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Bai Juyi
Definition by Emily Mark

Bai Juyi

Bai Juyi (l. 772-846) was one of the greatest poets of the Tang Dynasty (618-907) along with Li Po (l. 701-762) and Du Fu (l. 712-770). He was a government official who got in trouble with authorities a number of times for not following the...
Pan
Definition by Mark Cartwright

Pan

Pan is a figure from Greek mythology who was originally a pastoral god from Arcadia. It was believed Pan dwelt in the mountains and forests of Greece. He was the patron of shepherds, hence one of his attributes is the lagobolon - a hare trap...
Etruscan Religion
Definition by Mark Cartwright

Etruscan Religion

The religion of the Etruscans, the civilization which flourished from the 8th to 3rd century BCE in central Italy, has, like many other features of the culture, long been overshadowed by that of its Greek contemporaries and Roman conquerors...
Pan Flute
Definition by Mark Cartwright

Pan Flute

The pan flute or panpipes (syrinx) was a musical wind instrument first used by the ancient Greeks. Most commonly played by shepherds, the earliest use was in the Cycladic islands in the third millennium BCE, and representations of the instrument...
Etruscan Pantheon
Article by Mark Cartwright

Etruscan Pantheon

The religion of the Etruscans included a myriad of gods, goddesses, and minor divine beings, some of which were indigenous and some were imported, especially from Greece, and then given their own particular Etruscan attributes and myths...
Replica of Gutenberg's Press, Featherbed Alley Printshop Museum, Bermuda
Image by Aodhdubh

Replica of Gutenberg's Press, Featherbed Alley Printshop Museum, Bermuda

A replica of Johannes Gutenberg's printing press at the Featherbed Alley Printshop Museum, Bermuda.
Pan Teaching Daphnis
Image by Mina Bulic

Pan Teaching Daphnis

A Roman copy of an original by Heliodoros; Palazzo Altemps in Rome, Italy
Midas
Definition by Mark Cartwright

Midas

Midas was a mythical king of Phrygia in Asia Minor who was famous for his extraordinary ability to change anything he touched into gold. This gift was given to him by Dionysos in thanks for his hospitality to the wise satyr Silenus. Midas...
Donkin Tin Can
Image by Science Museum, London

Donkin Tin Can

A Donkin tin can. The commercially viable tin can that preserved food was invented in 1811 by Bryan Donkin (1768-1855). Donkin built on the ideas of others to perfect a cheap and safe canning process. The idea was that soldiers, mariners...
Tin
Image by Dan Mihai Pitea

Tin

A terracotta bust of the Etruscan god Tin/Tinia, head of the pantheon and equivalent to Zeus/Jupiter. 300-250 BCE. (Staatliche Antikensammlungen, Munich)
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