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A Spectacular Roman Empire Criminal Case Unveiled Through a Newly Discovered...

A remarkable papyrus recently unearthed from the collections of the Israel Antiquities Authority offers unprecedented insights into Roman legal procedures and life in the Near East. Scholars from the...

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Did Herodes Atticus Murder His Wife Appia Annia Regilla? A Strange Case in...

It was the year 160 AD when Appius Annius Atilius Bradua filed a complaint before the Roman Senate regarding the murder of his sister. The direct perpetrator of the crime was a freedman named...

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Cincinnatus, the Dictator Who Voluntarily Renounced His Power Twice After...

In Italy, it is not uncommon to find streets and neighborhoods named Cincinnatus, but even more familiar is the name of a city in the American state of Ohio. Although similar, these names have...

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Quality of Life During the Roman Empire Was Higher in the Countryside Than in...

A recent bioarchaeological study published in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports investigates the differences in lifestyle between urban and rural inhabitants of Roman Italy during the...

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Maes Titianus, the Merchant Who Organized the First Roman Expedition to China

Trade has been, since time immemorial, one of the main driving forces behind contact between civilizations. In this context, the Silk Road played a crucial role in connecting the Mediterranean world...

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A Study Reveals That Greek and Roman Statues Were Not Only Painted and...

A recent study published in the Oxford Journal of Archaeology has revealed a little-explored aspect of ancient art: the use of perfumes and aromatic substances in Greco-Roman sculptures. This research,...

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The Tower of the Scipios, the Best-Preserved Roman Funerary Monument in Hispania

Six kilometers from Tarragona (roman Tarraco in Catalonia, Spain), next to the ancient Via Augusta, stands a stone monument that was misinterpreted for a long time: the Tower of the Scipios. The...

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When the Roman Empire Had Six Emperors in a Year

The Eastern Roman Empire had seven simultaneous emperors during the Middle Ages, between the years 1203 and 1204 AD. This was a record that the Byzantines set, living up to the most convoluted...

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The Tarquinian Conspiracy: The Failed Attempt to Restore the Monarchy in Rome...

Ancient Rome transitioned from a monarchy to a republic in 509 B.C., after its seventh king, Tarquin the Proud, was overthrown in a palace coup triggered by his son, Sextus Tarquinius, who violated a...

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Rocks Found in Iceland Explain How Late Antiquity Little Ice Age May Have...

Research led by scientists at the University of Southampton, in collaboration with institutions from Canada and China, offers new evidence about the intensity and scope of the Late Antique Little Ice...

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