About the Greek poet Aristeas lang el was a semi legend ary Greek poet and Iatromantis miracle worker , a native of Proconnesus in Asia Minor , active ca. 7th century BCE. In book IV of Histories Herodotus The Histories , Herodotus reports blockquote The birthplace of Aristeas, the poet who sung of these things, I have already mentioned. I will now relate a tale which I heard concerning him both at Proconnesus and at Cyzicus. Aristeas, they said, who belonged to one of the noblest families in the island, had entered one day into a fuller s shop, when he suddenly dropt down dead. Hereupon the fuller shut up his shop, and went to tell Aristeas kindred what had happened. The report of the death had just spread through the town, when a certain Cyzicenian, lately arrived from Artaca, contradicted the rumour, affirming that he had met Aristeas on his road to Cyzicus, and had spoken with him. This man, therefore, strenuously denied the rumour the relations, however, proceeded to the fuller s shop with all things necessary for the funeral, intending to carry the body away. But on the shop being opened, no Aristeas was found, either dead or alive. Seven years afterwards he reappeared ... Two hundred and forty years after his death, Aristeas appeared in Metapontum in Mezzogiorno southern ... his death he had been travelling with Apollo in the form of a sacred raven . Arimaspea Aristeas ... DC Comics Vertigo Sandman comics Aristeas was a poet who lived around 700 BCE, and became by transformation ... Aristeas of Proconnesus Clarendon Press, Oxford, http www.worldcat.org oclc 1907787 OCLC 1907787 DEFAULTSORT Aristeas Category Ancient Greek poets Category 7th century BC poets Category Ancient Greek shamans Category Characters in Herodotus de Aristeas el es Aristeas de Proconeso fr Arist e de Proconn se it Aristea di Proconneso hu Ariszteasz nl Aristeas sr Aristej sh Aristej fi Aristeas ... more details
Aristeas may refer to Aristeas , 7th century BCE Greek poet Letter of Aristeas A letter purporting to record the events behind the translation of the Septuagint Aristeas, a character in The Dreaming comics The Dreaming comics disambig es Aristeas desambiguaci n ... more details
The so called Letter of Aristeas or Letter to Philocrates is a Hellenistic work of the 2nd century BCE, one of the Pseudepigrapha . ref name Harris Stephen L Harris Harris, Stephen L. , Understanding the Bible. Palo Alto Mayfield 1985 Andr Pelletier, SJ, La Lettre d Arist e Philocrate Paris 1962. ref Josephus ref name Josephus Antiquities XII ii passim http pace.cns.yorku.ca York york showText?book 12&chapter 2&textChunk whistonSection&chunkId 2&text anti&version whiston&direction &tab &layout split&go.x 15&go.y 7 Online in Greek and English at York University ref who paraphrases about two fifths of the letter, ascribes it to Aristeas and written to Philocrates, describing the Greek translation of the Hebrew Law by seventy two interpreters sent into Egypt from Jerusalem at the request of the librarian ... , reporting H. St.J. Thackeray s The Letter of Aristeas, with an Appendix of the Ancient Evidence ... often referred to as pseudo Aristeas . ref Prosographia Ptolemaica 6 Leuven 1968 14588 considers ... , in which he argued that the so called Letter of Aristeas was the late forgery of a Hellenized ... the Letter of Aristeas as a work typical of Jewish apologetics, aiming at self defense and propaganda ... by Aristeas in order to strengthen the force of the argument and commend it to non Jewish ... V. Tcherikover, The Ideology of the Letter of Aristeas Harvard Theological Review 51 .2 April 1958 ... In this article an attempt will be made to prove that the Letter of Aristeas was not written ... of Alexandria, have depended on ps Aristeas, who has that least attractive quality in a source ... References reflist 2 Bibliography Dries De Crom, The Letter of Aristeas and the Authority of the Septuagint ... Letter Of Aristeas Category Old Testament Apocrypha Category Septuagint Category Ptolemaic Jewish history cs List Ariste v de Aristeasbrief es Carta de Aristeas fr Lettre d Arist e he la Epistula Aristeae hu Ariszteasz lev l nl Brief van Aristeas ru sv Aristeasbrevet ... more details
