Image courtesy of Noah Slayter and previously used for this Tower article. By Anthony Curioso It is election season for the ...
In the first case, Julius Caesar marched his provincial army into Rome, overthrowing the power of the Senate, destroying ... Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc. (2006).
Ultimately the refusal to release the scrolls resulted, in the words of Geza Vermes, a distinguished commentator on the scrolls, in "the academic ... to Rome to convince the Roman senate that ...
They went to Rome in 1962 as comparatively obscure figures ... Just as it is rare for an American company president to have an academic history, the same is equally true in the hierarchy.
She was the first true empress of Rome, although you’ll struggle to hear anyone refer ... As a man in his 50s best known for his physical disabilities and academic interests, he was not a natural ...
a book detailing the academic’s theory that a group of Roman soldiers worked as border guards for the Western Han Dynasty at the empire’s western edge. These ancient expatriates, Dubs suggests, were ...
He chose as his patron St. Augustine, the political theologian whose fifth-century treatise “City of God” challenged Rome’s ruling ... to assess the elite, academic world around him.
Beards have long been thought to confer masculinity on its wearer, especially as a reaction to times of crisis ...
He graduated in electronic engineering from the Sapienza University of Rome in 1988 and received the Ph.D. degree ... From April 2013 to January 2018, he was a member of Roma Tre University Academic ...
He was a member of the International Panel on Economic Policy of the OFCE in Paris in the 1990s, and co-organizer of the annual Villa Mondragone seminar of the University of Rome 'Tor Vergata ...
Following the success of the Manhattan Project and the end of the war, Bethe returned to Cornell to resume teaching and his academic research ... In February 1997, as the Senate was preparing ...
He chose as his patron Saint Augustine, the political theologian whose fifth-century treatise “City of God” challenged Rome’s ruling ... to assess the elite, academic world around him.