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A small selection of the photos from Hartwell's 2008 production of Julius Caesar.

Little Caesars (4,259 square feet)

12496 Warwick Boulevard, Newport News, VA

Opened March 27th, 2019; originally Mercer's Florist (August 16th, 1984-winter 2018)

 

They've been putting up these cheeky little remarks at their own expense for the past few weeks, since the projected opening was in February and it kept getting pushed back. I like seeing a business do things like this! It gives them more of a personality instead of existing as just another Little Caesars.

Delicious Grana Padano.

3rd box variation from little caesars

Caesar finds a good book to read. He had quite a selection to choose from, but picked his own Commentaries on the Gallic War as his favorite.

 

His other choices included (from left to right): Major Pauline Cushman the Union Spy and Scout, by F. L. Sarmiento, 1890; Ben Hur a Tale of the Christ, by General Lew Wallace, 1880; Huxley's Autobiography and Essays, by Thomas Henry Huxley (edited by Sarah E. Simons), 1912; Abraham Lincoln and the Sleeping Sentinel of Vermont, by Waldo F. Glover, 1936; Tim the Autobiography of a Dog, by Ethelbert Talbot, 1914; A Book of Short Stories, edited by Blanche Colton Williams, 1920; Nurse and Spy in the Union Army; an autobiography by S. Emma E. Edmonds. 1865; From My Youth Up, an autobiography by Margaret E. Sangster, 1909; Wings, (the book based on the 1927 silent movie "Wings," -- the first motion picture to win an Academy Award for Best Picture) by John Monk Saunders, 1927; A Checkered Life, an autobiography by John A. Joyce, 1883; Jewels of Memory, by John A. Joyce, 1895; More Cargoes, by W. W. Jacobs, 1897; The Geological Story Briefly Told, by James D. Dana, 1875; The Flying Gray-Haired Yank, the Adventures of a Volunteer, an autobiographical account by Michael Egan, 1888; and Life and Deeds of General Sherman, by Henry Davenport Northrop, 1891.

Made fresh at the table - with *lots* of garlic.

A small selection of the photos from Hartwell's 2008 production of Julius Caesar.

A replica statue of Julius Caesar outside the Roman Museum in Nyon - it was no photos inside *argh*

Caesar's Palace Hotel and Casino.

Little Caesars (1,639 square feet)

3014 Turnpike Road, Suite 210, Midtown Marketplace, Portsmouth, VA

Opened in September 2015

A small selection of the photos from Hartwell's 2008 production of Julius Caesar.

The statue & fountains in front of the Caesars Palace casino & hotel.

 

3 frames combined & tonemapped in Photomatix. Contrast & sharpening adjustments in CS4.

Inside Mönchjochhutte hut....naughty Caesar didn't sign the visitor book...but he was only there for a couple of minutes to pose for this shot.

Caesar meets the strangest creatures on his wonderings.

caesar's casino, atlantic city, nj

ROMA ARCHEOLOGICA & RESTAURO ARCHITETTURA 2022. Update. Rome, the Danish-Italian Forum of Caesar Project (2021-22). New Photographs of the Excavation site & interview with Prof. Søren M. Kristiansen. Arrhus University (10 Dec. 2021) & Supplimentary Photographs: Francesco Campanini, The Forum of Caesar. FB (27 Jan. 2022) = Roma, il Foro di Cesare: Nuove fotografie di scavi (10/12/2021 & 27/01/2022). S.v., Il Foro di Cesare; in: Il Giornale D’Italia (12/03/1933): 1 & Il Messaggero (10/10/1933): 5. wp.me/pbMWvy-2uB

 

Foto: Rome, the Forum of Caesar excavations; in: BING MAPS & GOOGLE EARTH (July 2022).

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51901079005

 

1). ROME - Excavating Caesar's Forum: Present results of the Caesar's Forum Project. Jacobsen, J. K., Presicce, C. P., Raja, R. & Vitti, M. (2019/2021). "Excavating Caesar's Forum: Present results of the Caesar's Forum Project", Analecta 44: 239–245. Open source [in PDF].

 

Foto: Francesco Campanini, The Forum of Caesar. FB (27 Jan. 2022)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51901075220

 

Foto: Riccardo Vincenzi, Rome – the Imperial Fora. Instagram (2021).

