This is gorgeous, this so relaxing this village is beautiful đ€©
thinking about this here canal village in the netherlands
Reblogging to remember this for future reference. This is incredible!
WEAPONS - Swords were expensive and not common. - They required a lot of maintenance, to keep them sharp and rust free, to ensure they werenât bent or cracked or chipped. - You wouldnât just adventure around with a notched blade. - A razor edge would not cut through bone; for that, you need a chisel edge. - Swords feel heavy if you donât have the muscles built up, you canât just pick one up and be able to start swinging accurately without practice. - Never throw. Dumb move, now youâre unarmed. - Bows take years to learn well; crossbows donât. - Always unstring bow when not in use. - Always carry extra bowstring, donât let it get wet. - More commonly quiver is hung from the belt. - Arrow wounds are serious. No valiant pincushion charges, no ripping it out. Require medical help. - Shields arenât just for hiding; theyâre for crowding and breaking teeth.
If I think of more lessons they taught me, Iâll add.
All right... Iâm = Lawful & Chaotic Origins. I play the prologues a lot, Iâm a total lore nerd and read all the codexes I get my hands. Iâve played past Ostagar a lot. Usually slow down around Orzammer because Deep Roads. Only made it past a few times. I romance everyone fairly equally & can make mean choices if it suits the character too. For DA2 = Neutral fits best, believe 2 is problematic but has some strong points. Love the characters and purple dialogue options because sarcasm is such a mystery to me so having guide to how/when it happens is helpful and fun. Played diplomatic nice blood mage support focus before which makes me slightly annoyed at Inquisitionâs Hawke... Sitting there thinking, but arenât you a blood mage, Hawke the whole time? That was confusing why they did that. INQUISITION = Chaotic = While, I like guides for sidequests, because open world games are too much at once and I need help when thereâs 50 things a minute. I fought a dragon way too early, kept trying until I won. Jumped everywhere, the novelty didnât wear off, tried jump glitch my way up cliffs. Shortcuts! :) Skyhold indulged my eagerness to jump further.
Lawful Origins -knows everything about the DA universe -reads all the codex entries -actually knows things about story structure -nerd
Neutral Origins -romances alistair every time -can never bring themselves to make evil choices -loves the music -cries a lot
Chaotic Origins -âFINE DWARVEN CRAFTS DIRECT FROM ORZAMMARâ -just replays all the different prologues over and over -restarts when they get to ostagar
Lawful 2 -thinks DA2 was unfairly judged in comparison to origins -has Strong Opinions âą about anders -thinkpieces and meta -secretly bitter
Neutral 2 -really just loves all the DA2 characters -like, REALLY loves them -a lot -fix-it fic and coffee shop AUs -probably bisexual
Chaotic 2 -has only played 2 -âwtf is a darkspawn lolâ -purple dialogue options -probably a blood mage
Lawful Inquisition -enjoys fetch quests -takes time to craft new weapons and armour at regular intervals -talks to every companion between every single mission -looks up walkthroughs and quickloads whenever a companion disapproves
Neutral Inquisition -Inquisition was their first DA game -avoids fandom drama -just genuinely enjoys all the games -the most chill
Chaotic Inquisition -âHOLY SHIT YOU CAN JUMPâ -spends 90% of their time falling off of roofs in skyhold -runs into dragon battles 20 levels too soon and gets destroyed -tries to glitch on purpose
đ Aww đ„°
Take your own advice Shinji, you absolute walnut - Mod Velvet
*this isnât an edit or a screenshot, itâs 3d fanart*
So cool!!! One of my rpg OCs would totally wear stuff like this. They love fashionable suits!
ZENDAYA COLEMAN Tommy x Zendaya Collection (2019)
This is fun, thought I reblog it to remember. I knew most of this from my own deep dives in Arthurian stuff. But Sir Bedivere & sorcery associations is a new one. Huh, I got to hunt down that stuff. Interesting
The English: This is our legendary King Arthur. His bravest knight is named Gawain who cut off a green giants head
The French: Thatâs cool, but what if his coolest knight was FRENCH and practiced INFIDELITY with the QUEEN
The English: Thatâs notâŠ
The French: His name is Lancelot.
The English: Okay actually that name frickin rules. Proceed.
Honestly as a blind person Iâm so tired of seeing fictional blind characters who donât use white canes or other guides. âThey have special powers so they know whatâs around themâ or âtheyâre confident enough to not need a guideâ are common tropes, and Iâm tired.
Are people scared that using a white cane will make their blind character seem weak? They canât use a cane because theyâre so special that they already know whatâs around them, and other blind people who use guides are inferior because theyâre not special?
Iâm tired. Give your blind characters white canes and other guides. Let them hold onto their friends, let them have guide dogs. Donât make white cane users feel ostracized for not being âstrong enoughâ to go without.
