What book would you choose?

(William Glover, a regular contributor to Ancient Rome Refocused asked a question on FACEBOOK that got quite a few responses.  By the way, William, please get better…)

William Glover — If you knew that you were that you were going to be “layed up” for more that a few weeks what book on the classical world would you pick. Right now I’m “in hospital” and had “The Oxford History of the Roman World” pick on me for have that and “The Men who fought for Rome” in my comp. bag.

Steve Nodine – I’m just finishing “Caesar: Life of a Colossus” by Adrian Keith Goldsworthy. Very good book. Hope you get better soon.

Paul LaFontain — Herodotus…..

Joey Hill — I’m starting the Rise and Fall by Gibbon again. Love that one

Rob Cain — Ghost of Vesuvius by Charles Pellegirno for me.

Paul LaFountain — I’ll take a look Rob. FYI all….there are numerous applications like KOBO that give access to public domain literature for free. As an example: The 12 Caesars, and The Autobiography of Theodore Roosevelt (an audio download, not KOBO but a different service).

Bill Cohn  – Try Rubicon by Tom Holland. Also, the sub-rosa series by Steven Saylor for wonderful mysteries/historical ficiton. Recently started the series by John Maddox Roberts and am very impressed. Finally, I recently paid only 99 cents to get Gibbon’s Decline and Fall on my Kindle. 

Antonio Rodriquez – Steven Saylor would be my choice also.

Rob Cain — William, please get better.

Joey Hill — I have an Audible credit to get an audio book, but I have no idea which one I want.

William Glover — I’ll put those on my wish list [book suggestions], if they ever let me out of here, but it’s a hazard being a dig bum.

Paul LaFountain — Be well, William.

Steve Casey — Get well, soon. I also vote for Caesar: Life of a Colossus.  I bet it doesn’t end well for the protagonist.

Paul LaFountain — Ha!

William Glover — Yes, Goldsworthy does a good job.

Bill Cohn — I have read the entire Gordanius Sub-rosa series by Steven Saylor and eagerly wait for the next one. In the meantime, I discovered John Maddox Roberts SPQR series, read the first three, and thoroughly enjoyed them. Roberts is definitely in the same ballpark at Saylor.

(What book would you pick?  Leave your comments on the FACEBOOK PAGE or comment on this post.)

Design, Coins and Empire

What is a value of a coin? 

Is the value only determined by what it can buy?    

Does the design of the coin determine value as well?  

Can the design affect what others think of that country or civilization?

I’m not talking about whether it says 10 cents or a dollar.    I’m talking about what we choose to put upon it shows our power in the world, or what we think it should be?

 What I am asking is:  is there a sub conscious relationship to the art on the coin and its buying power, and what the public perceives the people to be by what is on the coin itself?   We know that weight and how it feels makes value, but what if how it looked determined the coin’ts worth and the country’s perceived self-worth as well?   Is that possible?

 Utter nonsence, right?

The JANUS coin

EARLY REPUBLIC: The JANUS coin

 The Janus coin (beginnings and ends) – early republic.  Look at it.  The design is brilliant, intricate, and its worth is determined in silver.  I love just to look at it. The Roman Galley on the back is intricate and detailed, and try to imagine how it felt in your hand.   This is a coin of the early Republic with a long life of a people laid out in front of it.  It was the beginning for the Roman people.   They chose the JANUS god to adorn the front (the god of beginnings and ends) an apt and noble god for a youthful people, and the symbol of power called the trireme.  Naval power to sing the power of the republic itself.    Naval power had saved the Romans on more than one occasion (Pompey’s conquering of the pirates on the MARE NOSTRUM is just one example).

 In ancient times the value of money was actually tied to the amount of precious metal that sat in the coin.    THAT you can always feel in your hand.   The weight is distinctive, the silver and the gold makes it feel heavy and satisfying.   There is still heavy trading in coins of this value, but what of the design of the coin?  Can the design determined value?  Can the design determine respect?

Roll-(20)-1889-CC-Morgan-Silver-Dollar-Very-Fine

EARLY REPUBLIC: 1889 Morgan Silver Dollar

 Check out the 1889 Morgan Silver Dollar currently valued today at 1,100 to 1,300 dollars.  A magnificent piece, with that same feel in your hand, but look at the design.   The head of Lady Liberty is exquisite.  Like the Romans with their God Janus, Lady Liberty is another form of deity — a personfication of a nation’s ideals.    I am not saying that it is just the choice of using a god or a personification which makes the value of the dollar higher, but making the holder of the coin feel that by weight AND design he or she holds something of IMPORTANCE.   

  Would you rather have the Morgan Dollar in your hand (right) ?

dollar-coins

Eisenhower Silver Coin

 Or would you rather have this (left) a 1972 dollar Eisenhower coin?  Forget value, which one seems to you worth more?  To me, the Morgan not only looks heavier, the design gives the impression of power…even though the subject on the left was one of the 20th century’s most powerful men.    Have a Morgan in your pocket you are carrying power, value in weight, and value in design.  Look how deep Lady Liberty is cut into the metal, it is a god damn statue in your pocket that ROARS of national power.  

 Shouldn’t a coin always denote power?  Shouldn’t the image upon it raise what it is trying to say to almost spiritual level?

Well, in my world: YES! 

 A coin should have intrinsic value, it should have weight, and a coin should have a design that speaks of a nation’s values and dreams.

 Modern coins do not use the silver nor design in the same manner.  Today, coins, especially quarters, have turned into travel post cards.  Don’t get me wrong I have no problem promoting the granduer of the ‘Grand Canyon’ and I would be the first to say that Duke Ellington should be lionized at one of the greatest musical geniues of the age, but are these the symbols of American power?  Ingrand-canyon-national-park-quarter-0921-lg my opinion it is turning our monetary power into postage stamps.  Give me personifications of our ideals in classical form for our coinage every time.  

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The Walking Liberty Coin circa 1940

 The ‘Walking Liberty 1940 silver quarter dollar is a image paying homage to a nation.  I have a coin like this dated 1945.  I admit I purchased it specifically for the reference to that date (end of the war), and hold this in your hand and you instantly feel that there is value behind it…the weight of a nation. This symbolizes a nation on the rise.  The sun even on the horizon hints of a bright future.  

Standing Liberty

Standing Liberty

Even the 1930 standing liberty is our ode to the our Roman forebears.  This is beauty, value, and a ‘great’ design incorporated into one coin.  The lines should be cut DEEP to denote the endurance of the country.  Do modern coins have such lines cut deep into the metal?  No. This coin was made to last forever.  To be heavy in the pocket and to be impressive to the touch and the eye.  Look at the Morgan Dollar Eagle below.  What does it say to you?  Can you doubt for a moment that the country is NOT here to stay?  Just, look at it.

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EARLY REPUBLIC

 Yes, yes, yes.  I am totally propagandized and have been seduced by the classical design in the coins.  Yes, I am a classical snob, but look at some of the modern coins in comparision.  Does it speak steadfastness, bedrock principals, AND national power?   