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51900756079

 

Abstract - This report presents the Caesar’s Forum Project. It furthermore summarizes the results obtained this far while situating the current investigations within the broader research history pertaining to the area best known as that of Caesar’s Forum. Hitherto the 16th–20th century Alessandrino Quarter that until now only received limited scholarly attention has been excavated within the framework of the project. Moreover, the pottery from the 1998–2000 excavations conducted by the Sovrintendenza Capitolina ai Beni Culturali has been processed in preparation for the ongoing excavations, which are expected to reveal material similar to that from previous excavations, spanning a cultural horizon of more than 3000 years.

 

Foto: Francesco Campanini, The Forum of Caesar. FB (27 Jan. 2022)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51900514763

 

Fonte / source:

--- The Caesar’s Forum Project [2017-21]; in: Arrhus University (11/2021).

cas.au.dk/en/cfp/news-events/show/artikel/excavating-caes...

 

Foto: Prof. Søren M. Kristiansen. Arrhus University, Denmark (10 Dec. 2021)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51900422401

 

2). ROME - Meet UrbNet - Prof. Søren M. Kristiansen / the Danish-Italian excavations at Caesar's Forum in Rome; in: Arrhus University / Video (1o/2021).

 

Foto: Francesco Campanini, The Forum of Caesar. FB (27 Jan. 2022)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51900422491

 

Over the coming months, we will upload short video introductions of the people at Centre for Urban Network Evolutions (UrbNet). In these videos, you will meet the researchers at UrbNet and hear a bit about what they do.

 

Prof. Søren M. Kristiansen. Arrhus University, Denmark (10 Dec. 2021)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51900422456

 

In this first video, you will meet Associate Professor Søren M. Kristiansen from the Department of Geoscience at Aarhus University. Søren is a member of the UrbNet senior advisory group and has worked on several UrbNet-related projects and excavations. Find out more about Søren and what he does - specifically in relation to the Danish-Italian excavations at Caesar's Forum in Rome.

 

Prof. Søren M. Kristiansen. Arrhus University, Denmark (10 Dec. 2021)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51901074965

 

Fonte/ source, Video & Foto:

--- Arrhus University / Video (1o/2021).

urbnet.au.dk/news/nyhed/artikel/meet-urbnet-soeren-m-kris...

 

Foto: Francesco Campanini, The Forum of Caesar. FB (27 Jan. 2022)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51899465472

 

Prof. Søren M. Kristiansen. Arrhus University, Denmark (10 Dec. 2021)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51899465277

 

3). ROMA - Francesco Campanini, "Passeggiare indisturbati nella città antica al centro di quella nuova." Facebook (27/01/2022).

 

Prof. Søren M. Kristiansen. Arrhus University, Denmark (10 Dec. 2021)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51900514663

 

--- Rome, the second series of important photographs of the excavations in the Forum of Caesar by Francesco Campanini, in: Fb (27/01/2022).

 

Foto: Francesco Campanini, The Forum of Caesar. FB (27 Jan. 2022)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51900422556

 

Fonte / source, foto:

--- Francesco Campanini, in: Fb (27/01/2022). Nota: S.v., Sotto = Foto di Francesco Campanini / Fb (29/09/2021).

 

www.facebook.com/francescocampanini76/posts/1022572715022...

 

Prof. Søren M. Kristiansen. Arrhus University, Denmark (10 Dec. 2021)

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51900753574

 

S.v.,

 

Foto: ROMA - Foro di Cesare, Scavi (1930-35). Roma, Collezione privata Munoz Antonio (fino al 1961); in: Comune di Roma / SMART web (01/2022).

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51832353982

 

--- ROMA ARCHEOLOGICA & RESTAURO ARCHITETTURA 2022: ROMA – Foro di Cesare, Scavi (1930-35) / Roma, Collezione privata Munoz Antonio (fino al 1961); in: Comune di Roma / Palazzo Braschi, SMART web (01/2022). S.v., ROMA – “Foro di Cesare: Durante lo scavo sulla Platea del Tempio di Venere Genitrice & Frammento di trabeazione dell’Interno del T. di Venere Genitrice” [marzo e ottobre 1933]; in: Il Giornale D’Italia (12/03/1933): 1 & Il Messaggero (10/10/1933): 5. (21/01/2022). wp.me/pbMWvy-2pn

 

Foto: Dr. Arch. Olindo Grossi,”The Forum of Julius Caesar and the Temple of Venus Genetrix.” Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome, Vol. 13 (1936): 215-220.