ShouldBeSVG map Hint I am drawing a SVG floor plan of the Ibn Tulun mosque at the moment. Completion will take some time but please be informed that the new plan is in preparation, so it is not necessary that anybody else should begin a SVG floor map, too. commons User Aristeas Aristeas Commons , 21 43, 14 February 2011 UTC Summary Map of Mosque of Tulun Licensing PD self date September 2007 ... more details
other uses Aristaeus disambiguation Orphan date February 2009 unreferenced date December 2008 Aristeas was an Alexandrian Jew who lived in the era of the later Ptolemaic dynasty Ptolemies , approximately the second or third century BC. He is remembered for his letter from Aristas in which is described in legendary form the origin of the Greek translation of the Old Testament known as the Septuagint . Although the account is in no way authentic, it does present some useful insights on Egyptian and Palestinian affairs of the period. Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Aristaeus of Marmora ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Aristaeus of Marmora Category Jewish writers Category Year of birth unknown Category Year of death unknown ... more details
Pratinas lang el was one of the earliest tragic poets of Athens , he was a native of Phlius in Peloponnesus . About 500 BC he competed with Choerilus and Aeschylus , when the latter made his first appearance as a writer for the stage. Pratinas was also the introducer of satyr play s as a species of entertainment distinct from tragedy , in which the rustic merry makings and the extravagant dances of the satyr s were retained. The associations of his home, not far from Corinth , where Arion was said to have established the cyclic choruses of satyrs, may account for his preference for this kind of drama. Pratinas was also a writer of dithyramb s and the choral odes called hyporchemata a considerable fragment of one of these is preserved in Athenaeus , xiv. 617 . A monument was erected by the inhabitants of Phlius in honor of Pratinas s son Aristeas playright Aristeas , who, with his father, enjoyed the reputation of excelling all, with the exception of Aeschylus, in the composition of satyric dramas, one of which was called Cyclops . See Pausanias geographer Pausanias ii. 13 Suidas q.v. fragments in Theodor Bergk T. Bergk , Poetae Lyrici Graeci , vol. iii. References 1911 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH Category Metics in Classical Athens Category Ancient Greek dramatists and playwrights Category Ancient Phliasians Category Tragic poets Category 5th century BC Greek people Category Year of birth unknown Category Year of death unknown bg el es Pratinas fr Pratinas it Pratina ru ... more details
The Hasmonean Baris was a citadel constructed north of Jerusalem s Temple Mount in existence during the Hasmonean period. History Nehemiah refers to a birah on or adjacent to the Temple Mount . ref Book of Nehemiah Nehemiah II 8, VII 2. ref This may have been the predecessor or identical to the Ptolemaic Baris Hellenistic fortress mentioned in the Letter of Aristeas . ref http www.ccel.org c charles otpseudepig aristeas.htm The Letter of Aristeas , 100. Translation by R. H. Charles ref It is unclear whether this structure was demolished under the Seleucid Empire Seleucids or during the Maccabees Maccabean revolt. Under the Hasmonean s, the Baris was rebuilt or repurposed as a fortress residence. The Kohen Gadol High Priest made use of the Baris, which was connected to the Temple Mount by an underground passageway. This is prominently referred to by Josephus as the Baris citadel. Under Herod the Great , the Hasmonean Baris underwent renovation or reconstruction, and it was renamed Antonia Fortress Antonia in honor of his patron Mark Antony . ref Josephus , Wars of the Jews , v 4, XXI 1. ref ref Josephus , Jewish Antiquities , XIII 307, XV 409, XVIII 91&ndash 94. ref Archaeology Some remains north of the Temple Mount have been tentatively identified with the Hasmonean Baris. ref Bahat, Daniel. 1994. The Western Wall Tunnels in Ancient Jerusalem Revealed, Jerusalem Israel Exploration Society, p. 185. ref The current consensus is that this fortress must have been located in the vicinity of the northwest corner of the Temple Mount, as described by Josephus. Because requests to allow archaeological excavation within the current walls of the Temple Mount have been denied by the Wakf which administers the area, current evidence does not allow for pinning down the exact extent and boundaries of the structure. ref Levine, Lee I. 2002. Jerusalem Portrait of the City in the Second Temple Period . Philadelphia Jewish Publication Society, pp. 112&ndash 113. ISBN 978 0 8276 0750 7 ... more details
