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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNArchaeologists Discover Roman Army Camp in the Netherlands—15 Miles Beyond the Empire’s Northern BorderResearchers think the camp was built during the second century C.E. Stretching across 22 acres, it was identified using a ...
Exhibit photos show the ancient coins spilling from the fragmented ... It provided mineral resources for the Roman Empire and was a strategic location during the Roman wars against Carthage. Last year ...
Maiorianus on MSN7d
Fashion and Function in the Late Roman EmpireThe image of a toga-wearing Roman faded by late antiquity. In this video, we explore how late Roman citizens, soldiers, and officials dressed after the 3rd century AD and how their attire reflected a ...
In South Moravia, Czechia, archaeologists have found a bronze fragment from a Roman wrist purse which dates back 1,800 years, ...
Centuries ago, a 73-mile-long stone wall marked the northwest border of the expansive Roman Empire. ... but the complete image has been damaged as the piece was reused for another construction.
Students and archaeologists located temporary Roman military camp near Hoog Buurlo beyond ancient empire’s northern frontier, university said and photos show.
Mangled bones found at a one-time manufacturing facility pinpoint species used to make a quintessential condiment.
But as the Roman Empire expanded, the presence of sweet chestnut pollen grew. ... Watch how the maps and images of our planet from above have changed over the last two millennia.
Archaeologists discovered a Roman soldier’s wrist purse in South Moravia, believed to be the oldest ever found in the Czech ...
A Roman silver coin hoard worth almost the same as a legionary's monthly wage in the 2nd Century has been uncovered by a ...
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Jacobin on MSNThe Hidden History of Class Struggle in the Roman EmpireAncient Rome was a rigidly hierarchical society where the ruling elite stigmatized everyone who had to work with their hands. Yet Roman workers still found ways to resist exploitation through strikes ...
Centuries ago, a 73-mile-long stone wall marked the northwest border of the expansive Roman Empire. ... but the complete image has been damaged as the piece was reused for another construction.
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