Beyond the Boundaries of Fantasia: An ancient imagining of the future of leadershipMain Menuhow to enjoy this albumYou Can Go Your Own WayI Know What Boys LikeSocrates' Last StandThe Song Remains the SameSpirits in the Material WorldA Political Thriller (c. 63 BCE)Born to Run"Caesar gained glory by giving, helping, and forgiving...Cato, on the contrary, preferred to be, rather than to seem, virtuous." - Sallust, Bellum Catilinae 54Golden YearsStranger than FictionMoney TalksHe Will Rock YouGetting to Know YouWho Runs the World? Girls!Meet the New BossI'm Every WomancreditsProject244106e9d2bdcdebde02dbbf69f852d44930279dSunoikisis leadership group
Step Three: Precedents (1:30)
1media/1c - Julius Caesar AR denarius - dual.JPG2016-07-25T15:56:38-07:00Norman Sandridgeaede92262dbe9a4752784e60e5be78fe98ea442488767image_header2016-07-28T10:05:54-07:00Norman Sandridgeaede92262dbe9a4752784e60e5be78fe98ea4424Now that you can “read” a Roman coin and have a general overview of the development of typology on Roman coinage, we are going to focus on the representations (e.g. obverse portraits and full-length or seated figures on the reverses) of leading, living figures on Hellenistic and Late Republican coinage. What would you say are the similarities and/or differences between Hellenistic and Late Republican coins of leading figures? For example, the feature of depicting living figures on Roman coinage is a borrowing from Hellenistic coinage.
Listening for Leadership
Possible Group Activity
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1media/money talks, ac_dc.jpgmedia/Augustus on the World.jpg2016-06-01T19:19:40-07:00Norman Sandridgeaede92262dbe9a4752784e60e5be78fe98ea4424Money TalksNorman Sandridge21image_header2016-07-29T09:29:21-07:00Norman Sandridgeaede92262dbe9a4752784e60e5be78fe98ea4424