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51765660901

 

--- ROMA ARCHEOLOGICA & RESTAURO ARCHITETTURA 2021. “Prof. Corrado Ricci, Il Foro di Cesare & Il tempio di Venere Genitrice.” Il Giornale D’ Italia (09/02/1933): 3. S.v., The Sunday Star, Wash. D.C., (12 Mar. 1933): A8. S.v., Dr. Arch. Orlandi Grossi, MAAR (1936): 215-220 [= PDF]. (12/12/2021). wp.me/pbMWvy-2jG

 

Ms. Virginia Raggi – Mayor of Rome (left) greeting Queen Margrethe II of Denmark (right) during the official initiation of the excavations in Rome for the joint “Danish-Italian Caesar’s Forum Project” (2017-22); in: RARA 2022 (05/02/2022).

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51872451508

 

--- ROMA ARCHEOLOGICA & RESTAURO ARCHITETTURA 2022. HISTORIE OG ARKÆOLOGI - The second phase of the excavation at Caesar's Forum in Rome initiated; in: 'The Caesar’s Forum Project', SCHOOL OF CULTURE AND SOCIETY - Aarhus University, Denmark (Mie Lind / 23 March 2021 [& Revised Radomir Gluhovic 16 November 2021]). Foto: Riccardo Vincenzi / Instagram (2020) & RARA 2022 (05/02/2022). wp.me/pbMWvy-2s2 (09/02/2022).

 

Foto / Video: “Roma, I Fori Imperiali & Foro di Cesare”; in: THE CARLSBERG FOUNDATION, DENMARK / You-Tube (05-08/11/2021).

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51676454372

 

--- ROMA ARCHEOLOGIA E RESTAURO ARCHITETTURA 2021: Notizie Dal Foro di Cesare a Roma: Danesi Studiosi e Studenti universitari portano alla luce nuovi resti architettonici del Foro di Cesare, e sotto il Foro anche possibili resti di Abitazioni arcaiche (753-510 a.C.?) e Quattro sepolture di bambini di tipo Tombe / Dolio? AARHUS UNIVERSITY & THE CARLSBERG FOUNDATION, DENMARK / You-Tube (05-08/11/2021). [in: Dansk tekst, Testo Italiano & English Text]. Inoltre: Archivio Notizie per le scoperte dell’età del Bronzo e del Ferro nell’area del Foro di Cesare (1998-2009). wp.me/pbMWvy-2cp (13/11/2021).

 

Foto: Roma, Il Foro di Cesare di Francesco Campanini / Fb (29/09/2021).

www.flickr.com/photos/imperial_fora_of_rome/51533606291

 

--- ROMA ARCHEOLOGICA & RESTAURO ARCHITETTURA 2021. Il Foro di Cesare scavi in corso e nuove pubblicazioni (2021). Foto di Francesco Campanini / Fb (29/09/2021). S.v., Prof. Arch. Wladek Fuchs, JRA (09/2021): 1-41 (abstract/astratto); Dott.ssa Isabella Salvagni, Boll., Di Archeo. XII (1/2021): 99-137 [in PDF]; Mario Torelli, ARG 6 (2004): 63-109 [in PDF] & Dott.ssa Arch. Barbara Baldrati (2002-2004 & 2009). Anche: Giacomo Boni, “La Curia del Senato Romano ed il Forum Iulium.” Nuova Antologia (1917): 151-158 [in PDF]. wp.me/pbMWvy-1Yf (30/09/2021).

The sun rises behind Caesar Augustus.

 

See all my Flickr images of Caesar Augustus.

This was a Caesar salad we had doe lunch that day. It anchovies on the top, which actually was my favorite part of the salad.

On the Ides of March (15 March; Roman calendar) of 44 BC, Caesar was due to appear at a session of the Senate. According to Plutarch, as Caesar arrived at the Senate, Tillius Cimber presented him with a petition to recall his exiled brother.The other conspirators crowded round to offer support. Both Plutarch and Suetonius say that Caesar waved him away, but Cimber grabbed his shoulders and pulled down Caesar's tunic. Caesar then cried to Cimber, "Why, this is violence!" ("Ista quidem vis est!"). At the same time, Casca produced his dagger and made a glancing thrust at the dictator's neck. Caesar turned around quickly and caught Casca by the arm. According to Plutarch, he said in Latin, "Casca, you villain, what are you doing?". Within moments, the entire group, including Brutus, was striking out at the dictator. Plutarch also reports that Caesar said nothing, pulling his toga over his head when he saw Brutus among the conspirators. The version best known in the English-speaking world is the Latin phrase "Et tu, Brute?" ("And you, Brutus?", commonly rendered as "You too, Brutus?"), this derives from Shakespeare's. Brutus and his companions then marched to the Capitol while crying out to their beloved city: "People of Rome, we are once again free!". Caesar's dead body lay where it fell on the Senate floor for nearly three hours before other officials arrived to remove it.

