In Borsum, Germany, more than 450 Roman silver and gold coins are discovered, a find that rewrites regional history.
StudyFinds on MSN
The Skilled Artisans, Many Enslaved, Who Made Ancient Rome’s Most Luxurious Art Are Finally Getting Credit
Archaeologist discovers workshop symbols on ancient Roman glass vessels, revealing how enslaved artisans secretly signed ...
Kings and Generals on MSN
Tribal revolt that almost ended the Roman Empire
The Great Illyrian Revolt, erupting under Emperor Augustus, was one of the most serious uprisings faced by Rome in the early ...
Itiner-e not only duplicates cartographic knowledge of Roman roads, but transforms our understanding of how the Roman Empire ...
A new interactive map reveals the Roman road network, linking Ancient Greece with the empire and shaping trade, travel, and ...
By 150 CE, the Empire was carved up and maintained by a network of stone/gravel/sand highways stretching 180,000 miles.
Meet Itiner-e, a new high-resolution digital dataset and map of the Roman Empire’s roads around 150 CE. A team of researchers ...
Archaeologists in Hungary uncovered an ancient building that may reveal the truth behind Roman Emperor Valentinian's death.
“These Roman roads—both paved and unpaved—gave structure to massive cultural shifts that affected Western history for the ...
Firefighters managed to extract a worker from beneath rubble inside a medieval tower that partially collapsed during ...
Archaeologists reveal that a new digital atlas shows Roman road network was 50% larger than known, mapping 186,000 miles ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results