Archeological excavations at Jerash continue to produce new finds more than a century after the ancient city’s rediscovery.
From the Minoan royal road to the Ridgeway, ancient roads still exist today showing how past civilizations built networks ...
With regard to another Alexander, above is the “Alexamenos Graffito” (Italian: “graffito blasfemo”– lit. blasphemous graffiti ...
At first it looks like wallpaper. On second glance, you see the imprints of hands, stamped in red paint and climbing up the ...
The digital Itiner-e atlas is revolutionizing how we see the ancient world. In it, researchers have mapped the entirety of ...
Science. The discovery that could change everything we know about our species: stones suggest early humans were inventors Science. Genetic analysis indicates Hitler may have suffered from a syndrome ...
An international research team has, for the first time, created a digital map of almost the entire road network of the Roman Empire – expanding the previously known routes by more than 100,000 ...
Back on planet Earth, and deep inside a pitch-black, sulfuric cave on the Albanian-Greek border, we reported on a study that ...
An international research team has created by far the most extensive map of the road network in the Roman Empire, based on satellite images among other sources. The online map is called Itiner-e and ...
A high-resolution ‘Google Maps’ for Roman roads includes nearly 300,000 kilometres of viae Romanae. It brings together fragmented data sets to show the full glory of the network that connected the ...
It’s no secret that the Romans liked to build roads. But European researchers say they've discovered an extra 100,000 kilometres of Roman road that had been hidden over time, covered by new ...
A high-resolution digital map allows people to plan their routes along the ancient roads of the Roman Empire. Combining historical records with modern mapping techniques, researchers mapped hundreds ...