Years ago, my dad gave me a quarter (depicted below).  A full silver one as they were disappearing.  He turned to me and said, “Rob, keep this…you won’t see another one like it.”  I carried it about with me in my wallet for years, and unfortunately one day it fell out.  I was extremely disappointed, still am…but to feel it in your hand you knew you had SOMETHING OF VALUE.   Am I talking buying value, sentimental value, or value of a nation that was still on the rise –  a value of 90 percent silver anyway. 

mercury-dime

No, not Mercury. It's actually Lady Liberty...but I have called it a Mercury Dime all my life, and I will continue to do so no matter what anyone says to the contrary.

 silvercoinquarterA quarter of its like has never came to me in such a way again.  My father received it in a transaction, turned around and gave it to me and said, ‘Rob, keep this.  You won’t see it again.”  I admit…I didn’t keep it for the silver but because he gave it to me.  Later, I tried to find a copy of the coin, but they were gone, all quarters had a copper layer that sat sandwiched between the silver.   What was left was a cheapened copy of something greater. Yes, we are talking weight again, and the value of the silver.  Not design right?  But even size can be an issue.  Why make a dollar coin the same size as a quarter, and why choose Susan B. Antony?  Though I admit her greatness in her support of women’s rights.  Choose a founder of the country or choose a personification of American ideals. 

Note that from Republic to Empire the coins seemed to change. 

I_R_3660_2

LATE EMPIRE: This is a coin from a people hoping for divine intervention. Though the gold is worth more than the silver, the early republic coin says POWER to me, rather than a call for prayer.

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LATE EMPIRE: Valentian III who lacked the ability to rule. A man with a weak profile.

 Look at the gold coin to the left — an anemic empire torn apart by barbarians cutting through and slicing away what was left only to be bribed by gold.  Look at the silver one below: powerful, full of fire, not worth as much as the other one, but the design, THE DESIGN, is represents a people on the rise, putting their faith in themselves and their city.  But what of the coins of an earlier republic?  Their symbols denoted personfications of a city-state, of a people. coins were to sing their praises of who and what a people were and what they hoped to be.  Eventually, as generals paid their armies it was to remind the spear carrier where his pay was coming from.  The soldier has a constant propagandist reminder of where his loyalities lie, and that marked the beginning of the end (See Brutis coin below). 

A personification of a city, confident in this ability to take on all comers.  Look at the design of the nose, the mouth that seems to have an amused expression.

EARLY REPUBLIC: A personification of a city, confident in this ability to take on all comers. Look at the design of the nose, the mouth that seems to have an amused expression.

 

Brutus on the Obverse side of the coin.

EARLY REPUBLIC: Brutus on the Obverse side of the coin. Brutis was the chief conspirator to kill Caesar. Hold this in your hand and you know your money comes from Brutis. When he calls for volunteers for his legion, with a little silver in your pocket, this is the man you will obey. Not the city-state, but BRUTIS!

 

atilia16

EARLY REPUBLIC: The portrait of the man on the left side is Roma. Hold this in your hand and you know who is paying you. Yes, the merchant or the paymaster of a legion, but its the state that you hold your allegiance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(OK, ok, you nuismatrists and / or economists.  Maybe this is a simplification.  Trying to play art into value, design as a function of state and the economy – who the heck does he think he is?  Fall of empire based on a quarter?  Fall from greatness based on design? Hurumph! Foolish.  So let me know what you think?  Don’t let me get a way with it. Comment.)

Buying Your Own Army

roman_soldiers_lg

Growing up this advertisement was always in a comic book near the backpage.  Personally, I think its a great ad (notice the prices if you want to guess the year).   This image has been burned into my brain, for I spent hours staring at the images wondering how I could convince my parents to buy it.   Never was able to do it.   Now, I’m told the soldiers contained in the box were just cheap plastic.  Yet, in a child’s imagination, that may have been enough.  I remember playing with soldiers that were nothing but cardboard cut-outs.   I had a howitzer that was flat as a pancake, but at that age it still looked ‘neat.’

Two dollars and twenty five cents FOR TWO COMPLETE ROMAN ARMIES. 

Anyone want to hazard a guess what that would have translated into denarii for a real army?

You can’t beat $2.25.

Go To The Mythology Nearest You!

justice1

The past surrounds us.  This depiction is just a few blocks from where I live.  Mythology is often used as public art to give meaning to public places.   Let’s play a game.  Take your digital camera and see if you can walk a few blocks from your home and find an image that seems to reflect ancient mythology. 

Is there something like this near you?  Send your photos to Ancient Rome Refocused at: rob@ancientromerefocused.org

Give us a description of what we’re looking at, your name,  location, and I will put it on the blog.

How strange is it that the past is continually with us.  Who can read what the photo to the left means?  It’s fairly easy for the image of the blinded justice with the scales of justice.  This needs little interpretation.   She may be based on Themis, one of the Titans.  Her meaning is the ‘neutrality’ in decision making.  She is also known at Justitia, a  Roman Goddess of Justice. 

My real reason to put this on the blog is the drama played beneath her feet.  What do you see?  A Tortoise and a Hare from the fables of Aesop.   “JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED” is written on the pedestal.  This is the the basis of our Sixth Amendment in the right to a ”speedy trial.”  I remember at first I was a bit confused when trying to make the connection between the tortoise and a “speedy trail” but then I remembered the hare took a nap, which gave time for the tortoise to make it to the finish line first. 

(I am looking for JPEGS that tell a story, and provide meaning to public spaces that tap into ancient mythology.  If you know of one  give us a description of what we’re looking at, your name,  location, and I will put it on the blogTELL ME WHAT MYTHOLOGY IS NEAREST YOU!)

Religion, Rituals, and War

(Members of the Ancient Rome Refocused Group got into a discussion on Facebook.  What do you think?  Either click on the comment balloon on the upper right or join in on the discusson over on Facebook.  Either way we want to hear from you.)

William Glover

In working on my research that early Roman and eastern cultures had a very strong element of ritual behavior in both the the the wars/battle began to the end of the conflicts. That was an element the the Romans in their way had modified within their culture that confounded their enemies. Thoughts?

Rob Cain

Ancient style Psychological Operations? We have the favor of the gods so get ready to die?

Antonio Rodriquez

I remember Rome’s early wars were declared by the ritual act of throwing a spear from the Forum, to the general direction of the enemy territory.  And also, of course, by an Augur reading the signs of the Gods. Many of these rituals are of Etruscan origin.

William Glover

I have given much thought to the above thoughts, as during the evolution of the Roman people and it’s Legions the legacy of Numa during the period of the kings among others had a great influence on Roman culture. The other peoples of Italy and both the East and west that helped to form Rome and it’s Legions, in looking at what evidence the archaeology offers the mosaic of languages and material culture due give hints as to their influence. The space allowed here makes it difficult to present some of ideas that have popped up during my work, such as the behavior of some Roman generals and they way they used and informed their Armies. I can think of at lest two generals in the conflicts of the 300′s and 200′s that managed to the officers and NCO’s that reminded me of the behavior of the paratroopers in the WW 2 drop into Sicily, but I go on too long.

Laura Lynch

My only comment is that is that rituals seem so innate to man since the beginning. Battle rituals (and other rituals) provide bonding and obedience, inspiration and comfort, an opportunity for storytelling, a source of propaganda (scare the enemy), a source of strength and a bit of superstitious magical thinking.

William Glover

That has been part of my thinking in working on this and in some ways the roman’s used those thoughts in both how Rome in all it’s aspect’s like other cultures did at the time and earlier, and used it for a tactical advantage against it’s enemies.

Rob Cain

I’m racking my brain on rituals before battle and the only thing I remember right now is the killing of chickens (At the battle Drepana during the First Punic War, an admiral named Publius Claudius Pulcher did not get the ritual correct I believe), the other is the ritual of the JANUS door that was left open (of course this was a large national symbol rather than an Army Level symbol…question…did not the American eagle have the lightning bolts at one time in the right hand as opposed as its now held in the left?) I’m been fascinated by an account of music being overheard leaving the city of Alexandria before Octavian took the city from Antony – the music being interpreted and I’m sure spread about the city by Anthony’s enemies as “the gods leaving and taking their protection with them.”