Another thing that pisses me off is when a sighted character comes up with the fantasy equivalent of braille and teaches it to the blind character. Braille was invented by Louis Braille, a blind man, in 1824. The blind character should be the one coming up with it.
Tldr Iâm blind and tired of sighted people lol
this is amazing!
TOSC-IN:
A database enabling you to search for keywords in article titles from c.160 Classics related journals. Provides a link to an abstract or full text version if one exists online.
Classical and Medieval History:
Annotated list of Reference Websites
Diotima: Women and Gender in the Ancient World
Online database and resources for studying Women and Gender in the ancient world.
Encyclopedia of the Hellenic World:
âOriginal electronic project aiming at collecting, recording, documenting, presenting and promoting the historical data that testify to the presence of Hellenic culture throughout time and space.â
Perseus Digital Library:
A showcase of digital and print resources for Classical studies.Â
World Archaeology:
Books, Magazines, Blogs, Travel. All Archaeology related.
House of Ptolomy:
Portal website on the Ptolomatic (holla!) Empire.Â
Star Myths and Constellation Lore:
Information website about the above.Â
Virgil.com:
Basically a portal site and resource for information on all things Virgil.Â
Homerica:
Portal and Resource. Link is in French, but you can have the website translated to any language.Â
Exploring Ancient World Culture:
âOn-line course supplement for students and teachers of the ancient and medieval worlds.â
Subject Centre for History, Classics, and Archaeology:
âThe Subject Centre for History, Classics and Archaeology is part of the Higher Education Academy.â
The Iris Project:
âan educational charity introducing the languages and culture of the ancient world to UK state schools in order to enrich the curriculum.â
Roman Law Resources
â information on Roman law sources and literature, the teaching of Roman law, and the persons who study Roman law.â
Egyptology Resources
âWorld Wide Web resource for Egyptological information.â
ABZU:
âguide to networked open access data relevant to the study and public presentation of the Ancient Near East and the Ancient Mediterranean worldâ.
Stoa:
A consortium for electronic publication in the Humanities, including most notably: Suda-On-Line  English translation of the Suda, a 10th century Byzantine historical encyclopedia. Demos: Classical Athenian Democracy; a practical description of how the various institutions of Athenian democracy actually worked. Metis Bruce Hartzlerâs collection of interactive QTVR panoramas for ancient Greek archaeological sites. And Medicina Antiqua A resource for the study of medicine in the Greek and Roman world.
Hellenic History:
From the Stone Age through the Modern Period from The Foundation of the Hellenic World (FHW), a non-profit cultural institution based in Athens, Greece. Â
Hellenic Culture:Â
Website of the Hellenic Ministry of Culture with sites on the museums, monuments, and archaeological sites of Greece.
Athenian Agora Excavations:
Website of the American School of Classical Studies at Althensâ excavations of the Athenian Agora.
Digital Classicist:
Concise information on projects applying computing technologies to Classical/Ancient Historical research.Â
VROMA:
Online scholarly community of teachers and students who share an interest in the ancient Roman world; images, texts, history and many other resources.Â
GNOMON Online:Â Â
Recent journal articles and book in the Classics. Type general search term under âAlle Felderâ (All Fields) or specific âAutorâ (Author) and hit âSuche Startenâ (Start search).â
Ancient World Mapping Center:
University of North Carolina. Cartographic resources, including a collection of free digital maps for educational use.Â
Ancient Scripts:Â
A website by âenthusiastsâ rather than scholars but very interesting!
The Beazley Archive Classical Art Research Center:
Databases and study tools.
Bryn Mawr Classical Review:Â
Timely open-access, peer-reviewed reviews of current scholarly work in the field of classical studies (including archaeology). This site is the authoritative archive of BMCRâs publication, from 1990 to the present.Â
Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama
It investigates the performance of ancient texts in any medium and any period, from Greek tragedy to Roman epic, from stage to screen, from antiquity to the present day.Â
The British Library Digitized Manuscripts
Contains digitised versions of a quarter fo the British Museumâs Greek manuscripts.Â
The Ancient World Online:
A blog which, much like this, presents a variety of online resources for the Ancient world.Â
Electronic Archive of Greek and Latin Epigraphy:
A website which seeks to store virtual Greek and Latin epigraphy of the ancient world, through a federation of multiple archive banks.Â
Projekt Dyabola:Â
Litterature and Object databases.Â
The Digital Sculpture Project:
A website devoted to studying ways in which 3D digital technologies can be applied to the capture, representation and interpretation of sculpture from all periods and cultures. Up to now, 3D technologies have been used in fruitful ways to represent geometrically simple artifacts such as pottery or larger-scale structures such as buildings and entire cities. With some notable exceptions, sculpture has been neglected by digital humanists.Â
Animus:
The open access Canadian Journal of Philosophy and Humanities.Â
American Philological Associationâs Society for Classical Studies:
AÂ â principal learned society in North America for the study of ancient Greek and Roman languages, literatures, and civilizations.â
The Classical Association of Canada:
Access to a wide variety of resources about Classics in Canada including graduate programs, and the monthly bulletin.Â
Corpus Thomisticum:
The works of St. Thomas Aquinas in Latin.Â
J. OâDonnellâs commentary on Augustineâs Confessions:
An on-line reprint of Augustine: Confessions, with commentary by James J. O'Donnell.Â
LANGUAGE RESOURCES:
UC Berkeley Ancient Greek Resources:
Pronunciation Guide; Accentuation Drills; Vocabulary Drills; and much more.
