A Romana-British metal artwork of a panther is believed to show the severed head of a barbarian.
The camps, all located in Germany between the northern Harz Mountains and the Elbe River, were dated to the 3rd Century C.E.
There is no polity more storied in the west than the Roman Empire, but could its fall have really been caused by its choice ...
A hoard of hundreds of Roman-era silver coins and precious metals was recovered in northern Germany, years after it went ...
The unexpected discovery of a well-preserved and fortified villa in Margam Park in South Wales sheds new light on the Roman ...
New photos show off NASA's newly constructed Roman Space Telescope, which will soon help researchers unravel the mysteries of ...
The transformation of the Roman Empire into what modern historians call Byzantium was not a single event but a gradual ...
Archaeologists in Germany have discovered four Roman marching camps and around 1,500 artifacts, including coins and shoe ...
A major €4.5 million project is clearing away the clutter to reveal a silent witness to the Rhodes' past: a grand, ...
Roman “wax tablets” were wooden frames holding a thin layer of wax used like a reusable notepad. The wax is gone in the Tongeren material, but stylus pressure sometimes bit deep enough to leave ...
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