Antonio Rodriquez

What about the role geese played during the siege of Rome by the Gauls? And the ritual sacrifice of a dog, each year, as a reminder of their failing to warn the Romans?

William Glover

As the American eagle with lighting bolts the SAC and Air Force have that/had that in their flags and patches, and the DOD may still have that symbolism. The accounts of Legion eagles turning or being difficult to remove has been noted before battles or campaigns the when badly for the army and the generals. The knowledge of both lunar and solar eclipses were used to calm Roman troops and allies and were it seems an added element to discomfort enemy forces. Just as the reports of the turning of statues and other event of the same nature effected the political life of Rome. In Gaul the destruction of shrine sites may have been used to both effect the civilian population and push the enemy to fight on unfavorable ground or before there full forces could be consolidated, as the more disciplined legion had a advantage over the more individualist fighting style of the Gauls. having Generals such as Caesar who was both an auger and chief priest omens could be worked in a creative for your army.

(Anyone got a comment? What do you think?)

A song to Mrs. Anderson

Oh muse,

I sing a song to Mrs. Anderson

5th grade teacher,

Singer of mythological gods and goddesses

Zeus, Apollo, Athena

Bringing Olympus to those who worship gods of another pantheon

Captain Kangaroo,  Mr. Rodgers and Bozo the Clown

It was the 60s.  I sat in a class taught by Mrs. Anderson.  I am ashamed to say I can not remember her name, not even the sound of her voice.  All I remember is she looked old, as ancient as the gods themselves.  Which brings me to my points.  We started the year reading short stories from O’Henry and chapters from Twain, but the moment we turned our attention to the gods and goddesses of ancient Greece I was hooked. 

Mrs. Anderson was the one who introduced us to the subject of Greek Mythology.  Days were spent watching Hercules clean the Augean stables, learning the meaning of the sword of Damocles hanging from the ceiling, and feeling the weight of the world shift on the shoulders of Atlas.  All of this came in large illustrated books, in drawings of bright color and ink.  The classroom was now filled with picture books of centaurs, harpies, warriors with sword and shields, and beautiful maidens.  The only world I knew at that time was the street on Woodbine Avenue, this was my universe, but under Mrs. Anderson’s tutelage I traveled with Jason and his Argonauts, slept under the stars, and saw the clashing peaks.  

From her chalkboard (do they still have them in schools?) she listed the names of the gods and the goddesses, and drew Mount Olympus peeking out between the clouds.  It was when she got to the subject of Troy, the gleaming towers of Illium, that I was hooked for life.  Who can resist the stories of Paris, Hector, Agamemnon, and the greatest warrior Achilles?  And the Trojan horse – what boy does not like secreting away inside a hiding place to spring forth to everyone’s surprise?  What boy can resist the darkened raid upon the town, and burning Trojans from their beds?  To take the town by stealth is every boys dream, a ten-year-old is a natural marauder, a Spartan just inches below the skin.  Boys are barbarians barely civilized by their parents, restrained to sit at the table while fireflies cover the backyard to be chased, and home-made forts are waiting to be taken on the battlements next to the garage.  I dreamed that I was the black bearded Ajax, whose shield had painted the winking man, and the tongue stuck out for his enemies to see.  A ‘raspberry’ [phhhtttt] in the face as you attack the enemies’ line. 

“I have a special project for you all today,” Mrs. Anderson announced one day.  “I want you to team up and 3 other students and act out a myth.”

A myth, AND A PLAY AS WELL!  I am paired with two guys and one girl.  I only remember the name of one of them Jim Bell, because he followed me to high school.   Jim Bell was big on plays and theatrics. 

We were assigned to read a myth and then act it out.  We were allowed to make up the lines as we went along.  I chose the myth of Philemon and Baucus an elderly couple that receive Zeus and Hermes into their home on one rainy night.  The two great gods have come to earth to destroy mankind, having great doubts of man’s goodness.  They turned themselves into beggars, and knocked on door after door, and each time the door was slammed in their faces.  It wasn’t until they got to the house of Baucus and Philemon that the door opened, and to their wonder they were invited in.    I was Philemon, the old man, and I played it to the hilt.  His character was doddering, impatient, but basically good and upon opening the door and seeing the two gods (who according to legend looked like beggars to his eyes) dragged them inside into his hut.  I did it in high-camp, with almost vaudeville effect. 

“Eh?  Eh?  What are you two doing out in the rain?  Baucus!  Where is that woman?  Set a table for these men.”

As the story goes, every time we filled their cups with wine the jug magically refilled itself.  

My eyes pantomimed the jug filling up and up again as I poured.

“This is the first time this jug has ever done that?  I got to get another one.  Baucus who sold us this contraption?  We got to get another one.”

The class loved it. 

We then reacted the part where we decide to slaughter the goose for dinner.  The creature runs for its life, and Baucus and Philemon run about the stage, limping and trying desperately trying to get a hand on his neck. 

Pandemonium followed.

“Don’t get on his lap for protection,” I said to Mr. Goose who sits on the lap of Zeus for protection.  “He won’t help you.  Sir, grab him and twist his neck.  Dinner, by the gods.”

It is then Zeus and Hermes decide to reveal themselves.  Both students (gods) drop their cloaks, and their mortal disguises as well.  

I couldn’t help myself.  I gasped: a nice long one, boarding on silly, as if I am about to die of lack of oxygen right there in front of the classroom.

(Laughter)

The room is laughing, I even hear a chuckle out of Mrs. Anderson sitting in the back of the room.

Immediately I fall on my knees to worship.  Looking at my wife  Baucus I say, “What are you doing old woman.  Get on your knees, it’s the gods!”  I turn to Zeus, “Sorry sir, women now-a-days!”

(Laughter)

Jim Bell (playing the role of Zeus) explains why he and Hermes are present.  “We came to destroy mankind.  Every door we came to slammed in our faces, but yours and yours alone opened in the spirit of hospitality.  In honor of your kindness, I grant you and your wife immortality.  You shall always be together.”  He waves his hands and Baucus and Philemon suddenly sprout branches where their branches intertwine. 

“I always liked holding hands with you sweety,” I said as we are transformed into trees. 

(Curtain)

The 5th grade class applauded. 

There’s a moral to this story.  Can you guess? 

Treat everyone with dignity and with hospitality lest they be gods.  

I think there is similar advice found in Hebrews 13:2

“Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for be doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it.”

If anyone related to Mrs. Anderson is reading this (she taught at the Oliver Wendell Holmes School in Oak Park, Illinois in the 1960s) I want to thank you for what she did.  She couldn’t possibly be alive, for it was so long ago, but I believe firmly that there is a setting at the gods table high on Mount Olympus for her, a place of honor, so she can listen to the gossip of the gods.  She opened up the universe to a classroom of children who knew little else but their small neighborhoods around them.  She sparked their imaginations, and for a couple of weeks we were carried across the world and back through time to Ancient Greece and the mythology of its time.

I will never forget her. 

(What teacher or professor changed your perspective on the ancient world?  Here are a few comments from Facebook :)

Joey Hill —  Mrs Mowery in my sophmore year of high school. World History, went from the fertile cresent to the modern age in one school year, and I loved every minute of it. :)

Jordan Harbour —  Dr. Shrimpton, Ancient Greek History. I walked into University a Roman man. I walked out a Greek.

William Glover – Dr. William Spallding at UCSB I learned more about archaelogy and asking the right questions of the data, over a cup of coffee with him than in hours in the classroom.   He was my mental guide in all my field work.

