🧵 With New Year approaching, I thought I'd share some of my favourite moments and photos from my 2022 archaeological travels, which have seen me travel to Egypt, Turkey, Hadrian's Wall and Algeria. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#FollowingHadrian
Sailing on Lake Nasser in Egypt between Aswan and Abu Simbel and visiting the temples that used to lie on the banks of the Nile but were moved when the Aswan High Dam flooded the region in the 1960s. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Egypt
Visiting the relocated Wadi es-Sebua temple with its beautiful avenue of sphinxes. The temple was built during the reign of Ramesses II and was dedicated to the deified pharaoh, Amun-Ra, and Ra-Harakhty. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Egypt
Visiting the wonderful archaeological site of Anavarza in the Adana Province of Turkey. The ruins include a 1500 metre-long fortification wall with 20 bastions, a columned road, a triumphal arch, a theatre, an amphitheatre and a stadium. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Turkey
Following the course of the Euphrates, the longest and one of the most historically important rivers of Western Asia. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Turkey
Visiting the fantastic Zeugma Mosaic Museum in Gaziantep, one of the biggest mosaic museums in the world, containing 1700 m2 of mosaics. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Turkey
Exploring Dara (Anastasiopolis), a beautiful and unusual Roman city whose ruins lie scattered around a Kurdish village close to the Syrian border. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Turkey
Visiting Göbekli Tepe, an archaeological site from the prehistoric period, between 9,600 and 8,200 BC. Enclosures with distinctive T-shaped pillars carved with images of wild animals were probably used in connection with funerary rituals. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Turkey
Exploring the magnificent Krom Valley near Gümüşhane in the Black Sea region of Turkey with its many churches, monasteries and chapels, and untouched nature. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Turkey
Visiting the "Rome's Flowing Frontiers" archaeological exhibition about the Romans Limes in North Rhine-Westphalia.
Bonn – Life along the Limes
Xanten – The Lower Rhine Limes
Cologne – Rome on the Rhine #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Germany
Visiting the Weiden burial chamber in Cologne, one of the best-preserved and most impressive Roman grave structures north of the Alps. It was the burial chamber of members of a wealthy family of landowners. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Germany
Visiting the world-famous Carnac stones, with more than 3,000 prehistoric standing stones spread across three alignments: Ménec, Kermario and Kerlescan. There are also dolmens, tumuli and single menhirs. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#France
Exploring the remains of the ancient town of Noviodunum in Saintes. It was the capital of the ancient Gallic tribe of the Diablintes. Urbanized in the 1st century AD, the city had public monuments of which a theatre and a temple remain. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#France
Celebrating my 46th birthday by spending the day on Hadrian’s Wall. 🎂Hadrian was 46 years old when he visited Britannia in AD 122 to oversee the construction of his namesake wall. #Throwback2022#archaeologytravel#Hadrian1900#HW1900#Britain
Giving my “Following in the Footsteps of Hadrian” lecture in the Hadrian’s Wall Gallery of the Great North Museum in Newcastle as part of the Hadrian's Wall 1900 Festival.
Making the cover of The Journal, a daily newspaper in Newcastle upon Tyne, in anticipation of my talk at the Great North Museum in Newcastle. #Throwback2022#Hadrian1900#HW1900#Britain
Exploring Timgad in Algeria, the "Pompeii of Africa". The Roman city was founded by Trajan around AD 100. The full name of the town was Colonia Marciana Ulpia Traiana Thamugadi.
Another dream come true! #Throwback2022#ArchaeologyTravel#Algeria
Visiting Lambaesis in Algeria, where Hadrian observed the Legio III Augusta and the auxiliary units stationed there during his visit to the province of Africa in AD 128. He witnessed their manoeuvres and praised them in speeches. #Throwback2022#ArchaeologyTravel#Algeria
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RIP Lucius Aelius Caesar, Hadrian's first intended successor, who died #OnThisDay in AD 138.
Lucius was adopted by Hadrian in AD 136 but never attained the throne as he died of tuberculosis a few months before Hadrian. Hadrian was then forced to choose a new heir, Antoninus Pius.
“He [Lucius Aelius Caesar] was a man of joyous life and well versed in letters, and he was endeared to Hadrian, as the malicious say, rather by his beauty than by his character.”
Historia Augusta
“He was considerate of his family, well-dressed, elegant in appearance, a man of regal beauty, with a countenance that commanded respect, a speaker of unusual eloquence, deft at writing verse, and, moreover, not altogether a failure in public life.”
Historia Augusta
Some photos of Timgad, the "Pompeii of Africa". It was founded by Trajan around AD 100. The full name of the city was Colonia Marciana Ulpia Traiana Thamugadi.
Thread: Last week, I sailed on Lake Nasser between Aswan and Abu Simbel. I visited the temples that used to lie on the banks of the Nile but were moved when the Aswan High Dam flooded the region in the 1960s. Follow me on this timeless journey through the legends of Nubia. #Egypt
Day 1 - New Kalabsha, a promontory located near Aswan which houses several temples, structures, and other remains that have been relocated here from the site of Old Kalabsha and other sites in Lower Nubia. #Egypt
🔸 Kalabsha Temple
🔸 Kiosk of Qertassi
🔸 Beit el-Wali
🔸 Dedwen
The Temple of Kalabsha was built as a tribute to Mandulis, a sun god of ancient Nubia, under the Ptolemies and then around 30 BC during the reign of Augustus. It is the largest free-standing temple of Egyptian Nubia. However, the temple was never finished. #Egypt
THREAD 👇🏻
Celebrating #Halloween 🎃👻 with some ancient monsters. Let's start with the Gorgon, perhaps the best-known monster from Classical Mythology. The snake-haired Medusa was one of the three Gorgons. Anyone who looked at her face was turned to stone. #ClassicalMonsters
The Minotaur was a bull-headed monster that devoured human flesh deep within the twisting maze of the Labyrinth. It was the offspring of the Cretan Queen Pasiphae and a snow-white bull. The monster was eventually slain by the Athenian hero Theseus. #ClassicalMonsters#Halloween
The Ketos was a huge sea creature sent by Poseidon to ravage the land of Aethiopia after Queen Kassiopeia boasted that her daughter Andromeda was more beautiful than the Nereids. Perseus slew Ketos to save Andromeda from being sacrificed to it. #ClassicalMonsters#Halloween
Happy birthday to Antinous, born #onthisday in a rural locality called Mantineion just outside Claudiopolis in Bithynia (today’s Bolu, Turkey). 🎉🎂🎊
We know about Antinous' birthday thanks to a valuable inscription discovered in Lanuvium where the 'dies natalis Antinoi', the birthday of Antinous, was celebrated on 27 November (Ante diem V Kalendas Decembres).
Read more ➡️ followinghadrian.com/2016/11/27/the…
Architectural fragments said to come from a temple Hadrian dedicated to Antinous at Claudiopolis where his lover was born. The temple was located above the stadium where the Sacred Games of Antinous took place. An inscription found in the stadium names Hadrian as the builder.
The Fountain of Trajan in #Ephesus, located on the northeastern side of the Curates street, the main thoroughfare of the city.
The nymphaeum was erected ca. AD 104 in honour of Artemis of Ephesus and Emperor Trajan by Tiberius Claudius Aristion, a prominent citizen of Ephesus.
The Arch of Trajan at Benevento (Italy) was set up in AD 114 outside of Beneventum to commemorate the of the new Via Traiana between Rome and Brundisium.
Each side of the arch carries relief panels that depict different aspects of the emperor's care for his people and the Empire.