Catching up with the Classical (and semi-Classical) blogosphere ... omitting some, I suspect:

N.S. Gill had a number of useful things (as always) ... the Roman Water Supply ... Thargelia ... Vulgar Latin ... Etymology of Geometry Terms ... some updates to the Who's Who in Greek legends section ... Curse of the Alcmaeonids ...

Adrian Murdoch is back with some Roman finds in Bosnia (that I think I missed) ... there is also a review of his book, The Last Roman ...

Mischa Hooker returns with a couple of useful posts ... we'll send you to his main page ...

From Michael Gilleland ... Puffballs ... Dregs of Life ... Vacation Idea ... From the Mailbag ... Table Dogs ...

Tony Keen comments on one of the oft-mentioned benefits of Latin ...

JM previews a talk on Horace the Satirist ... there's also something on Lucretius and Truth ...

Peter Stothard comments on a (unknown to me) piece of the Parthenon ... the Walls of Mycenae ... Vangelis on the Elgins


Down the hall, Mary Beard comments on the Romans' thuggery ... Human Sacrifice at the Getty ...

Gordon Watley has an interesting post on the Bible, Sybilline Oracles, and divination ...

Phil had some blogger problems, so there's no Patristics round up this week, but we still have to mention last week's installment ...

Laura Gibbs continues to post her Latin teaching resources ...

If Rome had the internet (hat tip to Sylvia of Classical Bookworm fame) ...

Wired wondered whether the Circumcelliones were the Roman equivalent of bloggers ...

Latest from Father Foster is a piece about Cicero ... via Father Coulter's page ... not sure if we mentioned the Equators piece ...

Also on the audio front, folks have been increasing using del.icio.us tags for latin and audio which some might find useful (although you have to wade a bit through the Salsa)

Interesting online dissertation: Bjørnebye, Jonas. “Hic locus est felix, sanctus, piusque benignus” : the cult of Mithras in fourth century Rome (hat tip to Mata Kimasitayo for this one)

The latest issue of Classical Antiquity (April 2007) is available (at unbelievable prices)...

Playback has a review of the latest installments in the Age of Bronze comics series ...

Also on the comic book front, we read of something called Odysseus the Rebel ...

I don't think I've mentioned Itinera Electronica ever (spam filter discovery!), so here's the latest updates from our Gallic friends ...

A website on the excavations at Arediou (Cyprus) ...

Although I see nothing Classical there yet, the Getty now has an exhibition blog ...

Mary Haarsch has moved her Roman Times blog to blogger ...

Also migrating is Debra Hamel's blogographos ... now's the time to check out her Summer Courses in Classics page as well ...

Teachers of matters Classical (including languages) will want to check out the new eLearning resource thingie set up by Andrew Reinhard at Ning.com ...

Latin teacher Rose Williams has also set up a very useful website full of resources ...

Peter Russell passed this one along a while ago (belated thanks) from the EBJ on the leader as Socrates (scroll down a bit) ...

... the latest Carnivalesque (purportedly an ancient history edition), by the way, seems rather unaware of the vitality of the Classical blogosphere ... QED

Other than that, we've posted issue 10.5 of our Explorator newsletter and the weekly version of our Ancient World on Television listings are also already up (great coffee this week!) ...