Stunningly and unexpected, virtually all of the selections on view in this exhibition are complete. Co-organized by the Art Institute and Rome-based Torlonia Foundation, it is the first time works ...
The ancient Roman brooch found at an Iron Age settlement ... During the second century, the Roman military abandoned some of their forts in southwestern Scotland and moved further south, but ...
THE BODY of a Roman man buried face-down ... site of the largest-ever Copper Age fort found in SpainCredit: Tera S.L. Archaeologists unearthed the huge ancient settlement during the construction ...
Now, some of them will be exhibited in Chicago, Fort Worth and Montreal Sonja Anderson ... Titled “Myth and Marble: Ancient Roman Sculpture From the Torlonia Collection,” the exhibition ...
Making use of aerial photography which often offers far clearer views of ancient outlines of Roman camps and forts, and exploring landmarks such as standing stones that tell their own stories of ...
Was it a bar brawl? Archaeologists will never know what killed these two people found near an ancient Roman site.
Although there were no contemporary Roman forts nearby after the abandonment ... And traces of even more ancient inhabitation were evidenced by the recovery of pottery dating to the early ...
Every new beginning comes from another beginning’s end.” The quote is often attributed to Seneca, an ancient Roman ...
Researchers have found a Roman brooch in the foundation of an Iron Age house in Scotland, but what was it doing there?
More than 20 sites in Egypt have been excavated by the French Archaeological Mission since 1994. Excavations were mainly ...
The abandonment of the Antonine Wall earlier in the century meant there were no Roman forts nearby at the time ... designed to draw protection from ancient gods. He said: "These brooches were ...