Justin McDonald - Mr. Anderson and Mr. Armstrong at Kingswood High school in the 80s.  Greek and Roman, both went out of their way to bring it alive, we did a extra unit of  ‘Ancient’ during lunch and before school as they wouldn’t put it in the timetable.  Great teachers, we used to have “Join the Greek Navy and sail off the End of the World”  tee-shirts.  Good Stuff.

Mark Schauss – The late Dr. Paul Avrich of Queens College in NYC.  He was the most amazing professor.  Made me love Russian history in particular.

Paul LaFountain – Dr. Carol Leonard and the link between history and economics.

Interview with Eric Shanower

Rob Cain:    We have on the phone Mr. Eric Shanower who is the writer and illustrator of the graphic novel, The Age of Bronze.  Welcome to Ancient Rome Refocused.

aob_logo_big

Writer / Illustrator Eric Shanower at the Covention Wondercon.  He is holding in his hand copies of his latest work based on the Wizard of Oz.

Writer / Illustrator Eric Shanower at the Convention Wondercon. He is holding in his hand copies of his latest work based on the Wizard of Oz.

Eric:    Thank you very much, Rob.  I’m glad to be here.

Rob:    Before we get started, I just want to say I was searching through the stacks of the library of Alexandria, my Alexandria, not the famous one, and I came across your graphic novel on Troy, and I was immediately drawn to it.  The drawings were realistic, the story line intriguing, and some of the characters seem slightly flawed which made it more interesting.  Part of the founding principles of what I’m trying to do on Ancient Rome Refocused is to talk to people that are keeping history alive either through research, education, hobbies or in their art, and I know that graphic novels are big in Europe and Japan and are certainly popular here in the US, but it seems to me that you stepped away from illustrating superheroes and have instead taken on mythological ones.  Is there much difference between the two?

 Eric:   Well, I think there is.  Drawing superheroes has never been my biggest focus in my career as a cartoonist.  I just take those jobs when they’re offered to me and I have time, but writing and drawing Age of Bronze is my major project at the moment and has been for quite a number of years and will be for a quite few more years.  It’s much more personal project to me because I’m telling the story of the Trojan War in the way that I think is the most dramatic and most exciting way to do it.  I’m just trying to re-tell the story for today’s audience and make it as exciting as possible for readers of today.

 Rob:    What drew you to this story?  Why this subject as a graphic novel?

 Eric:    I really like Greek mythology when I was a kid, and I went through a period where I read a lot of it, got lots of books out of the library, children versions of the Greek myths.  The story of Troy never really appealed to me as a child.  I knew various things about it, the things that most people know.  Helen and the wooden horse, things like that.  But it wasn’t until I was an adult and I was finishing a major project and was testing around for another project to start, and I happen to be listening to a book on tape called The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam by Barbara Tuchman who is a historian.  She is an American.

 A chapter on the Trojan War, I found it really, really intriguing.  I realized that there were many, many different versions of the story of the Trojan War that Homer’s Iliad was only the ageofbronze4abeginning, and I thought it would be a really great comic book series to take the complete story of the Trojan War, take all the different versions that I could possibly find and smush them all together and reconcile all the contradictions and also set it in the correct time period using the history and the archeology of the places where it occurred. 

 Just the idea of that made me really excited.  At that time, this is back in 1991.  I realized that it would be a very large project that I wasn’t sure I really wanted to take on something so large.  But every once in awhile, I’ll be in a bookstore and book that has something to do with the Trojan War would certainly pop from the shelves into my hands almost and after awhile I realized I did enough enthusiasm to see this project through the end.  I started working on it, started the research and eventually sold the project and have been working on the comic book for the first issue that was published in 1998.  The first collective volume came out in 2001.  So, that’s how Age of Bronze came into being, and I just thought Trojan War was a fascinating story.  It’s one of the world’s oldest stories.  It’s retold over and over again in every generation.  I guess, I’m just one of the latest re-tellers.

Rob:    How long did it take you to research the book?

 Eric:   Well, I began real researching about 1992.  I felt I had enough to at least start working on it in…let’s see.  I think I began writing scripts around ‘96, and then I actually began drawing in ‘97.  I’m still doing research, but the major stuff is I’ve complete within the first 4 or 5 years.  Every once in awhile, though, particularly for archaeological stuff that I have to draw some item that I just don’t have any information on and I have to go do some research on that.

 The story of the Trojan War has been retold so many times in so many different version that I am sure I will never find every single reference to it no matter how many years I keep looking.  Of course, all the major retellings, the Iliad, the Aeneid all with tragedies that address the Trojan War, things like that.  I was able to gather very quickly because they’re quite so prominent in our literature, but there are so many, many obscure things, obscure plays particularly like from 1700.  There weren’t major works and many of them have been lost or just in single copies, so I have to do a lot of research in library

 With things like that, often, they actually don’t have much to my knowledge of the story, the very obscure things or their parodies or developments of some episode which just won’t fit in very well, but I try to expose myself to all of these different versions and hope that aspects of them come across at least in my conception.  It’s just sort of a big…I put everything into plot and just as the story unfolds and I have to develop where it is going.  I hope that it goes to every single version that I have been exposed to will end up in the finished product.  Once Age of Bronze is finished, it will have at least an echo of every single version of the Trojan War that I’ve ever heard of, that I ever read or heard.

webRob:    Frankly, I think the drawings are magnificent.  There are beautiful renderings of the human form which made me kind of wonder.  Are you self-taught artist or did you attend a certain school?

 Eric:   Well, I’ve drawn all my life and I draw all the time.  When I was growing up, I would cover all my homework, assignments with drawings on the back.  So, in some instance, yeah, I’m self-taught, but I also have taken art lessons all my life.  My parents were supportive of my interests and they would send me to art classes.

 After high school, I attended the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art which is a small trade school in New Jersey which basically trains people to enter the field of comics to become cartoonists.  They also have graphic design and some animation classes, but their main thrust is comic books, and that’s what I wanted to do.

 Rob:   Do you always have an interest in ancient history?

74683-9440-77684-1-age-of-bronze_super Eric:   (Laughs)  No.  I did not.  All my knowledge of the Bronze Age Aegean has come from the necessity of studying all these stuff for Age of Bronze.  I like ancient Egypt.  I saw the travelling exhibit of the King Tut’s treasures which was in the country in ‘77.  I saw it in Chicago.  And for a long time, I wanted to do graphic novel based in Ancient Egypt.  I was actually planning this in the early 90’s but the wealth of information they have from ancient Egypt was just really overwhelming.  I was finding tons and tons of books trying to assimilate all this information into my idea for a story, and I just sort of got bug down.

 Once I had the idea to re-tell the Trojan War story, I started looking at books on the archeology of the period, and I was really, really relieved to find that all the books basically have all the same images time after time.  So while there’s nowhere near the amount of information that we have from the Bronze Age of Aegean world that we do from ancient Egypt.  It just made my task a lot easier.  I can get my head around it.

 There is a lot of information we have from ancient Greece and ancient Troy, but it’s nowhere nearer with what we have from ancient Egypt.

 Rob:   The armor of the Trojans and Greek heroes seemed to be slightly different than how it’s usually portrayed in Hollywood.  When you see certain type of helmets and everything, whenever they do anything about Greeks, it’s always portrayed in a certain way, but your armor seems more real but clunkier, harder to put on.  Did you research the armor?  Or did you find that maybe that most Hollywood film do it the wrong timeframe or… is it me?

Eric:    (Laughs) It’s not you.  Yeah, Hollywood tends to use that’s from a later period.  I guess, they think it looks cooler or else they think that’s what people are going to expect.  For instance, lots of Hollywood used Corinthian helmets or ancient Greece no matter what period it’s in, thus Corinthian helmets didn’t exist during the Bronze Age, so I can’t use those.

