Multi-Map Monday
#NewberryLibrary (Inc. 4385)
Both Pomponius Mela Cosmography, published by Ratdolt in 1482 Venice.
The hand colored, annotated copy on the left arrived in 2023 as part of Art and Jan Holzheimer's amazing collection! i-share-nby.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01...
          #NewberryLibrary (Inc. 4385)
Both Pomponius Mela Cosmography, published by Ratdolt in 1482 Venice.
The hand colored, annotated copy on the left arrived in 2023 as part of Art and Jan Holzheimer's amazing collection! i-share-nby.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01...
            November 3, 2025 at 3:27 PM
            
              
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    “Rome, ruler of all nations and the most beautiful place of the entire world.”
Roma omnium dominatrix gentium et totius terrarum orbis pulcherrima sedes.
— Pomponius Mela, 43 AD
          Roma omnium dominatrix gentium et totius terrarum orbis pulcherrima sedes.
— Pomponius Mela, 43 AD
            October 25, 2025 at 8:50 PM
            
              
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        #Pomponius #Mela, #Roman #geographer wrote De Chorographia (De situ orbis).
Mela's detailed descriptions of #peoples and #regions, despite inaccuracies and reliance on #Greek sources, provided a comprehensive overview of the known #world.
It remained a reference until the Age of Exploration
          Mela's detailed descriptions of #peoples and #regions, despite inaccuracies and reliance on #Greek sources, provided a comprehensive overview of the known #world.
It remained a reference until the Age of Exploration
            October 7, 2025 at 7:30 AM
            
              
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        Connaissez-vous les neuf Gallicènes de Séna évoquées par Pomponius Méla ?
youtu.be/wJjcriplv1k
        
            youtu.be/wJjcriplv1k
Les neuf Gallicènes de Séna
            YouTube video by Dominique Momiron
          
            
            youtu.be
          
        
          
            October 2, 2025 at 6:27 AM
            
              
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    #EpigraphyTuesday from Caelian Archaeological Park!
Here we have a section of the monumental inscription from the sepulchre of Pomponius Bassus Terentianus, proconsul of the province of Lycia & Pamphylia.
Found outside Porta Latina, dating to the end of the 2nd C. AD
#AncientBlueSky🏺
          Here we have a section of the monumental inscription from the sepulchre of Pomponius Bassus Terentianus, proconsul of the province of Lycia & Pamphylia.
Found outside Porta Latina, dating to the end of the 2nd C. AD
#AncientBlueSky🏺
            September 9, 2025 at 8:26 AM
            
              
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    While it's always dangerous to make 1-1 comparisons between the modern U.S. & a society an ocean away & 2K years ago, any Roman historian could have told you this. 
Titus Pomponius Atticus lived through 4 Roman civil wars and died a fabulously wealthy, happy publisher by never taking a firm stand.
          Titus Pomponius Atticus lived through 4 Roman civil wars and died a fabulously wealthy, happy publisher by never taking a firm stand.
      Sad thing recent events have made me accept: a lot of US elites are weak, amoral people, whose guiding star is "what does power want?" mixed with "what's easiest for me in the short-term?" And that unfortunately means we can't appeal to principle or patriotism, we need to structure their incentives.
    
        
      I think the answer to the “paradox” of Trump consolidating dictatorial power despite being incompetent and unpopular lies in Democrats rattling their sabers at people and entities who capitulate to Trump over the objections of the American majority. But first they’ll have to find those sabers!
    
  
            September 8, 2025 at 3:15 PM
            
              
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    📖 **Translated Texts from Antiquity Vol. 1: Pomponius Mela’s Geography of the World**
🔗 https://liverpooluniversitypress.blog/2025/09/05/translated-texts-from-antiquity-vol-1-pomponius-melas-geography-of-the-world/.
#ancient #history #histodons #books #bookstodon @histodons @bookstodon
        
