donatj 17 hours ago

Keep in mind the bright shiny copper color one is just a modern interpretation of what it may have looked like when it was complete, and what was found was just the small fragment next to it.

The article just neglects to mention this directly.

The model seems to make a lot of assumptions based on such a small fragment.

  • jihadjihad 17 hours ago

    It's a "highly detailed reconstruction" (bottom of TFA). Agreed that TFA is light on details and annoyingly disables text selection, which is something I haven't been annoyed by since 2007.

    • voidUpdate 16 hours ago

      Not only does it manually disable text selection, it also disables the right click menu and most ways of opening the dev tools... for some reason... (you can still reach dev tools using the top right menu on chrome though)

    • donatj 17 hours ago

      Using "Find" in my browser says those words are on the page somewhere but I cannot find them anywhere.

      • jihadjihad 17 hours ago

        Weird. It's the last sentence in TFA.

        • donatj 17 hours ago

          I think it actually slipped under the ad. Using a browser with Adblock I see it.

  • permo-w 9 hours ago

    >The model seems to make a lot of assumptions based on such a small fragment

    this could be said about a shocking amount of historical study

  • piombisallow 14 hours ago

    It would have been bright and shiny when new back then too

apples_oranges 20 hours ago

Personal items of dead people always make me emotional.. do you know what I mean? Even ~2000 years after the fact.. This person's life ended and all that he was and thought and felt is now gone.. so we do not know much, except that this item was important to him.

  • coldtea 19 hours ago

    You might enjoy this then:

      Davenports and kettle drums
      And swallowtail coats
      Tablecloths and patent leather shoes
      Bathing suits and bowling balls
      And clarinets and rings
      And all this radio really needs is a fuse
    
      A tinker, a tailor, a soldier's things
      His rifle, his boots full of rocks
      And this one is for bravery and this one is for  me 
      And everything's a dollar in this box
    
      Cuff links and hubcaps
      Trophies and paperbacks
      It's good transportation
      But the brakes aren't so hot
      Neckties and boxing gloves
      This jackknife is rusted
      You can pound that dent out on the hood
    
      A tinker or tailor, a soldier's things
      His rifle, his boots full of rocks
      Oh, and this one is for bravery, oh, and this one is for me
      And everything's a dollar in this box
    
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNwC8ETa0pg
  • DragonStrength 16 hours ago

    I most definitely am reminded of how few people leave an archaeological mark when I read these. Though from my perspective, I see him as one of the special ones, even if we know very little. There are so few folks remembered even a generation later -- even the wealthiest industrialists and movie stars quickly fade.

  • bloqs 20 hours ago

    agree. its quite an intimately human thing

kaonwarb a day ago

The single photo is remarkably elegant - a spare, almost modernist design.

  • andrewflnr a day ago

    Pretty slick and functional given the materials of the time. I wonder if it could be made to work today. I think adapting it to cards and cash would make it an awkward package, but maybe if you lay them out along the arm it could work.

    • hoseja 20 hours ago

      Bronze is a VERY nice material. It's a shame it's actually too expensive to see much use in our modern consumerist lives.

      • is_true 18 hours ago

        It's also easy to steal

        • andrewflnr 5 hours ago

          Not when it's a solid band around your wrist. Materials in isolation don't tend to have an inherent difficulty level of theft.

volemo a day ago

Damn, I’ve read “pulse” and was both very confused and very excited!

voidUpdate 16 hours ago

How do you get that over your hand, and simultaneously have it tight enough to hold the little flap closed?

thaumasiotes 5 hours ago

> The camp was established by the 10th Legion, who was stationed in the area between AD 172 and 180

This is interesting wording. I have a strong urge toward saying either of two other options:

- "The camp was established by the 10th Legion, who were stationed in the area between..." [The Legion is a collection of people]

- "The camp was established by the 10th Legion, which was stationed in the area between..." [The Legion is not a person]

I have difficulty interpreting the Legion as a single person, though. Does the wording in the article work for other people?

---

As to the item itself, I find it a little odd to call it a "purse", since it's reconstructed as a solid metal object. That sounds inconvenient and uncomfortable at best.

dfedbeef a day ago

Seems jingley

  • ggm a day ago

    Wrap the silver in cloth. Can't open without removing from arm so within limits stops petty theft.