Archaeologists recently found a massive stone basin in Italy dating back more than 2,000 years — remnants of a once-powerful ...
At the northern end of Hadrian’s Wall, volunteers and archaeology students uncovered pottery, metalwork, soldiers’ tools, and ...
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How Roman Engineers Built an Empire That Never Fell
They conquered half the world — but their greatest victories were made of stone, steel, and science. In this journey through ...
Construction work and related archaeological endeavors in the German Upper Bavarian district of Eichstätt has revealed the foundations of a Roman tumulus, or burial mound. Structures like these are ...
The carriage workshop, which also had evidence of fixing horseshoes, was situated along the well-traveled Via Claudia Augusta and offered services to travelers in the first century C.E.
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We Finally Know Why Ancient Roman Concrete Stood The Test of Time
The ancient Romans were masters of building and engineering, perhaps most famously represented by the aqueducts.
In what once functioned as an ancient Roman city focused on trade and thermal baths in the south of France, archaeologists ...
Archaeologists have discovered a residential area in Luxor dating to the time when the Roman Empire ruled Egypt. A team of archaeologists from the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities found a ...
In Croatia, archaeologists have discovered a mass grave dating back to the third century CE that indicates another key to ...
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French archaeologists uncover 'vast Roman burial area' with cremation graves 'fed' by liquid offerings
More than 160 cremation graves were discovered at the ancient site of Olbia, which began as a fortified Greek settlement around 350 B.C. in what is now the south of France. The ge ...
Scientists have uncovered how Roman concrete has endured millennia. The discovery reveals an ancient technique that allowed ...
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