Archaeologists have unearthed several Roman buildings and the ruins of a forum in Spain which likely helped integrate local communities into the ancient empire. A team of students, volunteers and ...
Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Archaeologists have uncovered an ancient Roman forum from more than 2,000 years ago at the site of an unknown city. A ...
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Rome's Forum, Italy: A drone flight through ancient glory
Soar above the ancient beating heart of the Roman Empire with this breathtaking drone video of the Roman Forum (Foro Romano). Witness the majestic ruins of what was once the center of Western ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. ROME (AP) — Italian archaeologists unveiled ...
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Walk through Rome’s ancient heartbeat
The Roman Forum, once the political, religious, and commercial center of ancient Rome, now offers visitors a vivid walk through history. From temples and basilicas to Julius Caesar’s altar, the site ...
The roar of the arena crowd, the bustle of the Roman forum, the grand temples, the Roman army in red with glistening shields and armor — when people imagine ancient Rome, they often think of its ...
A large Roman forum has been unearthed in Spain, archaeologists said. It is the oldest known plaza on the Iberian Peninsula. Photo from the University of Zaragoza The ruins of an enormous Roman plaza ...
Archaeologists and students excavated a hill with an old stone wall and uncovered some ancient Roman ruins, confirming a decades-old theory. Photo from University of Granada Archaeologists and ...
In the late 1700s, Juan Vegazo, a farmer and amateur historian in Ubrique, in the southern Spanish province of Cadiz, had a grand theory: buried within the rock and dirt of a nearby hill lay the ...
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