The original question was too long to copy in. It was: "The sum of the ages of Old and Young is 48. Old is twice as old as young was when old was half as old as young will be when young is three times as old as old was when old was three times as old as young How old is old?" There is a rather strenuous algebraic solution.The answer is :Old is 30, Young is 18When Old was 18, Young was 6; when Old was 27 (1/2 of 54), Young was 15, and Old is twice that.If you change the sum to 32, then the ages become 20 and 12.When Old was 12, Young was 4; when Old was 18 (1/2 of 36), Young was 10.In each case, Old is always 5/3 as old as Young and 5/8 of the sum.
You are 0 years old. You are 5 months old. You are 20 weeks old. You are 135 days old. You are 3,252 hours old
6576 days old and 9 years old
0.14 centuries old,1.4 decades old,14 years old,168 months old,730.484 weeks old,5113.39 days old,122721 hours old,7.363e+6 minutes old, 4.418e+8 seconds old, 4.418e+11 milliseconds old,4.418e+14 microseconds old, and 4.418e+17 nono seconds old.
If you were 3000 years old you would be 3000 years old.
The first fort at vidolanda was built about 85ADThe first Roman fort at Vindolanda was built about 85ADThe first Roman fort at Vindolanda was built about 85AD
The Vindolanda Tablets do not have records past 122 AD. However, the most famous writings from the Tablets, made around 100 AD, are written by commander Flavius Cerialis and his wife Sulpicia Lepidina.
It is in Nortumberland,England and we recommend if u go there you visit Vindolanda and the Roman Army Museum
G. W. I. Hodgson has written: 'The animal remains from excavations at Vindolanda, 1970-1975' -- subject(s): Animal remains (Archaeology)
Vindolanda was one of a series of Roman forts built in northern England in the last quarter of the 1st Century AD. The forts stretched from east to west, and are considered to have been a consolidation of the frontier of the Roman Empire. Roman armies had advanced far into Scotland in the 70s AD. But either by choice or necessity, they abandoned these gains and formed a frontier stretching roughly from modern Newcastle in the east to modern Carlisle in the west. The forts, together with the east-west road now known as the Stanegate connecting them, formed this frontier for 40 years. Then Hadrian's Wall was built just to the north, and the Stanegate forts either went out of use or changed their purpose. Vindolanda remained in use, though the ultimate purpose of its garrison (whether support for the Wall forts or protection in an unruly hinterland) isn't fully understood.
Of the 16 forts along Hadrian's wall, possibly the most famous is that of Vindolanda. That's the fort where archaeologists have found most of the artifacts, including personal letters and some scraps of clothing.
Roman forts were mostly constructed around the borders of the empire. There are many along the Rhine and also many forts along Hadrian's wall. The fort at Aliso in Germany and Vindolanda in Britain are two of the most noted. The Tenth Legion also had a fort in modern day Israel. As a rule of thumb, you could say that wherever the Roman had a military presence, they had a fort.
The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.The Romans had no formal dinner party invitations. Most dinner invitations were by word of mouth, but if a written one were needed, a slave would generally be sent with a note inviting the guest and he would wait for a reply. Sometimes invitations were sent in letters, such as the letter from a Roman woman at the fort at Vindolanda, where she was inviting her friend to come to her birthday party.
Yes, they did. In the begining of the custom, only the emperor's birthday was celebrated with the emperor giving public banquests and sometimes games in the theater or arena. The custom soon trickled down to the wealthy, who would celebrate with lavish banquets. There is a letter found in Vindolanda, from a lady named Laudia Severa inviting her friend Sulpicia Lepidina to her birthday party.
No They actually didn't, they went bearfoot everywhere. On some special accasions they would where mocasons but that is all!Ha! Ha! Funny joke. Believe it or not, the Romans actually did wear socks in the cold climates. There are letters from Vindolanda from a soldier asking for someone back home to send him more socks.
M. R. D. Seaward has written: 'The Vindolanda environment' 'Advice for young naturalists' 'Checklist of Yorkshirelichens' 'Lichen flora of Lincolnshire' -- subject(s): Lichens 'A revised check-list of Lincolnshire lichens' 'A lichen check-list of the West Riding conurbation'
There are plenty of Roman sites in Britain. The most famous ones are: The Roman baths in Bath, Somerset; Fishbourne Roman Palace, near Fishbourne, West Sussex; Hadrian's Wall; the ruins of the Roman fort of Vindolanda and the Vindolanda Tablets, just south of Hadrian's Wall, near Bardon Mill, Northumberland; the Arbeia Roman Fort and Museum in South Shields, Tyne & Wear; the Dolaucothi Gold Mines or Ogofau Gold Mine, Carmarthenshire, Wales; the ruins of a Roman Town near Caerwent, Monmouthshire, Wales; Chedworth Roman Villa, near Chedworth, Gloucestershire; the Corinium Museum in Cirencester, Gloucestershire; Viroconium, the ruins of a Roman town in Wroxeter, Shropshire; and the Antonine Wall in Scotland.