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RIH #30 - Rome Is REALLY Home

An episode of the Rome Is Home podcast, hosted by Jozef and Geneviève Maka, titled "RIH #30 - Rome Is REALLY Home" was published on September 8, 2019 and runs 29 minutes.

September 8, 2019 ·29m · Rome Is Home

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We made it to Rome! After many months of prayers, planning and stress, we finally made it! How was our journey here with the girls? How are we adjusting to life so far after one week? Find out more in our first Italian episode! www.patreon.com/romeishome Intro music: Strange Italian Song - Juanitos Support the show

We made it to Rome! After many months of prayers, planning and stress, we finally made it! How was our journey here with the girls? How are we adjusting to life so far after one week? Find out more in our first Italian episode!

www.patreon.com/romeishome

Intro music: Strange Italian Song - Juanitos

Support the show

Epics of Rome Dr Rhiannon Evans This subject explores Ancient Roman epic poetry, the literary genre which deals with grand mythical narratives involving heroes, gods, war, and love affairs. Epic was the most prestigious literary form in the ancient world. Roman poets adapted and developed Greek epic, particularly influenced by the Homeric Iliad and Odyssey. Roman epics similarly deal with divine and heroic material, but Roman poets also weave contemporary and topical themes into the mythical subject matter. The primary text for this subject is Ovid's Metamorphoses, which tells many comic tales of the gods in love and encounters between heroes and monsters through a series of transformations. Epics which influenced Ovid will also be studied, such as the Greek epics of Homer, the early Roman epics of Naevius and Ennius, and Virgil's Aeneid, which was the most significant influence on Ovid. We shall also consider Ovid as a major influence upon Western artists and writers, from Shakespeare to David Malouf. Pathways To Rome – Catholic Radio in South Carolina Father Jeffrey Kirby is joined by Atticus (Gus) Killough and Kathy Kerfoot Pathways to Rome: An Hour-long journey that brings Rome home to the local parishioner. Father Jeffrey Kirby is joined by Atticus (Gus) Killough and Kathy Kerfoot for a tour of the Vatican and how every artwork, building, or liturgical event can strengthen your understanding of Christianity and what lessons each of us on the local level might derive from the Center of the Catholic Faith. This is Your Life in Silicon Valley The Bold Italic Do you love HBO's Silicon Valley? Do you like reading about the latest technology trends? Then you'll love this show. Think of us as the real world/explain-it-how-it-is podcast for anyone with a Silicon Valley fetish. The Bay Area, San Francisco, and California in general are undergoing massive political and social change. We tackle issues like homelessness, the housing crisis, dating in the age of technology, startups, and other things you care about. How will it affect your life? It doesn't matter whether you live in New York, Texas, Arkansas, Bulgaria or Latvia - you will find something applicable to your day-to-day life from this show. And love it, or hate it the Silicon Valley/The Bay Area/California are the center of the technology universe right now. Insiders, and Valley apologists liken the Silicon Valley to Rome during the Renaissance. Others are more skeptical of the people in the Valley and their intentions. We examine life in the Valley by interviewing some of its most p From the Foundation of the City Vol. 01 by Titus Livius (55 BC - 17 AD) LibriVox Ab urbe condita, is a monumental history of ancient Rome written in the Latin language by Titus Livius(Livy), an ancient Roman historian. The work covers the time from the stories of Aeneas, the earliest legendary period from before the city's founding in c. 753 BC, to Livy's own times in the reign of the emperor, Augustus. The last year covered by Livy is 745 AUC, or 9 BC, the death of Drusus. About 25% of the work survives.Livy's History of Rome was in demand from the publication of the first packet. Livy became so famous that a man from Cadiz travelled to Rome just to see him, and once he had seen, returned home. The popularity of the work continued through the entire classical period. A number of Roman authors used Livy, including Aurelius Victor, Cassiodorus, Eutropius, Festus, Florus, Granius Licinianus and Orosius.Livy wrote during the reign of Augustus, who came to power after a civil war with generals and consuls claiming to be defending the Roman Repub
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