of Rome from Its Foundation: Rome and the Mediterranean (Penguin Classics) by Livy
Companion Guide to Istanbul: and around the Marmara (Companion Guides) by John Freely
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Friends: MysteryWatcher, nikossf
Interesting libraries: Ammianus, Amyntoros, AncientHistorian, antiquary, CaiusFabius, chicagocoin, dnousek, esnible, Feicht, kingdorothy, Koray, mauseus, NeosAlexandria, OHgamer, omaca, pomonomo2003, RainMan, rjohara, Romanus, Rudolf, SeriousGrace, shikari, sphragis, Tiesenhausen, timspalding, TomVeal
LibraryThing authors: G. Traina (gtraina), Barry Strauss (publipor)
Member: rcss67
CollectionsYour library (518)
Reviews9 reviews
Tagsroman history (58), ancient history (54), Ancient History (53), fiction (52), Roman History (41), ancient greek history (35), history (33), History (25), historical fiction (22), english fiction (22) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
Groups18th-19th Century Britain, Alexander the Great, American Civil War, Ancient History, Archaeology, Arthurian Legends, Australian LibraryThingers, Biblical History, Byzantinistik, Chinaski's Stool — show all groups
About meStudying Ancient History at University of Western Australia.
Courtesans and fishcakes
THe Inheritance of Rome
Rome Enters the Greek East
Thundering Zeus
About my libraryMainly non-fiction these days, have thrown out a lot of fiction i read in my younger days
Real nameRob Smith
LocationPerth, Western Australia
Emailrcss67
hotmail.com
Favorite authorsNone
Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/rcss67 (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/rcss67 (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (72), Awards (135), Characters (979), Places (267)
Member sinceJun 10, 2006









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posted by Garp83 at 5:48 pm (EST) on Jun 5, 2009
posted by Garp83 at 5:31 pm (EST) on Jun 5, 2009
posted by Garp83 at 5:25 pm (EST) on Jun 5, 2009
posted by Garp83 at 8:52 pm (EST) on Jun 4, 2009
So what's your honours' thesis topic? Have you picked yet?
posted by MysteryWatcher at 8:35 pm (EST) on May 28, 2009
posted by MysteryWatcher at 6:53 am (EST) on May 23, 2009
This is a nice place!
posted by omaca at 8:32 pm (EST) on May 22, 2009
posted by SageWoodWitch at 3:24 pm (EST) on Apr 20, 2008
posted by ranzigebunzing at 8:54 am (EST) on Dec 19, 2007
Jen (Mysterywatcher)
posted by MysteryWatcher at 12:07 am (EST) on Oct 19, 2007
posted by Romanus at 12:21 pm (EST) on Jul 28, 2007
posted by cedric at 7:55 am (EST) on Nov 15, 2006
posted by dnousek at 10:00 am (EST) on Aug 24, 2006
posted by dnousek at 10:18 am (EST) on Aug 21, 2006
posted by notmyrealname at 12:41 am (EST) on Aug 18, 2006
posted by notmyrealname at 12:17 am (EST) on Aug 18, 2006
posted by berthirsch at 8:05 pm (EST) on Jul 31, 2006
Biting sarcasm is his most endearing trait in my opinion. Yes, sometimes the tangents go down the rabbit hole but it remains entertaining. Julian and Burr will be added to the list. I will be keeping my eye on you and Tim for leads on history reading adventures.
posted by ponder at 4:44 pm (EST) on Jul 26, 2006
posted by ponder at 10:38 am (EST) on Jul 26, 2006
Does this statement refer to metal coins?
I don't know if this would count in a modern definition of currency, but it's probably the closest definition from really early (3000BCE-ish) times. There are clay tokens found much earlier than 600BCE in many cultures, mostly in ancient Mesopotamia, which may have also been used like a form of currency. Strong evidence as counting aids, loose evidence as currency - there are several theories that many of the tokens could have been used as a kind of marker at the temple - i.e. tax paid, number and type of offerings made, that kind of thing.
Google Scholar search yielded:
"The Cradle of Cash" by Heather Pringle, originally published in Discover magazine, October 1998
http://www.dushkin.com/text-data/article...
posted by purplestoregirl at 2:44 am (EST) on Jul 26, 2006