 I am setting Age of Bronze in the 13th century BCE specifically the time when…if the Trojan War really happened, this is what I hope it would have looked like.  I do pass a bit of a wide net.  I will take artifacts from the 14th century BCE and use them.  I can’t find something that I need from the 13th century.  So, I may be a little bit anachronistic but I’m certainly not as anachronistic as the Hollywood tends to be.

 I tried to be very, very as authentic as possible.  I can’t claim that I’m completely authentic.  Every once in awhile, I do something and then a few years later I’ll find some information that tells me what I did was wrong in the first issue of Age of Bronze.  I did some things that I wish I haven’t done, that I haven’t drawn now.  For instance, there is an animal enclosure, an enclosure for cows, and I wished I had not drawn these spear-like projections to keep predators away.  I should have just put thorny branches on the top of the walls as a deterrent to predators, but I didn’t know that at that time, and I just did the best I could.  That’s all that I can claim.  I’m doing the best I can.

 Rob:   Well, I think a lot of people when they’re writing books about ancient history, they do research and they make their best guess.  In historical novels that I’ve read, I’ve seen at the end of the book something like, “I did my best to try to put together an image of that timeframe.  If someone knows better, that’s great.”  You know, you just have to do what you can.

 Eric:   Right.

 Rob:   I’ve looked at photographs of the archeological site and I could be wrong but there’s a familiar image of two lions over a stone gate in your graphic novel, and chariots are going underneath with spearmen marching behind the chariots, and this kind of pricked my memory of seeing a similiar gate in a photograph.  Did you try to incorporate some of the walls and photography into your drawings?

The REAL Lion's gate in Mycenae.  The movie Troy puts it in Priam's Throne Room.  Shanower wonders how the producters thought no one would notice.

The REAL Lion's gate in Mycenae. The movie Troy puts it in Priam's Throne Room. Shanower wonders how the producers thought no one would notice.

 Eric:   Yeah.  Well, that specific gate, that’s the Lion Gate at Mycenae scene which is still there.  That was part of the walls of Mycenae.  Mycenae is an important location in the Trojan War.  That’s where the high king, Agamemnon, rules.  I was determined to put that into Age of Bronze since that is what would have been there at the time or probably was there at the time.  The Lion Gate was new in the late Bronze Age.  It seems to have been built about the middle of the 13th century BCE, so maybe it wasn’t up yet whatever events beside the Trojan War were happening but I have drawn it at Age of Bronze.  I tried to be as authentic as possible in all the architecture, all the aspects, all the clothes, all the hair, all the weapons, all the armor, the chariots, the landscape.  Whatever I’m drawing, I want to be authentic as possible.  As I said before, I can’t claim.  I can’t claim that this is exactly what it looked like but I’ll do my best.

I went to Troy in 2006 much, much later.  I’ve been working on a project at Oahu.  I went to Troy and hiked around the area, took lots of photos, have some videos, I did some sketching.aob30  Last fall, I went…I finally got to Greece and saw the Mycenae.  I went to sites there.  I went to Mycenae, saw the Lion Gate where they’ve retouched it with photographs, especially great.

Rob:    How did that make you feel?  I only ask because it’s something that I’ve kind of dreamed about myself.  Everybody has a different idea of what it will feel like.  So many say it’s just a stone, and some people may get all sorts of things from it.  I don’t know.  It’s just a thought.

Eric:    When I went to Troy I expected to be sort of in awe a little bit.  But when I got there, I don’t think…I wasn’t really in awe.  It was like, “Oh, yeah.  This is what it looks like,” because I’ve seen so many photographs.  I’ve seen it described.  Beside the Troy, it seemed a lot smaller than I had imagined it.  But, you know, what I was there for in the Greek Bronze Age site, was just to soak up as much information as possible.  That’s what I tried to do, is get information, just feel it and make it a part of myself.  I had drawn all those sites before so I had some familiarity with them.  Unfortunately, I’m not going to be drawing the Greek sites as much anymore because the story had gotten to the point where everybody is at Troy, the wars underway and the Greeks are camp outside of Troy and the main location is going to be there for the rest of the story.  I wish I’ve been able to get to Greece and see those sites before I had to draw them.  IHow did I feel?  I’m totally glad I went.  Going to Troy was one of those magnificent things that I’ve ever done in my life.  I was there for 12 days.  Greece, I didn’t get as much time.  I went to Mycenae, Pylos, and Tiryns and and we had a weekend, but I was actually taken around by Jack Davis and his wife, Cherie.  Jack is the current director of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, and Cherie had been digging at Pylos for a couple of decades now, so I couldn’t have had a better tour guides to see these sites.  They are the experts.  I was really thankful for that. 

Rob:    I got to the Roman Forum.  I hate to admit it.  I was walking down into the forum, and I got a little misty eyed.  A grown man getting a little tear in his eye over visiting the Roman Forum, can you beat that?

 Eric:   I think that’s perfectly fine.  It’s fully understandable.

Rob:    Which brings to a question, I see a lot of movies all the time and they never talk about who really the Trojans are.  I mean, it’s as if they’re another people in armor.  They always…both sides are speaking English or ‘British English’ or whatever and such, I mean, who really were the Trojans?  Who do you think they were?

Bronze2 Eric:    Well, I’m not sure I can answer that question, who were the Trojans?  They were people that lived in the northwest corner of Turkey.  The site of Troy was occupied for about 3,000 years or more like there are nine major levels which have been subdivided into many, many, many levels.  I think it’s like 30 or 40 some levels, occupation levels.  That level that’s most closely identified with the Trojan War is the sixth level.  There was some continuity of culture to Troy Seven.  So with the question if there was a Trojan War or whatever events that inspired the Trojan War or did it take place during the time of Troy Six or was it was the time of Troy Seven?  A lot of different archeologists are arguing…they have different claims.  That’s not so during the Age of Bronze.  I don’t really have to worry about whether what was the exact point in time.  I can draw from the archeology in the early part of the story more from Troy Six and in the later part of the story, I’ll be drawing more from Troy Seven.  I don’t think it can prove me right or wrong.  Basically, the Age of Bronze is historical fiction anyway.

I think my greatest asset to the experts, the archeologists, is in my ability to reconstruct our daily life, what it might have looked like at Troy so that they can picture because if you are an archeologist, you’re not necessarily an artist who cannot reconstruct things.  I think that’s part of what my value is at least in academic world.  I mean that’s not my main thought.  I’m telling the story I guess for literary reasons.

Rob:    You know what, I looked at the faces of your characters and they’re so full of expression.  You could see fear, hate and at times even boredom on their faces, I mean, the hero seemed to have faults and we just don’t see one face presented to the reader.  There’s a whole array of emotions, good and bad.  I mean, was this intentional?

agebronze3a_3helensmen

 Eric:   Well, absolutely.  I’m telling a dramatic story with characters who have emotions and the story is character in conflict, and without any conflict, we don’t have a very interesting story.  Obviously, the story of Trojan War is one of the oldest conflicts that we know of.

The characters have been pretty well established over the centuries.  I’m trying to stay well within the tradition of who the characters are – Achilles, Agamemnon, Odysseus, all the familiar characters.  So, yeah, they have to show their emotions.  That’s the way I tell the story.  That’s the way readers relate to these human beings.  You know these characters have pedigrees, that go back thousands of years.  They essentially are because human beings just like us.  That’s one of the reasons I enjoyed the story and I’m re-telling it, is to show people, yeah, you may think that this is some drive that is classic, but these characters are people just like you are.  They have to live their lives.  They have to make decisions.  They come into conflict with others.  They have to deal with all the necessities of life just like we do now.  They’re just from a different time.

