Lucy Lawless to go nude for ”Spartacus’

Washington, March 27 (ANI): ‘Xena: Warrior Princess’ star Lucy Lawless will soon be seen nude in new series ”Spartacus’.

The actress has apparently filmed steamy scenes with both men and women for the Starz show.

Moreover, some actors have apparently used prosthetic sex parts.

“I think everyone”s got [a merkin] just for fun,” Fox News quoted Lawless as telling Uinterview.com.

She added: “Mine, I haven”t had to break it out yet. Though [laughs] next season, maybe! Yeah, wait for it!”

Referring to the character she plays, she said: “My character is not supposed to be ripped. She”s a woman. It”s Ancient Rome.

“It”s not like they were popping off to the gym every two seconds, but they were very image conscious, that”s for sure.” (ANI)

Ancient Roman Christians liked eating fish

London, April 11 (ANI): A recent research on bones from the Roman catacombs has suggested that in ancient Rome, Christians preferred to eat a lot of fish, which indicates that the eating habits of Rome’s early Christians were more complex than has traditionally been assumed.

According to a report in the Times, the research was conducted by Leonard Rutgers and his colleagues in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

Their work was based on analysis of 22 skeletons found in the Catacombs of St Callixtus on the Appian Way, an area utilized in the 3rd to 5th centuries AD.

The Roman catacombs together hold an estimated half million tombs, and that of St Callixtus is one of the largest complexes of interlinking underground caverns, where the more noticeable graves were simple shelf graves called loculi and a series of monumental burial chambers called cubicula.

Half of the sample of fish bones was taken from loculi, half from cubicula burials.

Bone preservation was poor, making sexing and ageing difficult, although one person was definitely very old, between 82 and 85 at death, while another was a breast-fed baby of around 2.

Collagen, the organic portion of bone, was taken mostly from toe bones, in a few cases from fingers or limb bones. It was analysed for its carbon and nitrogen stable-isotope content: these elements are good indicators of diet.

Most samples had more or less the same isotopic levels, “confirming that the people buried in the Liberian region of the catacomb formed a single population and suggesting that, by and large, these people had access to the same kind of food resources,” the research team reported.

Comparing the catacomb results with those from other sites in Italy and in the western Mediterranean, the higher nitrogen and lower carbon figures indicate the consumption of freshwater fish.

The contribution of such fish to the diet of the early Christians in Rome ranges from 18 to 43 per cent, averaging at around 30 per cent.

Although this is surprisingly high, fish were still a supplement to an otherwise terrestrial diet, likely to have included sheep, goat and cow meat as well as cereals, fruit and vegetables.

According to the researchers, “While distancing themselves from Jewish food taboos and generally avoiding meat derived from pagan sacrifices, the early Christians are normally hypothesised to have eaten the same food as their non-Christian Roman contemporaries.”

“Within the larger context of what is currently known about Roman dietary habits, the inclusion of freshwater fish therefore comes as unexpected and raises questions about the social origins of hristianity as well,” they added. (ANI)

In Germany, an outpost of Pompeii shows its age

Aschaffenburg, Germany – So ancient is Europe that even a “new” building often seems as battered and worn as an “old” one. East of Frankfurt, restorers have struggled to remove the scars of nearly 160 years from a reproduction Roman villa which used to offer a vision of luxury living in the Italian city of Pompeii before a volcanic eruption on August 24 in 79 AD.

Mount Vesuvius exploded, raining ash on the city, sending streams of lava racing down the mountainside and suffocating its people with toxic gases. In three days, the Italian city was covered by a 2.6- metre-thick layer of volcanic material.

In the 19th century, archaeological excavations brought much of the city back to light, inspiring not just a fascination with Roman life but also a desire to look beyond the faded frescoes, grey old stone and blank marble of Ancient Rome and visualize it in full colour.

The Pompejanum was built in the German city of Aschaffenburg as a replica of a villa in Pompeii. The rich reds, intense blues and greens of its wall paintings are a shock to anyone expecting the dullness of the ancient ruins.

“The excavations were expanding during the reign of King Ludwig I of Bavaria,” explained a Pompejanum art historian, Werner Helmberger.