Greek of the same time, Aristeas son of Kaustrobios of Prokonnessos or Cyzicus , had managed ... of Aristeas Fact and Fancy in Early Greek Notions of East Russia, Siberia, and Inner Asia Artibus Asiae ... more details
the Seleucid conquest of Jerusalem. Letter of Aristeas The most detailed account of the Ptolemaic citadel is to be found in the Letter of Aristeas , an account of the translation into Greek of the Septuagint ... efficiently protect it. ref The Letter of Aristeas, http www.attalus.org translate aristeas1.html ... It is not entirely clear when the Letter of Aristeas was written, although it is certainly much younger ... not the Acra fortress Seleucid Acra . Thus, although it is not certain, the Letter of Aristeas ... more details
Humphrey Hody 1659 20 January 1707 was an England English scholar and theology theologian . Life He was born at Odcombe in Somerset in 1659. In 1676 he entered Wadham College, Oxford , of which he became a fellow in 1685. In 1692 he became chaplain to Edward Stillingfleet , bishop of Worcester , and for his support of the ruling party in a controversy with Henry Dodwell regarding the non juring bishops he was appointed chaplain to Archbishop John Tillotson , an office which he continued to hold under Thomas Tenison . In 1698 he was appointed regius professor of Greek language Greek at Oxford, and in 1704 was made archdeacon of Oxford. Works In 1684 he published Contra historiam Aristeae de LXX. interpretibus dissertatio , in which he argued that the so called letter of Aristeas , containing an account of the production of the Septuagint , was the late forgery of a Ancient Greece Hellenic Jew originally circulated to lend authority to that version. The dissertation was generally regarded as conclusive, although Isaac Vossius published an angry and scurrilous reply to it in the appendix to his edition of Pomponius Mela . In 1689 Hody wrote the Prolegomena to the Greek chronicle of John Malalas , published at Oxford in 1691. In 1701 he published A History of English Councils and Convocations , and in 1703 in four volumes De Bibliorum textis originalibus , in which he included a revision of his work on the Septuagint, and published a reply to Vossius. A work, De Graecis Illustribus , which he left in manuscript, was published in 1742 by Samuel Jebb , who prefixed to it a Latin life of the author. References 1911 DEFAULTSORT Hody, Humphrey Category 1659 births Category 1707 deaths Category People from South Somerset district Category English theologians Category Alumni of Wadham College, Oxford ... more details
This is a list of pseudepigrapha , works produced after the closing of the Hebrew Bible canon but before production of the Christian Testament canon that are not accepted as canonical by Jews or all Christians today. Some of these works may have Christian authors, but books in this list are predominantly Jewish in character and origin. br 1 Enoch 2 Enoch 3 Enoch br 2 Baruch 3 Baruch 4 Baruch br 3 Esdras 4 Esdras 5 Ezra 6 Ezra br 3 Maccabees 4 Maccabees 5 Maccabees 6 Maccabees 7 Maccabees 8 Maccabees br Adam Octipartite Adjuration of Elijah Apocalypse of Abraham Apocalypse of Adam Apocalypse of Elijah Apocalypse of Ezekiel Apocalypse of Sedrach Apocalypse of the Seven Heavens Apocalypse of Zephaniah Apocryphon of Ezekiel Apocryphon of Jacob and Joseph Apocryphon of Melchizedek Apocryphon of the Ten Tribes Ascension of Moses Assumption of Moses Book of Assaf Book of Noah Cave of Treasures Coptic Apocryphon of Jeremiah Eldad and Modad Ogias the Giant Enochic Book of Giants Epistle of Rehoboam Greek Apocalypse of Daniel Greek Apocalypse of Ezra History of Joseph History of the Rechabites Jannes and Jambres Joseph and Aseneth Jubilees Ladder of Jacob Letter of Aristeas Life of Adam and Eve Lives of the Prophets Manual of Discipline Martyrdom and Ascension of Isaiah Odes of Solomon Prayer of Jacob Prayer of Joseph Psalms of Solomon