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The Roman Colosseum: Facts about the gladiatorial arena
Jul 22, 2022
The Roman Colosseum: Facts about the gladiatorial arena
The Colosseum was the largest amphitheater built in ancient Rome. The massive arena held thousands of spectators, who packed the stands to watch gladiators battle to the death and fight exotic animals, such as lions. Built in A.D. 72, the four-story amphitheater soon towered nearly 165 feet (50 meters) high....
Gladiator arena from Roman era unearthed in Turkey
Jul 22, 2022
Gladiator arena from Roman era unearthed in Turkey
Archaeologists in Turkey have discovered the remains of a magnificent Roman-era arena, where up to 20,000 spectators likely cheered and jeered as they watched gladiator matches and wild animal fights, the excavators said. The 1,800-year-old arena was discovered on the rolling hills of the ancient city of Mastaura, in Turkey's...
Last Roman gladiator arena ever built unearthed in Switzerland
Jul 22, 2022
Last Roman gladiator arena ever built unearthed in Switzerland
Archaeologists in Switzerland have uncovered the ruins of a Roman-era amphitheater — possibly the youngest on record — where spectators likely watched gladiator fights and animal hunts with bated breath. The oval-shaped amphitheater was built in an abandoned Roman quarry that had been in use until late antiquity. This clue,...
Ancient Concession Stands and Shops Found at Roman Gladiator Arena
Jul 22, 2022
Ancient Concession Stands and Shops Found at Roman Gladiator Arena
Just like spectators at modern-day sporting events, people who attended ancient Roman gladiator fights would have gotten hungry and might have even wanted to shop for little souvenirs. Archaeologists in Austria say they have detected the remains of the bakeries, fast-food stands and shops that would have served spectators at...
'Box seats' found at Roman Empire-era arena in Turkey
Jul 22, 2022
'Box seats' found at Roman Empire-era arena in Turkey
Archaeologists in western Turkey have discovered the 1,800-year-old equivalent of box seats at a giant arena dating to the Roman Empire. During excavations at the ancient amphitheater of Pergamon, a large arena built to mirror the Colosseum of ancient Rome, researchers discovered two seat blocks with carved inscriptions on the...
What was the largest empire in the world?
Jul 27, 2022
What was the largest empire in the world?
According to Guinness World Records, which seems as good an authority as any, the answer is the Achaemenid Empire in 480 B.C. Also known as the Persian Empire, it's estimated that 44% of the world's population was ruled from the Achaemenid throne in what is now modern-day Iran, making it...
Roman 'Zodiac' coin with cancer sign unearthed in Israel
Aug 1, 2022
Roman 'Zodiac' coin with cancer sign unearthed in Israel
Archaeologists diving into the Mediterranean sea by Israel have discovered a bronze coin on the seafloor dating to one of the Roman Empire's most peaceful eras. On one side, the coin depicts Luna (Selene in Greek), the Roman goddess of the moon, with a crab, the astrological sign of cancer,...
Photos: Gladiators of the Roman Empire
Aug 17, 2022
Photos: Gladiators of the Roman Empire
Gladiators of the Empire (Image credit: Razvy | Shutterstock) There were several different types of gladiators who fought at the time of the Roman Empire. Wearing different kinds of armor, and welding a mix of weapons, these fighters were pitted against each other in the arena and often enough met...
Head of Hercules and other treasures found on Roman 'Antikythera Mechanism' shipwreck
Aug 17, 2022
Head of Hercules and other treasures found on Roman 'Antikythera Mechanism' shipwreck
The 2,000-year-old Roman shipwreck that carried the Antikythera Mechanism — a precise mechanical model of the sun, moon and planets — is giving up new treasures, including a marble head thought to depict the Greek and Roman demigod Hercules. Scientists and divers made the new discoveries after creating the first...
Famed Roman Shipwreck Could Be Two
Aug 17, 2022
Famed Roman Shipwreck Could Be Two
SEATTLE — A dive to the undersea cliff where a famous Roman shipwreck rests has turned up either evidence that the wreck is enormous — or a suggestion that, not one, but two sunken ships are resting off the Greek island of Antikythera. Either way, it's an exciting result, said...
The Roman Empire: Rulers, expansion and fall
Aug 31, 2022
The Roman Empire: Rulers, expansion and fall
The Roman Empire began in 27 B.C., when Octavian, Julius Caesar's adopted son and heir, was granted the title Augustus, meaning revered one, by the Roman senate. This new title signified Octavian's elevation to the position of emperor in all but name, ending the Roman Republic, according to many modern...
Amateur freedivers find gold treasure dating to the fall of the Roman Empire
Aug 31, 2022
Amateur freedivers find gold treasure dating to the fall of the Roman Empire
Two amateur divers swimming along the Spanish coast have discovered a huge hoard of 1,500-year-old gold coins, one of the largest on record dating to the Roman Empire. The divers, brothers-in-law Luis Lens Pardo and César Gimeno Alcalá, discovered the gold stash while vacationing with their families in Xàbia, a...
Deformed 'alien' skulls offer clues about life during the Roman Empire’s collapse
Sep 2, 2022
Deformed 'alien' skulls offer clues about life during the Roman Empire’s collapse
Over decades, dozens of artificially deformed alien-like skulls that are more than 1,000 years old have been unearthed in a cemetery in Hungary. Now, these skulls are revealing how the collapse of the Roman Empire unleashed social changes in the region. During the fifth century A.D., people in central Europe...
Why did the Roman Empire split in two?
Sep 24, 2022
Why did the Roman Empire split in two?
An old adage states that Rome wasn't built in a day, meaning that big projects take time to complete. The Roman Empire, as an example, was established gradually and grew over hundreds of years from a city-state to a colossal empire stretching from Britain to Egypt. And just as Rome...
1,600-year-old mosaic of Hercules and Neptune's 40 mistresses unearthed in war-torn Syria
Oct 17, 2022
1,600-year-old mosaic of Hercules and Neptune's 40 mistresses unearthed in war-torn Syria
Archaeologists in war-torn Syria have unearthed a stunning mosaic from the Roman era that features events from the Trojan War, the chiseled muscles of the Roman demigod Hercules and the powerful ancient Roman god Neptune alongside 40 of his mistresses. The General Directorate of Antiquities and Museums, a Syrian government...
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