Jona Lendering
Jona Lendering read history at Leiden University (MA 1993), specialized in Mediterranean culture at the Amsterdam Free University (MA 1996), and worked at excavations in Holland (Riethoven) and Greece (Halos). After teaching historical theory and ancient history at the Free University for several years, he was one of the founders of a school for history teaching, Livius Onderwijs. Born in Amsterdam, it has now spread to auxiliary locations in Bussum, Dronten, Gouda, Haarlem, Hoorn, Schagen, Zaanstad, and Zoetermeer. As of 2013, Livius Onderwijs has eight teachers, about 500-600 students a year, and offers tours to countries like Italy, Turkey, Iran, and Lebanon. The field trips help to etch into the students' minds some of what they've learned at the school.
Because history is for a large part telling a story, something you do best in your own language, Lendering prefers to publish in Dutch journals. However, he has contributed to the Bryn Mawr Classical Review and Ancient Warfare, while he is the founder of Ancient History Magazine. He is also the publisher and editor of the on-line publication of the Babylonian Chronicles of the Hellenistic Period, a set of important cuneiform sources for the history of the Seleucid and Parthian Near East, transcribed, translated and commented on by Bert van der Spek of the Free University Amsterdam and Irving Finkel of the British Museum. A publication as book is in preparation.
Lendering has written several books and maintains a blog in Dutch. He is the author of several books, including Edge of Empire and Consensus and Crises. For the Livius website, which has received several awards, he collaborates closely with Bill Thayer of LacusCurtius. Lendering is also the webmaster of two daily blogs, the MainzerBeobachter.com and Grondslagen.net.
There are 9380 items in Jona Lendering:
Building Orders and Capitals
Building order: a style of (Graeco-Roman) building design. Reconstructed capital from Xanten Although there used to be complex rules to determine the…
![]() Bujoru, Votive chariot (Early Iron) |
Bukhara, museum
There's a small archaological-historical museum in the citadel of Bukhara. (A couple of finds are on display in the Mausoleum of Job, just west of the citadel.)Bull of Phalaris
Phalaris: tyrant of Acragas on Sicily between c.570 and c.554, the proverbial "evil tyrant".Between 570 and 544, Phalaris was tyrant of Acragas, a newly founded city in southern Sicily, which he made very powerful. Our sources portray him as a clever but cruel man.…Bulla Regia
Bulla Regia: Numidian-Roman city on a great plain in western Africa.Bulla Regia House of Amphitrite, Triumph of Venus Situated on a large…
![]() Bulla Regia, Apollo |
![]() Bulla Regia, House of Amphitrite, Triumph of Venus |
![]() Bulla Regia, House of the Hunt |
![]() Jona Lendering |
![]() Bulla Regia, Lucilla |
![]() Bulla Regia, Memmian Baths |
![]() Bulla Regia, Opus Africanum |