So spake
couplingchaos in response to my invitation to ask about things on my interests list.
To aid the reader:
Bands: alien sex fiend, bauhaus, boiled in lead, chameleons uk, cordelia's dad, corvus corax, cranes, david bowie, dead can dance, die form, dropkick murphys, einstürzende neubauten, faith and the muse, gossamer, karl zero, malicorne, mediæval bæbes, ministry, miranda sex garden, nine inch nails, oingo boingo, peter murphy, qntal, rasputina, siouxsie and the banshees, skinny puppy, steeleye span, the changelings, the cure, tri yann
Many of those, of course, were probably quite obviously bands. To the completely uninitiated, by which I do not mean to include
couplingchaos, I offer the information that these are, by and large, bands that one could categorize generally as "goth," "industrial," or "Celtic rock," but there are, of course, some exceptions.
Historical references: agrippina, ammianus marcellinus, augustus, boudicca, caligula, claudius, domus augusta, flavians, julian the apostate, julio-claudians, livia, messalina, suetonius, tacitus, tiberius
I have not here included things like "Roman Women" or other categories that are probably immediately recognizable. I have, however, included some people who fall under the category of "Roman Women."
I suppose 'barbarians' could be interpreted as some band, but that isn't how I meant it.
Other things on the list that might give a spell-check program pause:
Bretagne = Brittany, where one finds, among other things, chouchen, dolmens and menhirs, and fest noz.
couchen is a beverage similar to mead, also called "hydromel."
dolmens and menhirs are, of course, megalithic.
fest noz I covered yesterday at great length.
Kolonaki is the neighborhood in Athens, Greece, where I lived during my junior year of college. It is full of (or was full of, ten years ago) classics and archaeology students (mostly from various non-Greek countries), embassies (likewise), cafés, fashion models, and French restaurants.
Les Délices de Daubenton is a spiffy store in Paris.
Nescafé frappé is the iced instant coffee beverage that, ten years ago at least, an archaeology student might sip while sitting at a café in Kolonaki Square, watching fashion models go by, assuming he or she wanted to pay too much money for it. -- As I have the technology to make such a thing rather cheaply right here in my office (one needs Nescafé, sugar, water, milk, and a container in which to shake the aforementioned) and since I need caffeine, I am going to drink one in the exceedingly near future, although no European fashion models will strut by as I drink it; but, if I open the windowshade and risk a hellish breeze from the ancient window, it is not impossible that I might see some people who wish they were European fashion models coming and going from the library or the student union.
To aid the reader:
Bands: alien sex fiend, bauhaus, boiled in lead, chameleons uk, cordelia's dad, corvus corax, cranes, david bowie, dead can dance, die form, dropkick murphys, einstürzende neubauten, faith and the muse, gossamer, karl zero, malicorne, mediæval bæbes, ministry, miranda sex garden, nine inch nails, oingo boingo, peter murphy, qntal, rasputina, siouxsie and the banshees, skinny puppy, steeleye span, the changelings, the cure, tri yann
Many of those, of course, were probably quite obviously bands. To the completely uninitiated, by which I do not mean to include
Historical references: agrippina, ammianus marcellinus, augustus, boudicca, caligula, claudius, domus augusta, flavians, julian the apostate, julio-claudians, livia, messalina, suetonius, tacitus, tiberius
I have not here included things like "Roman Women" or other categories that are probably immediately recognizable. I have, however, included some people who fall under the category of "Roman Women."
I suppose 'barbarians' could be interpreted as some band, but that isn't how I meant it.
Other things on the list that might give a spell-check program pause:
Bretagne = Brittany, where one finds, among other things, chouchen, dolmens and menhirs, and fest noz.
couchen is a beverage similar to mead, also called "hydromel."
dolmens and menhirs are, of course, megalithic.
fest noz I covered yesterday at great length.
Kolonaki is the neighborhood in Athens, Greece, where I lived during my junior year of college. It is full of (or was full of, ten years ago) classics and archaeology students (mostly from various non-Greek countries), embassies (likewise), cafés, fashion models, and French restaurants.
Les Délices de Daubenton is a spiffy store in Paris.
Nescafé frappé is the iced instant coffee beverage that, ten years ago at least, an archaeology student might sip while sitting at a café in Kolonaki Square, watching fashion models go by, assuming he or she wanted to pay too much money for it. -- As I have the technology to make such a thing rather cheaply right here in my office (one needs Nescafé, sugar, water, milk, and a container in which to shake the aforementioned) and since I need caffeine, I am going to drink one in the exceedingly near future, although no European fashion models will strut by as I drink it; but, if I open the windowshade and risk a hellish breeze from the ancient window, it is not impossible that I might see some people who wish they were European fashion models coming and going from the library or the student union.