Rob:    In your version of the story, Troy, I really don’t see any gods in the story like I think there have been versions where we see what Jupiter or Zeus is thinking and various gods and goddesses, and there was a centaur, Chiron, I believe.  You drew him with a thick horsetail down at the back of his tunic.  Was this an editorial decision to keep the gods at arm’s length?

Eric:    Yeah.  One of my basic reasons in re-telling the story, one of my goals is to show the story of the Trojan war on a human level and to remove all the supernatural on it so the gods don’t come down and actually they don’t fight with the warriors.  They don’t tell what to do simply because I want to present it from the human perspective.  There are gods that the characters worship of course.  The Achaeans, the Greek character, have worshipped the familiar Greek pantheon, at least the ones that we know of that were attested with confidence from the late Bronze Age.  The Trojans however worshipped the Hittite gods.  This goes back a little to the question about who were the Trojans, location that has been identified as Troy in northwestern, but he was on the fringes of the Hittite empire, the great Hittite empire which flourished in the Bronze Age.  We have documents from the Hittites talking about Troy, and it had been pretty well conclusively proven that the site excavated in the 1800 is the site that Homer used for Troy, and there are various linguistic and written alphabetical inscriptions that give really strong evidence that that was Troy that we know today.  Certainly there were conflicts in that area.  It’s situated geographically at a point where lots of trade routes particularly sea routes or traders would have met.  It’s situated like the point where Europe and Asia meet and many ships would have been sailing from the Aegean Sea which is the Eastern Mediterranean up to the Black Sea.

Certainly, we have documents from Egypt showing trade routes and some of these places were around the Aegean work on Egyptian trade routes and we have artifacts from all over the area in all of the different places.  We know that Troy was very strong.  And because Troy was situated very advantageously, they obviously were rich town and people would have wanted to attack them so that’s why there are probably things like that are where the story of the Trojan broke throughout, but these are all very human things, human reasons or conflict and that’s what I concentrate on not showing the gods come and tell the people what to do.

agebronze1_5kentaur

A human looking centaur that trains Achillies for manhood.

This gives me real interesting problem because they are many version of the Trojan War.  The gods could instigate many of the actions but that’s really fascinating, a fascinating problem to me to have to figure out in my version of the story how to keep the plot going without the gods to show the characters coming to their own decisions and advancing things about the intervention of the gods as characters.  Of course, a lot of the characters say, “Well, I was inspired by the God,” or, “obviously, the gods want me to do this.”  But as a reader we know that all these decisions are motivated purely by the human reasons.

Rob:     Well, what has the public’s reaction been to your series, Age of Bronze?

Eric:     Overall, it’s overwhelmingly positive.  It’s one of words.  It sold well.  The Age of Bronze was first published as comic book, 20 pages of art at that time, which come out periodically and then every once, every few years, those are collected into the graphic novels. The novels really sell well and those have been very well received.

At first, not everybody likes everything about the series and I get reactions from people.  Let me see.  Some negative reactions were they can’t tell some of the characters apart.  At the beginning, all the Trojan princes, I designed them all to look like brothers since they are brothers, and I probably didn’t design them well enough to be able, for readers to immediately tell them apart which I regretted at this point, but that’s one of those things where I can’t go back and re-do everything.  So, I tried to, since then, have certain aspects of the characters like Paris, one of the main Trojan princes, the one who kidnapped Helen, wears a lion, not a lion skin but a cat skin or rabbit skin over his shoulder almost every time I draw him.  So, I hope the readers will be able to identify him by that symbol. 

I did much better job on many of the Greeks, the Achaean warriors to differentiate, and I think people don’t have any problem telling them apart.

Rob:  Well, I never had any problems even when you put Achilles in a dress.  I still could figure out who he was.

Eric:     OK, yeah.

 Eric:    And I recognize the face and strange enough, even while he was in a dress, I recognized his attitude.  He was hiding a secret and it’s the person hiding, you say, “Uh, that’s Achilles,” so that wasn’t a problem for me at all. 

 Eric:    Well, good.

[Editor's note*  There is a tale that Achillies mother hid her son in a woman's dress to protect him from going to Troy.  Interesting ploy to avoid the draft, don't you think?)

 Rob:    Well, speaking of Achilles, OK, he was the greatest warrior of the Greek coast, but in your novel, and if I'm wrong, please let me know, but in your novel, he seems young, maybe a little untested, he is full of youth, OK.  He is battle ready.  He certainly wants to go to battle but what made him important to the cause?  What made Achilles more important than any other warrior?

 Eric:    Well, I'm not sure.  I'm not certain that he is important, more important than any other warrior.  He is important in literary culture because he is the main character of the Iliad which is one of the oldest and greatest stories that we have.

 In Age of Bronze, he starts out very young, at about 12 years old.  By the time he gets to the point where he died towards the end of the story, he’ll about 25.  But, yeah, when he is young, he is untested.  He goes through a path.  He has to grow and turn into the person that we know from the Iliad, the warrior who is more interested in his own noble nature in his own honor than he is in the rest of the, any reason for the war, this sort of pointless war that could just go on and on and everybody becomes frustrated with. 

 Rob:    Maybe, it’s really an unfair question.  I mean, because when you think about it, here I'm complaining why we are talking about Achilles, but see, that’s the character they chose to talk about.  So, he is one of the lead characters in the story, so that was the one chosen.  Some of the minor characters, they didn’t make the lead. 

Eric:     There’s a number of characters in the story who go through significant life decisions that they have to go.  They start at one point they have to go and end up at another point.  Achilles is one of those.  Yeah, he starts out very young, untested, lots enthusiasm but he doesn’t really know what he is getting into.  I mean, he has an overprotective mother.  He has sort of absent father.  He has many, many different relationships, romantic and sexual relationships during the story.  But by the time, he gets to his final battle he is a very different person than who he is when he started out.

 There are other characters who have to go through a journey, go through…contract problems, make decisions and those are the characters who are the most interesting and the most important to the story.  People like Hector, the great Trojan prince.  Helen, herself, she is the character that a lot of people seem to really dislike because she makes certain reprehensible decisions very early on.  She decides for her husband and go off with a young Trojan prince who is several years younger than she is, who is not a very likeable character, but who is very charismatic and fascinating.

 You know, the character that everyone thinks is very important is Odysseus.  He starts out more mature than a lot of the other character, but he discovers many things about himself, about his place in the world, about his relationship to the world around him over the course of the story, too.  He goes through a lot more after the Trojan War ends.  So, the story of the Odyssey history comes from the Trojan war, but he is also one of the more fascinating characters. 

Agamemnon, the high king, the leader of the Greek forces, he is not a very likeable character but he also goes through a lot of stuff, has to make a lot of decisions, knows a lot of things about who he is, about how relates to the world.  In the second graphic novel, he confronted with the problem of sacrificing his eldest daughter and basically saying “Yeah.  You can kill her because there is no other way we’re going to be able to reach Troy,” and he has to make that decision.

One of my challenges was how do I show a human being making the decision to let his daughter die, and I hope I told that as believably as possible.  It’s not that I advocate anybody to go around killing their daughters.  But I wanted to show how that could…how a human could be pushed to the point of making that decision just having such overwhelming conflict that someone actually goes there and says, “OK.  I can't make any other decision at this point but to let my daughter die.”

I think I pulled off successfully at least from the actions that I've gotten from readers.

