Tyrone Biggums
Well-known member
The signs were always there but nobody was paying attention.
James Reyne was thinking about the Romans back in 1987
James Reyne was thinking about the Romans back in 1987
That is possibly the weirdest thing I've ever read. Obviously I'm thinking about the Roman Empire right now, but no, I can't say it's a subject that crops up regularly in my thoughts. Certainly if I'm sitting on the sofa with a faraway look in my eyes my wife never says "You're thinking about the Roman Empire again aren't you?"The Roman empire: why men just can’t stop thinking about it
Women across the world are asking men how often the ancient civilisation pops into their head – and the answer is frequently startlingwww.theguardian.com
Not sure what is weirder, the fact that this is a thing or the fact that apparently men think about the Roman Empire a lot!
That is possibly the weirdest thing I've ever read. Obviously I'm thinking about the Roman Empire right now, but no, I can't say it's a subject that crops up regularly in my thoughts. Certainly if I'm sitting on the sofa with a faraway look in my eyes my wife never says "You're thinking about the Roman Empire again aren't you?"
V minute jobWell I reckon builders, architects, bricklayers, handymen, town planners etc. think about it all the time because their stock excuse if things go tits up is “Rome wasn’t built in a day”.
Yes yes yes, but you could carry that line of argument back to the stone ageWell, technically speaking that's not quite true. It was a kingdom until Tarquinus Superbus's son decided to rape Lucretia and set in train events that led to the establishment of the Roman Republic.
It was a republic for 400 odd years, administered by a dictator, although not in the sense we'd know it as he'd still be bound by laws of Rome. That changed with Sulla who gave the dictator more power and changed more radically under Julius Caesar, who became a dictator as we'd understand the term - hence his assassination in 44BC. Rome then became a true republic for 17 years before Octavius took over and became Caesar Augustus
And is that where I Claudius began ?Well, technically speaking that's not quite true. It was a kingdom until Tarquinus Superbus's son decided to rape Lucretia and set in train events that led to the establishment of the Roman Republic.
It was a republic for 400 odd years, administered by a dictator, although not in the sense we'd know it as he'd still be bound by laws of Rome. That changed with Sulla who gave the dictator more power and changed more radically under Julius Caesar, who became a dictator as we'd understand the term - hence his assassination in 44BC. Rome then became a true republic for 17 years before Octavius took over and became Caesar Augustus
I for one am a big fan of Roman numerals.Depends on the day. Yesterday, I thought about it VII times but only IV times on Tuesday.
TVVATS!This should be a question for Pompeii fans shirley?