Originally posted by d000hg
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Previously on "Anyone got any boring hobbies that they want to admit to?"
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Churches: How to Read ThemOriginally posted by thunderlizard View PostSurely "astronautographs"!
I am a big fan of early church history, and have been known to collect ancient Greek and near-eastern pottery.

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agreed, roman history suddenly becomes quite boring once the empire fell and it became split religiously across east and western europe but that's just a personal opinion.Originally posted by Incognito View PostI prefer Roman history when the gods were the gods and the plebs were the plebs. Long live the Republic.
and when it comes to religion nothing beats the greek/roman gods - much better stories than the bible, the hindu stories are cool too
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Hey, easy with the use of the word 'interesting' ...Originally posted by Gibbon View PostThat is an interesting subject.
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That song would have been much better if the first line had been, "I drove my pitch fork through your haystack last night"Originally posted by pacharan View Post"I drove my tractor through your haystack last night...."
Hmmm, how did they ever get to be on Seaside Special with lyrics like that?
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In addition to folk music I also play classical guitar, once played a concerto in a little church with a string ensemble. I enjoyed it but it was hard on the fingers, managed to get through it without muscle cramp.
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No they didn't nick them, they inherited them just as the Greeks did from earlier deites. Homer and Hesiod helped fix the Greek panthenon in the 8th century but Rome was already worshipping Jupiter at this point.Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostThey nicked their Gods from the Greeks.
Now they had cool Gods.
Zeus and Jupiter both come from the hindoo Diyeus Pater or Sky Father.
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That is a point I've not come across before. Please direct me to any literature/source you may have in support.Originally posted by Old Greg View PostIt is also interesting because it created a split in the West between the Orhodox / Athanasian / Catholic Romans and the Arian Barbarians residing in the Empire. It is arguable that this religious split between the two communities had an important role in the transition of the Western Roman Empire into Barbarian kingdoms.
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They nicked their Gods from the Greeks.Originally posted by Incognito View PostI prefer Roman history when the gods were the gods and the plebs were the plebs. Long live the Republic.
Now they had cool Gods.
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