Romans
Latest about Romans
2,000-year-old bullet found with Julius Caesar's name on it was likely used in civil war
By Kristina Killgrove published
The bullet's inscriptions hint that Indigenous people in Spain supported the would-be dictator, Julius Caesar, during the Roman civil war.
2,300-year-old shell mosaic discovered in luxurious home in Rome
By Tom Metcalfe published
Archaeologists think the house belonged to a senatorial family during the last years of Rome's Republic.
Why didn't Alexander the Great invade Rome?
By Owen Jarus published
If Alexander the Great had invaded Rome, would he have won?
2,000 ancient clay stamps used to seal official Roman documents discovered in Turkey
By Jennifer Nalewicki published
Researchers found thousands of clay stamps used to seal official documents inside a former city archive in Doliche.
More than 3,000 Roman coins and gems unearthed at 'magical place' in northern Italy
By Jennifer Nalewicki published
During ongoing excavations at Claterna, an ancient Roman site in Italy known as the "Pompeii of the North," archaeologists unearthed 3,000 coins and 50 gems.
Cult temples and sacrificial pit unearthed at ancient Roman camp in Germany
By Jennifer Nalewicki published
Archaeologists in Germany have unearthed the foundations of two temples and a shallow circular ditch at a former Roman camp.
'Magical' Roman wind chime with phallus, believed to ward off evil eye, unearthed in Serbia
By Tom Metcalfe published
Phallic objects like this were common in the Roman world to ward off evil.
Scuba diver discovers 30,000 astonishingly well-preserved Roman coins off Italian coast
By Jennifer Nalewicki published
The well-preserved bronze coins found off the coast of Sardinia could be linked to a shipwreck.
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