Questions of Ezra Revelation of Ezra Sibylline Oracles Signs of the Judgement Sword of Moses Testament of Abraham Testament of Adam Testament of Isaac Testament of Jacob Testament of Job Testament of Moses Testament of Solomon Testament of the Twelve Patriarchs Treatise of Shem Vision of Ezra Visions of Heaven and Hell Words of Gad the Seer See also Apocrypha for books rejected by Jew s but accepted by some Christian s New Testament Apocrypha for books in the style of the New Testament References references http www.pseudepigrapha.com Pseudepigrapha, Apocrypha and Sacred Writings http www.earlyjewishwritings.com Early Jewish Writings Category L ... more details
Ancient Greek religion Iatromantis ref Ancient Greek from , iatros healer and , mantis seer . ref is a Greek word whose literal meaning is most simply rendered physician seer. Perhaps the most famous iatromantis was the Greek pre Socratic philosopher Parmenides , best known as the founder of Western culture Western logic . The iatromantis, a form of Greek shamanism shaman , is related to other semimythical figures such as Abaris , Aristeas , Epimenides , and Hermotimus . ref name ref1 cite book last Luck first Georg title Arcana Mundi Magic and the Occult in the Greek and Roman Worlds A Collection of Ancient Texts publisher The Johns Hopkins University Press year 2006 pages 500 isbn 0801883466 ref In the classical period, Aeschylus uses the word to refer to Apollo ref Aeschylus, Eumenides l. 62. ref and to Asclepius , Apollo s son. ref Aeschylus, Suppliant Women l. 263. ref According to Peter Kingsley scholar Peter Kingsley , iatromantis figures belonged to a wider Greek and Asian shamanic tradition with origins in Central Asia . ref name ref2 cite book last Kingsley first Peter authorlink Peter Kingsley scholar title In the Dark Places of Wisdom publisher The Golden Sufi Center year 1999 pages 255 isbn 1 890350 01 X ref A main ecstatic, meditative practice of these healer prophets was Incubation ritual incubation , enkoimesis . More than just a medical technique, incubation reportedly allowed a human being to experience a fourth state of consciousness different from sleeping , dream ing, or ordinary Wakefulness waking a state that Kingsley describes as consciousness itself and likens to the turiya or sam dhi of the Yoga Indian yogic traditions. References reflist Category Ancient Greek religious titles Category Healthcare occupations Category Shamanism Category Supernatural healing Category Divination ... more details
that Pliny, referring to Aristeas, says that the Arimaspeans lived very near the Earth s gate ... gate north wind&q 22Pliny 2C referring to Aristeas 22 search anchor p180 ref scholars such as Carl ... J.D.P. Bolton ref Bolton, J.D.P. 1962 . Aristeas of Proconnesus ref and Ildik Lehtinen ref Considering that Pliny, referring to Aristeas, says that the Arimaspeans lived very near the Earth s gate ... gate north wind&q 22Pliny 2C referring to Aristeas 22 search anchor p180 ref have speculated on a connection ..., then the sea to which they extended was the Pacific, and Aristeas was the first civilized ... auf Hawaii, 1936 1941 s.n., 1983, http books.google.com books?id RVCHAAAAIAAJ&q 22Pacific, and Aristeas 22&dq 22Pacific, and Aristeas 22&hl en&ei QLE3TJjNOYX7lwf1lbHTBw&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum ... writes in his Histories Herodotus Histories 4.13 that the explorer Aristeas , a native of Proconnesus ... to the Issedones of the far north. Aristeas reported that beyond them lived the one eyed Arimaspi ... This Aristeas, possessed by Apollo Phoibos , visited the Issedones beyond these he said live the one ... in Chinese Turkestan. ref Phillips, The Legend of Aristeas Fact and Fancy in Early Greek Notions of East ... title Aristeas of Proconnesus year 1962 pages 104 118 ref Since Herodotus places the Hyperboreans ... that Greek and Roman trade with Saka Scythian nomads flourished in that region from Aristeas ... Aristeas in the classic era, to Giovanni da Pian del Carpine Giovanni di Piano Carpini in the Middle ... Bibliography Bolton, James David Pennington 1962 Aristeas of Proconnesus Clarendon Press, Oxford, http ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 MergeTo Alexander Polyhistor discuss Talk Alexander Polyhistor