4don MSN
A Construction Crew Was Renovating a Soccer Field—and Found the Bodies of 150 Ancient Roman Soldiers
Renovations on a soccer field outside of Vienna, Austria, uncovered a Roman-era mass grave that held the remains of roughly 150 males.
The largest libraries of the ancient world weren’t mere book collections. They were centers of power, education, and survival across empires.
Archaeologists in Turkey have uncovered an ancient tomb, revealing how Rome’s richest woman donated her fortune to rebuild Sillyon.
From a mosaic of flip-flops in Sicily to Cicero's possible sauna, new discoveries prove that bathing has always been about more than getting clean.
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Did Ancient Jews Hide These Coins for Safekeeping During a Fourth-Century Revolt Against Roman Rule?
A cache of coins bearing the faces of the Roman emperors Constantius II and Constans I was discovered in underground tunnels created by Jews in what is now northern Israel ...
In what was one of the greatest decoration flexes in ancient Roman design, a wealthy resident of Iuvavum—now modern-day Salzburg, Austria—in the second or third century C.E. had a bronze replica of a ...
ROME, Italy — I traveled to an ancient world to see a future version of America. The “No Kings” chant is a bit off. Donald Trump’s true calling and character is akin to a cruel Roman emperor. Under ...
Almost 1800 years after Rome’s founding, the people we call Byzantines still thought of themselves as part of the same enduring society.
Archaeological discoveries can change our idea of what a particular place was like in ancient times. This is what has happened in Turkey, where a group of archaeologists has uneart ...
Henry Stewart History on MSN
The Gothic War - The Battle That Shattered the Roman Empire
The Gothic War of 376–382 marked a turning point in Roman history. What began as a refugee crisis, with Gothic tribes seeking asylum inside the Roman Empire, soon spiraled into a rebellion that the ...
Polish researchers have identified a marble portrait found in 2003 as Laodice, a 2nd century aristocrat who helped her city gain freedom.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results