 

Caesar's body was cremated, and on the site of his cremation the Temple of Caesar was erected a few years later (at the east side of the main square of the Roman Forum). Nowadays, only its altar remains. [wiki]

 

Roman Forum

Roma - Italy Europe

Carved in the wall of the Temple of Dandarah, the child Caesarion stands between his parents, Cleopatra and Julius Caesar.

Caesar's Legion, Fallout New Vegas Photographer: A.Z.Production Cosplay Photography (www.facebook.com/azproductioncosp) Cosplayer: The StandArt (www.facebook.com/TSACP/) #cosplay #game

Caesars Casino at Atlantic City: Seems like everybody is in a hurry to enter into the casino. I went there to try hands on poker but could not restrain myself taking shots [one above]. The good news is I did win $200 bucks on slot machine. Cheers..!!! ;)

 

Now you can buy my art at tarunparmar.imagekind.com

Caesar wants to know whatever happend to earth, air, fire and water as the foundations of the cosmos.

Little Caesars

15482 Warwick Boulevard, Suite A2, Newport News, VA

Opened October 9th, 2020; originally part of Twin B Auto Parts (August 1988-1994), later Dairy Queen (September 16th, 1995-April 2017)

 

After only a year spent operating in the Hidenwood area, Tidewater Pie decided to move this Little Caesars further up Warwick Boulevard near Denbigh and the Fort Eustis base, taking over the old Dairy Queen space (at least half of it, since I can't tell how they're utilizing the left part of the building with covered windows). The decision seems solely based on the fact that the building has a drive-thru, which I guess wasn't a huge deal breaker when they originally opened in the old florist shop last year but is vital now that you have a lot of customers unwilling to go inside certain businesses. After all, this part of Newport News didn't necessarily need a Little Caesars, as the unaffiliated Jefferson Crossing location already has 'em covered, but even then the pizza chain had a location right across the street from here in the old Rack & Sack shopping center back in the 90s, so it's sort of a return! Also, this new location is directly next to Chanello's, which is a total non-issue because an employee there actually came here to pick up lunch during my visit!

French Army CAESAR of the 40e Régiment d’Artillerie (40e RA), 501e Régiment de Chars de Combat (501e RCC) military base, Mourmelon-le-Grand, May 12, 2018.

The standard "Caesar salad" legend credits the creation of the recipe to an Italian immigrant, Caesar Cardini, who operated a restaurant (or hotel and restaurant in some versions) in Tijuana. According to the canonical version, told by Caesar's daughter Rosa, he tossed the first Caesar's salad on the evening of July 4, 1924. The most detail I've been able to find on the supposed background of Caesar Cardini is in articles in the "Tulsa World" (July 9, 1997) by Rik Espinosa (whom I've also spoken to by phone), in "The Santa Fe New Mexican" (May 28, 1997) by Alan C. Taylor, and in the "Chicago Tribune" (July 23, 1987) by Peter Kump.

 

Caesar was born near Lago Maggiore, Italy, in 1896; he and his brother Alex emigrated to the U.S. after World War I. The Cardini's lived in San Diego but operated a restaurant in Tijuana to circumvent Prohibition. The canonical version claims that the restaurant was frequented by Hollywood stars such as Clarke Gable, Jean Harlow, and W.C. Fields; if this was ever the case, it isn't relevant to 1924, when Gable was a young unknown, Fields was still in vaudeville, and Jean Harlow was 13 years old.

 

The only person who actually claims to have dined at the restaurant is Julia Child, who, according to Paul Kump, said she was brought there by her parents and ate the salad at its source. After the repeal of Prohibition (1934) and the outlawing of casino gambling in Mexico (1935), the Cardini's sold the Tijuana restaurant and moved to the Los Angeles area. The restaurant still exists in Tijuana, though it has changed location a number of times.