            🔗 https://liverpooluniversitypress.blog/2025/09/05/translated-texts-from-antiquity-vol-1-pomponius-melas-geography-of-the-world/.
#ancient #history #histodons #books #bookstodon @histodons @bookstodon
Translated Texts from Antiquity Vol. 1: Pomponius Mela’s Geography of the World
            _Translated Texts from Antiquity_ is a sister series to the renowned  _Translated Texts for Historians series_, published by Liverpool University Press for over thirty years, latterly also joined by  _Translated Texts for Byzantinists_. With a broad geographical focus, including the Ancient Near East and Egypt as well as the Mediterranean world to c. AD 300, and a variety of languages in addition to Latin and Greek,  _Translated Texts from Antiquity_ will make valuable sources available to ancient historians and all those studying antiquity. _Pomponius Mela: Geography of the World_ translated with a commentary by Georgia Irby, is the first volume in the series. Here, Georgia explains what she found intriguing about the ‘delightful’ and ‘quirky’ Pomponius Mela, and delves into the translation process.
* * *
Pomponius Mela—about whom we know practically nothing other than that he very proudly hailed from Tingentera, southern Spain —is such a delightful, quirky author whose Latin style extends from a boringly prosaic litany of toponym after toponym to the downright perplexing. The challenge when reading Mela is often trying to restore what he has left out from his narrative.
Quickly, Mela’s _Geography of the World_ is a short book in Latin, about 16,500 words, dating to the mid 40s ce, and giving a description of the world known to the Romans at the time. As with many ancient works, the title does not survive, if it had one: most ancient “titles” are just the first few words or modern attributions. It is essentially a narrative map, tracing three paths through the inhabited world: 1) the coasts (and inland settlements) along Our Sea (the Mediterranean), spanning most of the first two books (1.25-2.96); 2) the islands within Our Sea (2.97-126); and 3) the lands beyond Our Sea (book 3: including the Atlantic, northern Europe, winding toward India and Taprobane (Sri Lanka), and then back toward Africa, where Mela completes an imagined circumnavigation of the continent).
A few words about the translation process. Translation is an act of interpretation: no language ever goes neatly into another one. Each language is its own individual way of thinking about the world and the culture that a language represents. My challenges in translating Mela included trying to stay as faithful as possible to the idiosyncrasies of Mela’s Latin within the confines of English idiom: to this end, I break many of the “rules” of good English grammar: I replicated Mela’s passive tense verbs (“where the sun is plunged…”) and his use of lots of participles (“the Nile, _rising_ out… more _contracted_ little by little”). The Latinless reader will hopefully then have some sense of Mela’s authentic style and authorial voice. Further, while Mela acknowledged the “dryness” of his material, he nonetheless had literary aspirations, which are evident in the (occasional and) artful arrangement of words into rhetorical devices (e.g., chiasmus: **_unum_** _septentrione, a meridie**duo**_ , “**one** from the _north_ , from the _south_ **two** ”); and intertextuality (textual echoes) of his Latin literary predecessors including Julius Caesar, Sallust, Livy, and even Vergil, all renowned for their elegant style. It’s all too easy to dismiss semi-technical writers as style slackers.
> > > > > > > > > > Translation is an act of interpretation: no language ever goes neatly into another one. Each language is its own individual way of thinking about the world and the culture that a language represents.
Many things really intrigued me as I delved deeper into this text. For example, Mela was a native of southern Spain, and thus the product of a rich multi-cultural society, including Phoenician, Greek, and Roman. And Mela often forefronted his North-African Phoenician heritage, including his deep interest in the myth of Hercules (identifiable with the Phoenician god Melqart) and his use of the Pillars of Hercules as a geographical frame: Mela’s world started and ended with the Pillars, and the reader is taken back to the Pillars close to the work’s midpoint. In addition, Mela’s view was of a world inhabited by peoples in a puzzling and tangled up order: the world is thus a puzzle to be unfolded and decoded. From time to time Mela was certain to remind the reader of the world’s puzzling arrangement. Furthermore, Mela’s landscape is a fully anthropomorphized and vilified personality. This “ethical landscape” can be nurturing or dangerous, and it sometimes accommodates human interests and elsewhere impedes them, aligning with the Greek and Roman prejudice that everything (land, flora, and fauna) exists in service to humankind. I was also fascinated by his use (and misuse) of his predecessors, including his artful allusions to great Latin and Greek writers, and his “adaptations” (to put it politely) of information recorded in those hoary sources. I wonder if this is a product of Mela working in several languages at once: Latin, Greek, and possibly even Phoenician. Moreover, like other writers of his time, Mela was fascinated by the paradoxical, and his prose sparkles when he describes paradoxical phenomena: Psammetichus’ labyrinth, the Corycian cave, the phoenix.
A reimagination of Mela’s map, created by author Georgia Irby.
Finally, a word about the commentary. Mela included over 1,000 individual toponyms of towns and cities, regions and provinces, harbors, ports, islands, mountains, promontories, caves, landmarks, as well as nearly 270 hydronyms (seas, oceans, bays, gulfs, straits, rivers and lakes, oases, fountains), and about 250 separate ethnonyms of peoples. This is a lot of raw data. So, I tried to include one interesting or peculiar thing about each place, the sort of information that Mela would want his readers to know, or the bizarre details that would have delighted him (i.e., the flowers at Henna in Sicily were so fragrant that they prevented hunting dogs from holding a scent on a trail). The commentary is intended as both a guidebook for the virtual traveler and as a collection of clues for those trying to solve the puzzle of Mela’s inhabited world. It is my hope that the reader will be both entertained and rewarded by a closer look at this eccentric author, with his interest in the paradoxical, deep topographical selectivity, and his unique (Iberian-Punic-Roman) view of the first c. CE Mediterranean world.
* * *
_Georgia L. Irby is Professor of Classical Studies at William and Mary, where she works on the history of science, especially cartography, geography, and watery matters, Greek and Latin pedagogy, and mythology. You can purchase_Pomponius Mela: Geography of the World _here._
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            September 5, 2025 at 5:52 PM
            