Rob:     What I liked was how he [Achillies] was calling out to Agamemnon’s daughters, you know, yelling up that: “I’m here!”  That kind of touched me in a big way that he was giving her an out.  It added more drama to the scene.  It impressed me. 

 Eric:    You are talking about Achilles.

 Rob:    Yeah, Achilles shouting out that “I am here!”  So all she had to do was call out to save her life if she chose to do so.

 (Pause)      

               OK.  I’m about to ask the big question now.  I don’t know if I’m going to regret this but what did you think of the Hollywood movie, Troy?

 Eric:     The one in 2004?

 Rob:    Yeah.

 Eric:    Yeah.  It wasn’t as bad as I expected it to be.  There were a couple of things, major things that I didn’t like about it.  One was at the beginning.  They put some sort of date on it.  Yet, they then proceed to put all these anachronistic costuming and ships and architecture into it, stuff from other periods, stuff that they just made up.  I’m fine with telling the story of the Trojan War as a fantasy, but if you’re going to put a date on it, you can’t tell if it’s really a fantasy.  That is stick to the date if you’re going to say…if you’re going to give a date, stick to the date.  If you’re going to give a date, you can do whatever you want.

 People have re-told the story over and over and over and over again, thousands of years and it’s been pushed, pulled, twisted, done tons of stuff to, and Hollywood can do whatever they want with it, but I object to mixing your genres.  If you’re going to tell it as historical fiction then use historical fiction.  I’ve no problem with using mythology and fantasy whatever you want to call it, but make your decision.  So, I did object to the anachronistic use of research.

 They took the Lion Gate and they put the lion relieving triangle for lions above the gate.  They stuck it right into Agamemnon’s throne room which made absolutely no sense whatsoever.  They probably looked cool but I don’t care what looks cool.  It looked stupid to me if you’re putting this in there.  It’s laughable.  There is no architectural reason for it to be there or there is architectural reason for it to be in the wall of the gate.  I mean it actually looked stupid to me.  I guess, the few people  know what they’re talking about know better don’t really matter as long as they got there 10 bucks or whatever it cost to get in the movie.  Who cares?  But I just thought it was insulting. 

 What I did like about the movie were some of the performances.  I liked at the end when they have some of the Trojan characters escaping from Troy including like Paris who is really suppose to die in the traditional story.  It is sort of weird.  When they have Aeneas going and with Aeneas, they have this old man which the script doesn’t refer to and no one in the movie paid attention to this old man but that’s clearly Aeneas’s father, who in the traditional story, Aeneas carries out of Troy.

Yeah.  The traditional story is that Aeneas carries his father and his son out of Troy.  They didn’t have a son here.  They just had the father, but I wish I put more stuff like that in just little things where he noted real story, you would just go, “Oh, I know what’s going on there in the background.”  It doesn’t really matter to the overall movie, but it’s just been fun little things like that, and they did that with Aeneas’s father, Anchises, but they didn’t do enough of that for me, so overall I was disappointed with the movie. I think obviously it was rather disappointing to almost everybody.  It certainly didn’t make much of an impression on the movie world.  It is not a movie that everyone talks about anymore.

 Troy-movie-brad-pittRob:    But Brad Pitt looks good in armor, right?

 Eric:    I thought he would look better if his armor was from the real period. 

 Rob:    Oh, OK.

 Eric:    No.  I came to the movie with my prejudices, my preconceived notions.  They can do whatever they want, obviously.  This is their version of the story, andIMG090113 certainly there have been so many, many, many versions of the story.  I don’t agree with the people who get upset because they didn’t stick to a more traditional view of the story.  I guess I’m no purest as far as tradition goes, not in the way I am purest as far as the archeology goes.  They could do whatever they wanted, and I would not have that much of a problem with it.  People get upset because they made Achilles and Patroklus cousins in the Troy movie, but there is a version of the story where they are cousins, so that is perfectly legitimate as far as I’m concerned.  So, I would like to make, I guess, I just want to make it clear that as far as their version of the actual story, I didn’t have really any problem with it.

 Rob:     OK.  At the end of your book, I just thought you might want to tell us a little something about the Institute for Mediterranean Studies.  Is this an organization you’ve been involved with?

 Eric:     The Institute for Mediterranean Studies is part of the classics department at the University of CincinnatiThe University of Cincinnati in Ohio is the American partner in the current excavations at Troy.  These excavations began in 1988.  They’re led by the University of Tubingen from Germany, but it’s an international effort so they have scholars from all over the world.  The excavations have sort of…they haven’t quite ended but they’ve been greatly reduced for the past, I don’t know, eight years or so.

 The University of Cincinnati isn’t really active there anymore, but they are still the American partner at Troy.  They are basically researching post-Bronze Age, not the period that I’m interested in, but they, as the American partner, they do represent the entire excavation in the US, and they’re still seeking funds so I do put a little bit of money every once in awhile and I do publicize their efforts at raising money with Age of Bronze since I think it’s really important site.

 Obviously, Troy is a major, major site that’s important in the world for both science and the art.  The excavations that are going on there now, it’s the fourth…fourth major excavation, yeah.  The last time Troy was excavated was in the 30’s and 40’s.  Is that right?  I can’t remember at all.  I’m sorry.  I may be getting this wrong.  The Blegen expedition was earlier, but the current expedition which was led by Manfred Korfmann and is now led by Ernst Pernicka is important because we have so much greater technology than the last time the excavations were ran that we have discovered many, many new things about Troy, just the magnetometer capability that we have, we discovered the lower town from the Bronze Age which was totally unknown previous to that.  We sort of knew that there had to have been a lower town, but no one knew exactly where it was and there was no evidence for it, but now we have it in the mid-‘90’s they found it, found the circuit ditch.

 And also, funding these researches even after the excavations have been reduced.  The publication of all of the material and all of the discoveries and the analysis and all that stuff is also going to cost money.  This is important as actually having the archeologist go to the site and dig and do all their activity there.  So, I do what I can to publicize the fact they’re still going to need money.

 The Institute of Mediterranean Studies accepts donations and they have a very informal organization called Friends of Troy which if you donate so you belong automatically, and they send out reports, excavation reports once a year.  They send out little newsletters, interesting things that are happening around the excavations about Troy, about the Bronze Age, Mediterranean world.  They send that about two times a year. 

 Rob:      Are you working on anything now that you want to tell the public about?

 Eric:     Well, I’m still doing Age of Bronze.  I’m working on Issue 32 which will be part of the fourth book, the fourth graphic novel.  This section I’m working on right now is the Troilus and Cressida story.  In fact, the pages I’m working on right now are Cressida being turned over to the Achaeans against Troilus’s wishes.  This is actually a section of the story that is not from Ancient Greece.  It is a development out of the medieval tradition of the story.  Probably, the way most people know this section of the story is from Shakespeare from his play, Troilus and Cressida.  There’s also a major poem by Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus and Cressida which I’m also using as reference for the story.  That’s what I’m working on right now.

Another major project that I do is write scripts for a comic adaptation of the Oz books by L. Frank Baum.  These are published by Marvel Comics working on the scripts for the fourth Oz but right now, Dorothy and the Wizard in OzOzma of Oz, the third book is being serialized and will be out in graphic novel form in the fall, and The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the first book, and The Marvelous Land of Oz, the second book, are out now.  Those were published within the last couple of years.

Age of Bronze also is undergoing a web.  It will be on the web in interactive digital enhanced book very soon.  The major announcement of that will be this summer in July.  It’s going to be available on the web and every page is going to be annotated with my sources and discussions of how the story developed through the ages, artistic sources, archeological sources and literary sources.  There is going to be areas for discussions of that if you download the digital enhanced book.  You can go on to the discussion for and give your reactions and discuss with other readers things about the story.