Akropolis World News:
The news of the world in Ancient Greek- a great way to learn and practice the language.
Logeion:
Quick look-up of Greek and Latin words across all of the Perseus lexica.
Dictionaries [VIA Perseus Project]: LATIN || GREEK
NUMISMATICS [COINAGE]:
American Numismatic Societâs MANTIS:
Database on more than 600,000 objects.Â
 CHRR Online:Â
Coin hoards of the Roman Republic Online archive.
Online Coins of the Roman Empire:
Similar to CHRR but coins of the Empire.Â
Roman Provincial Coinage Online:
A standard typology of the provincial coinage of the Roman Empire.Â
British Museumâs Roman Coinage:
A series of resources on Roman coinage.Â
Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum:
The Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum is a British AcademyResearch Project, the purpose of which is to publish illustrated catalogues of Greek coins in public and private collections in the British Isles.Â
MANUSCRIPTS:
Digitalized Greek Manuscripts:
Princetonâs Modern language translations of Byzantine sources, digitized Greek manuscripts.Â
Pinakes:
Pinakes s'ouvre Ă de nouvelles collaborations institutionnelles et accueille maintenant des projets de recherches sur les manuscrits de divers domaines. On trouvera l'ensemble des partenaires et des financements passĂ©s ou actuels sur la page Colophon.Â
Greek Codicology/Paleography:
A detailed biliography on Greek codicology.Â
Resource Lists by School: All links are to Classics, or Antiquities portals for more resource lists.Â
Oxford Libraries
Cambridge Libraries
University of Toronto
Berkeley Classics Department
Library of Congress: Classics and Medieval History
Virginia Tech: Electronic Antiquity
Brock University: Classics Research Guide
Cambridge Ancient History Series
Williams.
University of Texas
Princeton University
Text Databases [Via Oxford]:
Antiquity
American Journal of Archaeology
Archaeology Magazine
Arion
Cambridge Archaeological Journal
Classical Philology
Classical Quarterly
Classical Review
Eranos
Greece & Rome
Journal of Near Eastern Studies
Journal of Field Archaeology
Journal of Roman Military Equipment Studies
Journal of Roman Archaeology
Kernos
Phoenix
Pomoerium
Syllecta Classica
Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphie
Gateways:
Argos - search-engine for all major classical resources
Classics Section of the Intute gateway.
Voice of the Shuttle Classics Page from University of California, Santa Barbara
Classical and Biblical Literary Research Tools compiled by Jack Lynch at Penn
Reading Classics Gateway
Kirke Katalog der Internetressourcen fĂŒr die Klassische Philologie
NOTE: So I compiled a list of some of my favorite classics sites to use. I also put in links to other schoolâs departments and libraries. Almost all Universities which have Classics departments have resources lists. If you want to add to the list, please do!
All of the schools above have much more extensive lists for you to use! I made this list in little over half an hour, so there is much room to be expanded on.Â
NEW ADDITIONS:Â
Latin Library at Packard Humanities Institute - http://latin.packhum.org/ (PHI numbers standard way to refer to Latin texts, look at the ones Perseus uses - itâs PHI).
Brepolis - http://www.brepolis.net/ - may need to access this via your institution or its ezproxy (includes the Library of Latin Texts A and B LLT-A and LLT-B and many other interesting resources).
LâAnnee Philologique - http://www.annee-philologique.com - another one in which youâll have to use via your institutionâs ezproxy or other online database (we use ebscohost). Many journals you submit articles to expect references to other journals use the abbreviations in APh.
For databases of journals, first start at JSTOR - http://www.jstor.org - again, institutional access is required.
((Via:Â monumentum))
The Latin Library - A collection of Classical and Medieval texts in Latin, organized by author.Â
The Internet Ancient History Sourcebook - A collection of mostly primary source texts translated into English. Not comprehensive, but covers a broad range of topics.
((Via:Â hodie-scolastica))
Wow amazing art.... that includes Kida!!!
By FDASuarez
Russia may have a big hole in it, but, what happened to Western Australia and South Australia!! That would not be helpful for the oceanâs ecosystem and thatâs a lot of damage...
does anyone wana talk about THIS GIANT FUCKING HOLE WHERE RUSSIA SHOULD BE.
Wow đŻ
Ethan, you wanna see some shit?
Persona, Fire Emblem Awakening and Dragon Age Ace fan girl.
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