              
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    Author Georgia Irby discusses her book, Pomponius Mela: Geography of the World, which is the first volume in the new Translated Texts from Antiquity series. Read more here:
        
          Translated Texts from Antiquity Vol. 1: Pomponius Mela’s Geography of the World
            Translated Texts from Antiquity is a sister series to the renowned Translated Texts for Historians series, published by Liverpool University Press for over thirty years, latterly also joined by Translated Texts for Byzantinists. With a broad geographical focus, including the Ancient Near East and Egypt as well as the Mediterranean world to c. AD 300, and a variety of languages in addition to Latin and Greek, …
          
            
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            September 5, 2025 at 9:01 AM
            
              
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        Ancient Ireland...
"this country was so luxuriant in grasses that if cattle were allowed to feed too long, they would burst”. So did Pomponius Mela wrote. Join me to discover the foodways of Irish ppl!
open.spotify.com/episode/5O3q...
        
            "this country was so luxuriant in grasses that if cattle were allowed to feed too long, they would burst”. So did Pomponius Mela wrote. Join me to discover the foodways of Irish ppl!
open.spotify.com/episode/5O3q...
A History of Food Culture in Ireland with Regina Sexton Part 1
            
          
            
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            September 1, 2025 at 3:13 PM
            
              
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    In Process and Reality (1929), Alfred North Whitehead put forward his philosophy of organism, of 'internal relationships between actual occasions.'
By the first century CE, the Iberian travel writer, Pomponius Mela, had conceived of the oceanic tides as the breathing of a single animal world.
          By the first century CE, the Iberian travel writer, Pomponius Mela, had conceived of the oceanic tides as the breathing of a single animal world.
            August 11, 2025 at 10:15 PM
            
              
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    I definitely agree and for my professional work I'd always use a human translator. This is for a fun hobby project, where I'm happy to get a rough-and-ready translation of an obscure German text (on Pomponius Porphyrio, a 5th century scholiast of Horace) to have a sense of the argument of the book.
          