The major market that we see is educational but it certainly not going to be limited to educational so this is going to be published by Throwaway Horse

Rob:       Throwaway Horse, that’s the company?

 Eric:     Yeah.  Age of Bronze itself, the comics and graphic novels, are published by Image Comics which I neglected to mention but I would like to mention that. 

 Rob:     Sure thing.  Well, I just have one more question.  Is there anybody in your series of the Age of Bronze that you identify with?

 Eric:     Well– (sounding amused)

 Rob:     Any hero that you want to pick out.

 Eric:     As the creator of Age of Bronze, I have to identify with every single one of the characters that I write about because as I said it is historical fiction, I’m telling it dramatically, it’s a story full of conflict, and you were talking about the emotions on the characters’ faces so I have to be able to understand every single character, every action, every event that happened, and I’m telling you on human levels.  So what I’m trying to bring out is the human aspect of everything.  So, I can identify with every character.  I guess, I’m not, a lot of the background characters, a lot of the other solders stories you don’t have, just worried or standing around or finding the battlefield in the background.  I can’t say I identify along with them.  But, yeah, on a human level, I have to understand everything that’s going to the heads of every single one of my characters.  But that said, I think Hector is possibly my favorite character in the story.  Even though he dies not a very glorious way, all he is ever trying to do is do the best he can to be outstanding.  I guess, that’s part of his fatal plot, too.  He feels such responsibility for his place in his society in Troy that that’s why he died because he cannot walk away from it.  He cannot say this is not a good situation for me.  I got to get out of this right now.  So, I think that’s admirable.  Unfortunately, it is also the reason that he dies.

 Rob:     Well, listen, Mr. Shanower, I want to thank you for taking the time and talking with us. 

 Eric:     OK. I just want to say thank you very much for this opportunity, and I’ve enjoyed talking to you.

(End of Interview.   The interview is available on the Ancient Rome Refocused podcast (Season 2, Episode 8) titled: “Ancient Troy, Graphic Novels and Brad Pitt?”  If you want to read more about Eric Shonower go to his web site at: http://ericshanower.com/ )

Title – "Ancient Troy, Graphic Novels, and Brad Pitt?" Mr. Cain travels back to Ancient Troy just as the Goddess Aphrodite guides Aeneas from the city. Interview with Eric Shanower the writer and illustrator of the graphic novel THE AGE OF BRONZE. Learn about the research that goes behind a truly artistic retelling of the Trojan War. Yes, Brad Pitt is discussed and the movie TROY.

MP3 File

( A discussion of Livia was started by Kristina Wood.  Many others joined in at the Facebook Ancient Rome Refocused Group site.  Either read it there or read it below.)

Kristina Wood

I’m just wondering…I’m reading Robert Graves’ “I, Claudius,” and was wondering, how accurate is it? Was Livia really as horrible as the story paints her or is she painted that way simply for the plot’s sake?

Paul Weimer

I suspect Rob could do an entire episode on the Julio-Claudian dynasty.

Robert W. M. Greaves

My understanding is that “I, Claudius” is pretty much based on some of the gossip that was flying round in ancient Rome. How much of it was true would depend on who you asked.

Gustavo Oliveri

Well, it’s ALWAYS a version .. :/

Daniels McLean

Read the chapter on Claudius in Suetonius’Lives of the Twelve Caesars.  [His full name] Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus. If you have a kindle or other e-reader, it’s available for free from Amazon or Project Gutenberg.

Rob Cain

I was watching HBO’s Rome.  There was a scene where a young Livia tries to push Atia — Augustus’s mother — out of line when they are all about to step out onto a balcony to welcome Augustus back from Egypt. 

“It’s a matter of precedence.” I think was her excuse, before Atia Balba Caesonia (by the way, daughter of Julius Caesar’s sister)  used some choice words to tell her where to go. 

I couldn’t help thinking that maybe Livia’ s demeanor was a younger version of what was seen in the 70s TV show I CLAUDIUS…which was a murderous maternal hellion in letting nothing from stopping her son Tiberius from rising to the imperial purple.

I wonder how much scriptwriters and writers of fiction and movies influenced by what was written before.

Was Livia really this way?  Did she really have a hand in the deaths of Marcellus, Marcus, Agrippa, Gauis and Lucious Caesar, Agrippa Posthumus, Germanicus, to top the list off with her own husband?

Tacitus in his ANNALS OF IMPERIAL ROME merely has accusations, a book written a century after the events and based what scholars might say is ‘uncertain accuracy.’

Well, he was certainly closer to events than I am. 

Livia does get a fair shake from Suetonius (THE TWELVE CAESARS) which is neutral and somehow favorable to her.

So who is right?

The attempts to get inside what the Windsors are actually like (and their ‘family business’ as they call it) is just as hard as interpreting the motives of the first Roman Imperial family.  Historians, artists, and playwrights have filled in gaps and suspicions.

Here is a small example (and a small one).  A few years ago a movie came out called CATCH ME IF YOU CAN.  It was based on the adventures of Frank Abagnale Jr., a 16 years old boy who posed as an airline pilot and through check fraud amassed millions of dollars. 

In the book (Frank Abagnale SENIOR was a hard working guy who came upon hard times).  In the movie there were many deviations from the actual story, but Abagnale’s father is portrayed as someone skirting the law and eventually getting into trouble with the IRS.  How else can you explain having such a ‘bad’ son? (note* He was caught, did time, and started his own security business).

The book at the end includes a Q and A session with the author that asks the about the portrayal of his father.  Abagnale Jr. responds: “It’s just a movie.”

 That’s true…it is…but imagine that that was YOUR father (or any relative you held high in esteem).  In a way its changing history and I think there are many historical figures that are bent and shaped for the purpose of drama and good story telling.

Sure, Livia could have been a murderous viper, and then again maybe not.  Who is telling the story?  How close are they to the main characters?  How close are they  to them in history?  What did they based their research on – history, word of mouth, or fiction?  Is the historian or storyteller, a roman republican, someone hurt by the imperial family, a secret Christian or someone who liked gossip?

 Do we really know anyone, and why let gossip get in the way of good storytelling?

 (What do you think?  Comment.  Let’s hear from you.)

Episode 8 – THE AGE OF BRONZE

If you talk about the Romans, you have to talk about the Greeks…and if you talk about the Greeks, eventually you have to talk about the Trojans.

–Rob Cain, Ancient Rome Refocused

The artwork of Eric Shanower

The artwork of Eric Shanower

I always wanted to ’quote’ myself. 

The next Ancient Rome Refocused has an interview with Eric Shanower who is the author illustrator of THE AGE OF BRONZE.  This is a fantastic graphic novel of the adventures of the ancient heroes of Ancient Greece, and has a very realistic take on the story of Ancient Troy. 

His website can be found on:  http://ericshanower.com

Episode 8 deals talks how enduring the story has been over the ages.  Most great artists, authors and playwrights have tried their hand at telling the tale of Ancient Troy.  It has everything: sex, betrayal, love, hate, magic, the Gods and Man in conflict.  Can you ask  for more?  There is even the most beautiful woman in world, and the great warriors of the age.  

This story always had appeal.  Remember John McClane of the Die Hard Series?  Remember Rambo?  What of Matt Damon in the Bourne Series?  Our modern fiction is filled with memories of the heroic age.  While modern day Homers use the classics as inspiration, the story Troy itself is retold and retold to audiences of every generation that never seem to tire of it. 

Is it the way it’s told, or are we hardwired to be thrilled by such stories?

Watch for Episode 8 coming soon to this site, hipcast and itunes.