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Alexander the Great hopes dashed as massive black coffin in Alexandria turns out to contain mummified family swimming in red liquid Login/Join 
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quote:
His horse was named Bucephelous


Yeah after Hank Jr.
 
Posts: 17281 | Location: Stuck at home | Registered: January 02, 2015Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Staring back
from the abyss
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"Great danger lies in the notion that we can reason with evil." Doug Patton.
 
Posts: 20131 | Location: Montana | Registered: November 01, 2010Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Web Clavin Extraordinaire
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quote:
Originally posted by Balzé Halzé:
quote:
Originally posted by Russ59:
Why do I remember my 8th grade world history class - Alexander the Great was born in 356BC and died in 323BC. His horse was named Bucephelous (?).


Hmmm, so would that have made him -33 years old?


BC dates count down toward 1 BC, so the smaller number always comes after the larger, the inverse of AD/CE dating.


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Posts: 19837 | Location: SE PA | Registered: January 12, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Frangas non Flectes
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posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Balzé Halzé:
quote:
Originally posted by Russ59:
Why do I remember my 8th grade world history class - Alexander the Great was born in 356BC and died in 323BC. His horse was named Bucephelous (?).


Hmmm, so would that have made him -33 years old?


It’s why they call him Alexander the Great rather than Alexander the Average. Razz


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Carthago delenda est
 
Posts: 17221 | Location: Sonoran Desert | Registered: February 10, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Tinker Sailor Soldier Pie
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quote:
Originally posted by Oat_Action_Man:
quote:
Originally posted by Balzé Halzé:
quote:
Originally posted by Russ59:
Why do I remember my 8th grade world history class - Alexander the Great was born in 356BC and died in 323BC. His horse was named Bucephelous (?).


Hmmm, so would that have made him -33 years old?


BC dates count down toward 1 BC, so the smaller number always comes after the larger, the inverse of AD/CE dating.


Come on, dude. I was making a joke. Albeit a crappy one.

I know how BC dates work.


~Alan

Acta Non Verba
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Men will fight and die to protect women... because women protect everything else. ~Andrew Klavan

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Posts: 30435 | Location: Elv. 7,000 feet, Utah | Registered: October 29, 2012Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Frangas non Flectes
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Not familiar with the burial practices of that culture and time period, I have to wonder if it was an interment in a family home, a basement crypt, that sort of thing. I know that a lot of cultures in that area and that time period kept remains in ossuaries or family crypts; when you died, in you went with grandma and great-uncle and everyone else in the family bone box once your remains were sufficiently decomposed. The state of the tomb says these people were well-off. I wonder what they'll be able to figure out from the dig, I know I'm in the the long haul on data from this one.

Hand-in-hand with that, who knows other spectacular burials are a few dozen feet under modern day cities, especially in the middle east where cities haven't necessarily grown across the land but rather straight up, layers and layers upon layers of nothing but straight history? Rome, Jerusalem, countless other locations. Every time you break the surface of the ground, you're only inches away from thousands of years of history. That's the romanticism that brought me into archaeology in college. The reality of swimming in distilled sewage is what snaps one out of such a reverie.


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Carthago delenda est
 
Posts: 17221 | Location: Sonoran Desert | Registered: February 10, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Alexander's tomb rests under the Nabi Daniel Mosque in Alexandria. Good luck getting permission to excavate under a mosque in Egypt.


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Posts: 13819 | Location: VIrtual | Registered: November 13, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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quote:
Originally posted by Balzé Halzé:

Come on, dude. I was making a joke. Albeit a crappy one.

I know how BC dates work.

I got your joke. I thought it was humorous.



.
 
Posts: 8628 | Registered: September 26, 2013Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Originally posted by TigerDore:
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We've opened it and, thank God, the world has not fallen into darkness," Mr Waziri said."I was the first to put my whole head inside the sarcophagus, and here I stand before you — I am fine."

I wonder if he blew bubbles.



.

Bubbles wasn't in town.




Phone's ringing, Dude.
 
Posts: 6068 | Location: Upstate SC | Registered: April 06, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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