date February 2011 Alexander of Miletus was a Greeks Greek historian and author who flourished between 105 and 40 BC. He was the author of a book entitled Upon the Jew s . Only a few fragments have been preserved, quoted in the works of Eusebius and Clement of Alexandria . The work consisted evidently of excerpts from various Jewish , Samaritan , and Hellenistic authors, touching the earlier history of the Jews, strung together with a pretense of chronological order. Upon the Jews Louis Ginzburg wrote of Alexander s work Although these excerpts reveal their author as nothing but a compiler without taste or judgment, and bereft of all literary ability, they possess, even in their meagerness, a certain value. In his compilation Jewish and non Jewish sources are cited indiscriminately side by side and to Alexander, therefore, the world is indebted for information on the oldest Jewish, Ancient Greece Hellenic , and Samaritan elaboration of Biblical history in prose or poetry. The epic poet Philo poet Philo , the tragic writer Ezekiel the Tragedian Ezekiel , the historian Eupolemus , the chronicler Demetrius the Chronographer Demetrius , the so called Artapanus historian Artapanus , the historian Aristeas historian Aristeas , and Theodotus the Samaritan , as well as an unnamed fellow countryman of the latter often confused with Eupolemus, the rhetoric ian Apollonius Molon an anti Jewish writer all of these authors are known to posterity only through extracts from their works which Alexander embodied verbatim in his. Of some interest for the ancient history of the Jews is his account of Assyria Babylonia , frequently drawn upon by Jewish and Christian authors in it extracts are given, especially from Berosus , and also from the Chronicles of Apollodoros and the Third Book of the Sibyllines. Josephus made use of the work ref See Freudenthal, Alexander Polyhistor 25. ref , ... more details
Multiple issues copyedit August 2009 intromissing August 2009 wikify August 2009 orphan August 2009 At 23 of May in 1963, in a Panargiakos F.C. council, the chairman Nikos Zafeiris asked for an approval for founding a Football association in Argolida . The Argolida s Football team football clubs used to play at Argolidokorinthias Football Association, which was based in Corinthos . The council members recognized the need of making another football association. Panargiakos F.C. and those teams accepted to join Apollon Argous Argonatautis N. Kiou AEK Argous Proitos T.Tyrinthas A.E. Kranidi E.Tzavellas, a lawyer, helped the association to overpass all the problems. With the number 356 1964 decision or Nauplio s council, Argolida Clubs Football Association was founded. At 12 August 1964, the first elections held. The results were Zafeiris Nikolaos, President Loukaitis Konstantinos, Vice President A Neofotiadis Dionysis, Vice President B Paziotas Giannis, General Secretary Louris Stamatios, Special Secretary Balios Athanasios, Economy Manager A Mitsopoulos Petros, Economy Manager B Xintaropoulos Alexandros, Member Vlachopoulos Nikolaos, Member Fourlas Georgios, Member Darlasis Konstantinos, Member Kalogeropoulos Dimitris, Member CLUBS Sport s Club A.E. Kranidi AEK Argos A.O. Amygdalitsas A.O. Dalamandaras A.O. Mideas A.O. N. Kiou A.O. Schinohoriou Aias Traheias Academy 98 Akratitos Anagennisi Lygourio Apollon Argeias Argeiakos Argolida 2000 Argonautis Aris Roinou Arizona Aristeas Aristeionas Arkadios Asklipios Asteras Drepaniakos Atromitos Achladokabos Diovouniotis Danaoi Dimaina Diomidis Doxa Doxa Adamiou Doxa Poul Dryopi Enosi Mideas Erasinos Ermis Ermionis Ermis Kyverion Iraklis Karyas Thermissia Thiseas Thyella Thyella limnon Thyella Mal. Thyella Skaf. Inachos Karantzas Keraunos Irion Kechries Koronis Koiladas Kreon Leukakia Lygeus Midas Methana Metohi Mikti Argolidas Juniors Mikti Argolidas Youngsters Borsia Mikinaikos Myloi Achilleas Niki Olympiakos Argous Olympiak ... more details