 

In L.A. , the Cardini's are supposed to have sold a homemade version of their salad dressing from a store. In 1948, Caesar and Rosa began to commercially bottle the dressing, though because "Caesar salad" was in the public domain--which suggests it was pretty well-known--they could trademark only "Original Caesar's" and "Cardini". Rik Espinosa reports "Rosa told me that in 1953, the Paris-based International Society of Epicures called the Caesar's Salad [sic] the 'greatest recipe to originate from the America's in 50 years.'" (Allan C. Taylor gives as a source for the same information a public relations firm for the dressing manufacturer.) Caesar Cardini died in 1956.

 

There are also a number of non-canonical versions of the Cardini legend: according to Rik Espinosa, Paul Maggiora, a partner of the Cardini's, claimed to have tossed the first Caesar's salad in 1927 for American airmen from San Diego and called it "Aviator's Salad." (Maggiore and the two Cardini's were all veterans of the Italian air force during the war.) Paul Kump claims that Diana Kennedy (an oft-quoted authority on Mexican cooking) had met Alex Cardini in Mexico City before Alex's death in 1975, and that Alex claimed to have developed the salad (he too allegedly called it "aviator's salad"). (For those interested in the culinary details, Alex's version included anchovies, but that was not the way Caesar made it--in the canonical telling he got the fishy tang only from Worcestershire sauce.) Neal Matthews ("San Diego Union-Tribune", March 2, 1995) quotes one Livio Santini, an elderly resident of Tijuana, who claims he made the salad, from a recipe of his mother, in the kitchen of Caesar's restaurant when he was 18 years old, in 1925, and that Caesar took the recipe from him.

 

A totally heterodox origin for "Caesar salad" appears in the 3rd edition of "Webster's New World": "so named in honor of (Gaius) Julius Caesar by Giacomo Junia, Italian-American chef in Chicago, who invented it c. 1903." Journalists only bring this etymology up to heap scorn on it (demonstrating by the way their complete incomprehension of the meaning of "Webster" in dictionary titles.) Is anybody out there in Cleveland on ADS-L? Where did this etymology come from?

 

The documentation of the collocation "Caesar salad"/"Caesar's salad" is thin. The first cite Merriam has is from the "Britannica Book of the Year, 1950", from the article "Fads of 1949": "In foods, fads were limited. Caesar salad was in vogue through the summer and fall, and slot-machine hot dogs still prevailed in the larger cities" (pp. 273-74). There have to be earlier cites out there, even if only from 1949, when the salad was supposedly popular (suggesting it had been regional until then?).

 

The "Tulsa World" article includes an illustration from an old postcard of the Cardini restaurant in Tijuana; I'm hoping to get a copy of the postcard from Rik Espinosa, who owns the original. This would at least document, to my personal satisfaction, the existence of the restaurant at one of its locations. (Espinosa, who grew up in southern California, and whose grandparents owned a hotel in Tijuana two blocks from the legendary restaurant, is a font of knowledge on Caesar salad lore and the Cardini's, not to mention Tijuana.)

  

Caesar chicken salad

Heading down to Staffal - amusing ourselves by texting Dennis to say we were one valley over.

Das Caesars Palace ist ein Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. Es ist im Stil eines antiken römischen Palastes errichtet.

 

Das luxuriöse Hotel am Las Vegas Boulevard besitzt 3.348 Gästezimmer und Suiten. Säulen, Statuen und Wasser-Fontänen prägen das Erscheinungsbild. Das im Hotel integrierte Spielkasino belegt eine Fläche von etwa 12.000 Quadratmeter. Die Forum Shops, ein großes Einkaufszentrum mit exklusiven Geschäften, und ein Schwimmbad-Bereich mit vielen Säulen und Marmor gehören zu dem Komplex. Auf seiner Website wirbt der Hotel-Palast mit dem Motto: "All die kleinen Details, die den Unterschied zwischen einer normalen Übernachtung und einem spektakulären Erlebnis ausmachen, gehören Ihnen."

  

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Caesar Salad Dressing

 

2 tablespoons mayonnaise - or - 1 egg

1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice

1/2 teaspoon Dijon mustard

1 small garlic clove, minced

1/2 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

1 oil-packed anchovy fillet, finely chopped (optional)

1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil

 

Whisk all except last together. Gradually whisk in 1/4 cup olive oil. Season with salt and pepper. (Dressing can be made 1 day ahead. Cover and refrigerate. Bring to room temperature and rewhisk before using.)

The lobby at Caesars Palace. Las Vegas, NV. November 2016.

Caesars Palace Las Vegas, Nevada

William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar

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