It is the first Roman Imperial helmet ever found in the country, and just the second ever found in all of Scandinavia.
Game Pieces Made of Bones, Hinted at Roman Military Strategy Among the exciting archaeological discoveries, some intriguing ...
One thousand six hundred years ago, in a city named after the famous emperor Hadrian, bored Roman soldiers spent their free ...
A payslip belonging to a Roman auxiliary soldier, posted on Twitter back in March 2019 by archaeologist Joanne Ball, shows that the imperial grunt was left penniless immediately after getting paid ...
The 404 coins, including 44 from Britain, are believed to be a mix of military pay and the spoils of war, stashed by a Roman soldier after he returned to the European continent ...
The next day, they had to do it all again! Roman soldiers weren't always at war - they spent most of their time training for battle. They practised fighting in formation and man-to-man.
The Roman Empire was created and controlled by its soldiers. At the core of the army were its legions, which were without equal in their training, discipline and fighting ability. By the time ...
An ancient Roman villa in northern France also had ... 1908 — and the body was identified as a German soldier from World War I, researchers said, confirmed by the discovery of his identification ...
It's believed they were taken by soldier as "spoils of war". There were also 360 Roman coins discovered, and it's the first time a Roman-British coin hoard of this kind has been found in mainland ...