The word bugonia or bougonia is Greek in origin, meaning ox birth . It denotes the mythical practice by which bees are produced from the carcasses of dead oxen. The process is most clearly described by Virgil in the fourth book of the Georgics . File Aristee.png thumb upright 2.0 left Aristeas and bugonia. Virgil s Georgics . Lyon. 1517 In antiquity it was a widespread belief that bees were born from a dead ox or a dead bull Nic. Ther . 741 Alex . 447 Arist. Gen. An . 759a . Archelaus fr. 128 from Egypt 3rd c. BCE also reports the same belief and he calls the bees children of the dead ox . Many other writers report the effectiveness of the bugonia process Ov. Fast . 1.377, Met . 15.364 Plin. HN 11.22.70, 21.47.81 Ael. NA 2.57 Serv. Georg . 4.286 Lib. Extr 1.1.90 Isid. Orig 12.8.2 Sext. Emp. Pyr . 1.42 Philo De Speliabus legibus 1.291.4 Porph. De antr. nymph . 18.9 Simpl. In Phys . 9.239.18 Joannes Philoponus In Aristotelis physicorum libros commentaria 16.107.14 Origen C. Cels . 4.57 . The bugonia belief is also reported in the Yerushalmi Talmud Shabbath 1.3b and the Babli Talmud Baba Qamma 16a of the 5th and 6th c. respectively. A similar story of the creation of bees is seen in the Biblical story from Judges 14 14, where Samson puts forward the riddle of out of the strong came forth sweetness, referring to a swarm of bees found inside a dead lion s body as celebrated on tins of Tate and Lyle Golden Syrup . In the hermetic Cyranides 2.39.32 it is reported that from the dead bull worms are born after one week, and bees after three weeks. A most detailed description of the bugonia process can be found in byzantine Geoponica 15.2.21 . In 1474 Petrus de Cresentiis in Ruralia Commoda also refers to the method. In the 14th century, Konrad von Megenberg, writer of the first German book of natural history Das Buch der Natur , claimed that the bees are born from the skin and the stomach of the ox. Michael Herren 1563 Verdolmetschten Veltbau gives a detailed description of b ... more details
Image Papposilenus crotals Louvre CA942.jpg thumb right 200px Papposilenus playing the crotals, theatrical type of the satyr play, Louvre . Satyr plays were an Ancient Greece ancient Greek form of tragicomedy , similar in spirit to burlesque . They featured choruses of satyr s, were based on Greek mythology , and were rife with mock drunkenness, brazen sexuality including phallus phallic props , pranks, sight gags, and general merriment. Satyric drama was one of the three varieties of Athenian drama , the other two being tragedy and comedy . It can be traced back to Pratinas of Phlius , circa 500 BC . After settling in Athens, he probably adapted the dithyramb , customary in his native home, with its Greek chorus chorus of satyrs, to complement the form of tragedy which had been recently invented in Athens. It met with approval and was further developed by his son Aristeas playright Aristeas , by Choerilus , by Aeschylus , and others. In the Athens Athenian Dionysia , each playwright customarily entered four plays into the competition three tragedy tragedies and one satyr play to be performed either at the end of the festival or between the second and third tragedies of a trilogy, as a spirited entertainment, a comic relief to break the oppression of hours of gloomy, fatalistic, formulaic tragedy. They were short, half the duration of a tragedy. The general theme of heaven, fate, and the gods affecting human affairs in the tragedies was carried through into the festivities of the chorus of satyrs and Silenus Sileni , companions of Dionysus . Origins The origins of performance culture and the emergence of the satyr play can be traced to ancient rural celebrations in honour of the god Dionysus . Rush Rehm argues that these inaugurated the agricultural cycle of planting and harvesting closely associated with Dionysus, who represented the embodiment of a fundamental paradox inherent to the world, life giving but potentially destructive. ref Rehm 1992, 12 13 ref The dram ... more details
and Aristeas of Argos Aristeas , were keen rivals. As Aristippus was an ally of Antigonus, Aristeas ..., with the help of Aristeas, he was plotting to seize the city. In the middle of the night, he marched his army up to the city walls and entered through a gate that Aristeas had opened. His ... more details
s Histories Herodotus Histories , the seventh century BC sage Aristeas of Proconnesus was first found ... it to traditional Greek beliefs such as the resurrection and physical immortalization of Alcmene and Aristeas the Proconnesian, for they say Aristeas died in a fuller s work shop, and his friends coming ... more details