Like many educated Europeans, Ludwig had made the Grand Tour to Italy and had been fascinated by the discoveries.

“He noticed how quickly the colourful Roman frescoes faded when they were brought to light,” said Georg Fahrenschon, today’s Bavarian finance minister, who oversaw funding of the replica’s restoration. That gave him the idea of building a reproduction villa.

“He never intended to live there. Its purpose was to educate Bavarians about classical architecture,” said Helmberger.

In 1843, Ludwig laid the foundation stone at Aschaffenburg, a town in the far north of his kingdom, and the replica with its colourful interior was completed in 1850. But within a century it was as much a ruin as Pompeii was.

During the Second World War, the US Army shelled Aschaffenburg. The walls of the Pompejanum were smashed and the frescoes lost. The building is close to the Main River, and dampness from the soil crept into what was left, worsening the damage, along with vandalism.

Teenagers lit campfires in the rooms or scratched hearts into the plaster. A bullet which remains impacted in the nose of the goddess Hera in a mosaic apparently dates from those violent days.

Restoration of this outpost of Campania began in the 1960s. In the decades since, fashions in historical preservation have regularly changed and each phase followed different principles. The last, intensive phase began in 1989.

In line with current principles that advocate showing a building’s many phases, parts of the Pompejanum are fully restored to their 1848 state and others seem frozen in their state of war destruction in 1945.

The Housewife’s Room, opened to the public this month when the work was completed, has largely grey walls, where the US shells wrecked the frescoes. They have only been restored at a few spots.

Restorer Armin Schmickl-Prochnow said: “We make a point of only using the materials of 2,000 years ago. They are simply earth pigments with some lime added to bond them.”

Raimund Wuensche, head of the Bavarian state antiquities collection, said the 12.7 million euros (17 million dollars) spent since the 1960s on restoring the Pompejanum had been well worth it.

“It’s a unique feeling here: the space, the frescoes, the culture, all in one place.”

New archaeological find explores life in ancient Roman town buried by volcano in 79 AD

Rome, March 23 (ANI): Archaeologists have uncovered a marble sculpture dating back to the 1st century AD in the ancient roman town of Herculaneum, which has been sent to Naples, where it will join a major exhibition exploring life in the city buried by Mt. Vesuvius in 79 AD.

According to Roman news agency ANSA, the show, running until April 13, already features over 150 artefacts and human remains uncovered over the last three centuries, but the new relief, uncovered by accident last month, is stirring fresh interest.

The marble sculpture, dating back to the 1st century AD, apparently depicts two separate scenes centred on Dionysius, the Greek counterpart of Ancient Rome’s god of wine and merrymaking, Bacchus.

“The relief is particularly fascinating for scholars as we are not yet certain exactly the tale that is being reproduced on the work,” explained Herculaneum’s excavation chief Maria Paola Guidobaldi.

“It almost certainly shows Dionysius and what appears to be one of his female followers, a Maenad, dancing. However, there are also two other figures, one with men’s hair and the other wearing female clothes that aren’t yet clear,” she added.

“It was very probably some kind of offering, perhaps a thanksgiving, much as people make today to patron saints,” she further added.

The Greek marble relief was uncovered by accident in Herculaneum on February 18, during regular maintenance work.

It was located in a luxurious residential building on the northwest block of the town, which has only been partly excavated so far.

The relief was fixed in the eastern wall of a large room, at about two metres above the ground.

It appears to have been designed as a partner for another relief, located at the same level on the southern wall of the room, which was removed in 1997.

“The find is particularly important owing to the interpretation of the scene it shows, which is still an open question,” said Pompeii Superintendent Pietro Giovanni Guzzo.

“So far no one has been able to find a connection between the two separate scenes dividing the relief, the dancer and the homage to Dionysius,” he added.

While Pompeii was covered by hot ash and lava, Herculaneum, its less famous neighbour disappeared under an avalanche of molten rock.

This mingled with mud and earth and solidified, allowing fragile organic matter like wood, fabrics, wax tablets and papyrus rolls to survive.

Archaeologists began digging at the site at the start of the 1700s and continue to make discoveries today. (ANI)