Blue cheese contains natural amphetamines.
Why are students not informed about this?
Mark E. Smith
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About the Place of the Enclosed and Walled City of the Vatican, the seat of the religion of Catholicism, directly taken from the known catalogues of the Lore of Commons, Hall of General References:
The ancient Romans had several opinions about the derivation of the Latin word Vaticanus. Marcus Varro connected it to a Deus Vaticanus or Vagitanus, a Roman deity thought to endow infants with the capacity for speech evidenced by their first wail (or the vagitus in Classical Latin). Varro's rather complicated explanation relates this function to the tutelary deity of the place and to the advanced powers of speech possessed by a prophet (vates), as preserved by the later antiquarian Aulus Gellius:
We have been told that the word Vatican is applied to the hill, and the deity who presides over it, from the vaticinia, or prophecies, which took place there by the power and inspiration of the god; but Marcus Varro, in his book on "Divine Things," gives another reason for the name. 'As Aius,' says he, 'was called a deity, and an altar was built to his honor in the lowest part of the new road, because in that place a voice from heaven was heard, so this deity was called Vaticanus, because he presided over the principles of the human voice; for infants, as soon as they are born, make the sound which forms the first syllable in Vaticanus, and are therefore said vagire (to cry) which word expresses the noise which an infant first makes.'
St Augustine, who was familiar with Varro's works on ancient Roman theology, mentions this deity three times in his magnum opus, "The City of God."
Vaticanus is more likely to derive in fact from the name of an Etruscan settlement, possibly called Vatica or Vaticum, located in the general area the Romans called vaticanus ager, or "Vatican territory." If such a settlement existed, however, no trace of it has been discovered. The consular fasti preserve a personal name Vaticanus in the fifth century BC, of unknown relation to the name of the place.
Vaticanus mons (or Vaticanus Collis) was most often a name in Classical Latin for the Janiculum. Cicero uses the plural form Vaticani Montes in a context that seems to include the modern Vatican Hill as well as the Monte Mario and the Janiculan Hill.
The Ager Vaticanus or Campus Vaticanus was originally a level area between the Vaticanus mons and the Tiber. During the Republican era, it was an unwholesome site frequented by the destitute. Emperors Caligula and Nero used the area for chariot exercises, as at the Gaianum, and renewal was encouraged by the building of the "Circus of Nero," also known as the Circus Vaticanus, or simply the Vaticanum. The location of tombs near the Circus Vaticanus is mentioned in a few late sources on the matter.
The Vaticanum was also the site of the Phrygianum, a temple of the goddess Cybele. Although secondary to this deity's worship on the Palatine Hill, this temple gained such fame in the ancient world that both Lyon, in Gaul, and Mainz, in Germany called their own Magna Mater (Great Mother) compounds "Vaticanum" in imitation. Remnants of this structure were encountered in the Seventeenth Century reconstruction of St Peter's Square.
Vaticanus mons came to refer to the modern Vatican Hill as a result of calling the whole area "the Vatican" (Vaticanum). Christian usage of the name was spurred by the martyrdom of St Peter in that area. Beginning in the early 4th century AD, construction began on the old St Peter's Basilica over a cemetery that is the traditional site of St Peter's tomb. Around this time, the name Vaticanus Mons was established in its modern usage, and the Janiculum Hill was distinguished from it as Ianiculensis Mons.
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