            July 31, 2025 at 1:31 PM
            
              
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        Recently published | The first volume in the new series Translated Texts from Antiquity: a fresh translation and the first detailed English-language commentary of Pomponius Mela.
Find out more here: www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/book/10....
          Find out more here: www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/book/10....
            July 23, 2025 at 11:01 AM
            
              
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    But other authors placed it in different territories in the Libyan desert: Pomponius Mela in Cyrenaica; Pliny (apparently chennelling various literary sources) in Cyrenaica, the territory of the Garamantes (in a place called Debris) and Trogodytis; and so on.
          
            July 10, 2025 at 8:26 AM
            
              
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        Pomponius Secundus And His Ancient Roman Crowd Testing Technique
Read here: thehistorianshut.com/0rj7 #history
        
            Read here: thehistorianshut.com/0rj7 #history
Pomponius Secundus And His Ancient Roman Crowd Testing Technique - The Historian's Hut
            Pomponius Secundus was a prominent Roman statesman and literary creative from the 1st century. He lived a curious life, alternating between public prestige and political danger during the reigns of Em...
          
            
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            June 25, 2025 at 8:50 PM
            
              
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    "I never knew who saved me. I remember a tall figure looking down at me. I remember his hat, and his staff. He didn't say anything. 
He simply stood, right in front of me... And I think I cried."
- Caria Pomponius -
"The Mortach and the girl", by @faeriemab.bsky.social
          He simply stood, right in front of me... And I think I cried."
- Caria Pomponius -
"The Mortach and the girl", by @faeriemab.bsky.social
            June 21, 2025 at 11:10 PM
            
              
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    The feast of Pomponius, bishop of Naples under Theoderic the Great and steadfast in his opposition to Arianism, is celebrated #OnThisDay
        
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            April 30, 2025 at 7:18 PM
            
              
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            April 8, 2025 at 7:16 PM
            
              
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    Titus Pomponius Atticus, best known for his correspondence and close friendship with  Cicero, starved himself to death #OnThisDay in 32BC
        
          Titus Pomponius Atticus - Wikipedia
            
          
            
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            March 31, 2025 at 3:54 PM
            
              
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        #OnThisDay in 233/232BC, the consul Marcus Pomponius Matho celebrated a triumph for his victory over the Sardinians
        
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            March 15, 2025 at 11:35 AM
            
              
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        My first serrated (Fallout Bottlecap) denarius:
Roman Republic - Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus, L. Licinius Crassus, L. Pomponius (Crawford 282/4) - minted 118 BC in Narbo, France.
Per Steve: the reverse is a retrograde D variant on the reverse (L·LIC·CN·(backwards D) OM)
          Roman Republic - Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus, L. Licinius Crassus, L. Pomponius (Crawford 282/4) - minted 118 BC in Narbo, France.
Per Steve: the reverse is a retrograde D variant on the reverse (L·LIC·CN·(backwards D) OM)
            February 25, 2025 at 10:06 PM
            
              
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    Fabulous. Thank you. The story without the mirrors can be found in Pomponius Mela's Chorography.
          
            February 21, 2025 at 11:30 PM
            
              
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        This reminds of M. Pomponius Marcellus, who, when the emperor Tiberius used an unspecified loanword, said “You, Caesar, can give citizenship to people, not to words.” (“Tu enim, Caesar, civitatem dare potes hominibus, verbo non potes.”) This according to Suetonius (de grammaticis 22)
          
      In a speech in 1414, Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund used the neutral gender Latin word "schisma" as feminine.
When pointed out, he replied
"I am Emperor. If I say it is feminine, it is."
The reply from the Council:
"Caesar non est supra grammaticos"
transl. "Caesar is not above the grammarians"
        When pointed out, he replied
"I am Emperor. If I say it is feminine, it is."
The reply from the Council:
"Caesar non est supra grammaticos"
transl. "Caesar is not above the grammarians"
            February 20, 2025 at 5:07 PM
            
              
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    Pomponius Mela!! Well, a map based on the reconstruction of his work done at the end of 19th Century (we don't have any actual world map from that era).
          
            February 13, 2025 at 10:05 PM
            
              
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    Pomponius or similar?
Sorry for my tedium.
          Sorry for my tedium.
            February 11, 2025 at 5:34 PM
            
              
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        Caria Pomponius
          
            February 10, 2025 at 12:56 AM
            
              
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