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Archaeological work in south east Cornwall is uncovering the history of the area. A team from the county council working at Scarcewater near St Stephen-in-Brannel says its finds are significant. Fieldwork has revealed a history of ceremonial and settlement activity at Scarcewater spanning five millennia. full article at the BBC
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The French team excavating at Kharga Oasis have made an archaeological discovery 8 kilometers from Al-Monira village. The team unearthed a Greco- Roman cemetery embracing tombs carved in a sandstone hill. The tombs which are irregularly clustered mostly comprise a small burial room 1.5 meters high and a burial well from 1 to 2 meters deep. full article at SiS.gov
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A 3,000-year-old wooden staircase has been found at Hallstatt in northern Austria, immaculately preserved in a Bronze Age salt mine, Vienna's Natural History Museum said. "We have found a wooden staircase which dates from the 13th century B.C. It is the oldest wooden staircase discovered to date in Europe, maybe even in the world," Hans Reschreiter, the director of excavations at the museum, told AFP. full article at yahoo news
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A team of international archaeologists have set sail from Mexico to seek a sunken city that has been dubbed the "Mayan Atlantis", press reports said on Monday. Quoted by the Mexican newspaper Milenio, team leader Paulina Zelintzky, a Russian archaeologist, said sonar equipment had given indications there could be ancient structures on the ocean floor between Mexico's Yucatan peninsula and Cuba. full article at IOL
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images of the mask should be in your inbox now..
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significant historical find was made at Presidio La Bahia over the weekend during a public archaeological dig. Volunteers and members of several archaeological groups found what appears to be the "setting trench" for the original location of the palisades stockade wall at the fort. full article at Victoria Advocat
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Book Review by Ursus This book was first written in 1969, and for that reason I'm sure there are more up-to-date treatises of the Roman military. The reason I was attached to this particular treatment of the subject was its focus. It does not delve into minute descriptions of martial tactics or epic battles; plenty of other volumes accomplish that. Rather, Watson explores the subject of the typical Roman soldier himself and his experiences through recruitment to discharge. The point here is to acquaint ourselves with the man behind the armor and see military service through his eyes. The first chapter of the book is an introduction detailing the author's purpose and methods. We also find a brief rundown of the various units that comprised the imperial military. Next we see the soldier as he first enters imperial service, a green but enthusiastic recruit. He is given some preliminary pay and receives his first tastes to the world that will own him for many years. The recruit soon becomes a soldier, with extensive training and then various duties and campaigns. From here Watson takes a chapter to explore the conditions of imperial military service, with both their dark and triumphant sides. A short and interesting chapter follows discussing the role of religion and marriage to a Roman soldier. Finally, the author assesses the Roman soldier's impact on greater society. The last third of the book is devoted to extensive footnotes. Here the reader can check the author's sources and find inspiration for further study. There are plenty of black and white photographs to enliven the reading with some visual aids. The author writes in a style that is clear and erudite without being totally dry. His attempt to humanize the individual behind the faceless legions largely succeeds. The reader will garner a better sense of the individual soldier's contribution to Western Civilization. Those Romanophiles extensively schooled in Roman military affairs may find little here of worth. Those who want an introduction to the Roman military may otherwise find this a valuable read, especially if they want a more humanistic perspective as opposed to a military science perspective. ...more Book Reviews! Empire of Honour by J. E. Lendon The Complete Roman Army The Roman Army by P. Southern This is the eighth volume in the series Aspects of Greek and Roman Life, edited by H.H. Scullard. Like others of that series, it has the full apparatus of scholarship: the notes and appendices alone cover about one third of the book (pages 155 to 246). There are eleven distinct indices (people, subdivided into nomina, cognomina, emperors, ancient authors, and modern authors; deities; places; inscriptions; papyri; texts; and a general index). The 546 notes give references in French, German, Italian, Latin, and Greek, including the Latin originals for all quotations given in English translation in the text. The text itself is written in a clear and readable style, although liberally peppered with Latin words, since many terms are left in this language, including names of weapons, military ranks, and units, ceremonies, insignias, money values and other quantitative references. Obviously, anyone interested in the Roman soldier should now begin with this volume. It totally replaces Mellersh's The Roman Soldier (1965), which never was very useful. Tell us your opinion - Submit your Review - Buy the book! Book Review of The Roman Soldier - Related Topic: Roman Egypt Bibliography Get it now! The Roman Soldier for the UK ________________________________ Archive
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Here are the two images of the mask, where did you take them?
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How true that is!
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Carbon dating shows the horses
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Four years ago, scientists thought they had found the perfect place to settle the Noah flood debate: A farmer's house on a bluff overlooking the Black Sea built about 7,500 years ago -- just before tidal waves inundated the homestead, submerged miles of coastline and turned the freshwater lake into a salty sea. Some believed the rectangular site of stones and wood could help solve the age-old question of whether the Black Sea's flooding was the event recounted in the Biblical story of Noah. via Tech Archive
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Inscriptions read out on two silver vessels from the Thracian treasure revealed in the Golyamata Kosmatka mound has confirmed the supposed dating of the tomb to the times of ruling of King Seutus III. The archeological team headed by Dr Georgi Kitov has opened a new page in history of ancient Thracians by actually finding the mausoleum of one of mightiest Thracian rulers. full article at Novinite
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Archaeologists yesterday announced the discovery of an entire Iron Age village on an until-now unexamined site on the west bank of Loch Lomond. A team from the West of Scotland Archaeology Service and a research unit at Glasgow University have spent months digging and sifting through soil at the site, which is being cleared for a golf course and leisure development. Among their finds is a pre-Christian Iron Age glass bead described as "a national treasure". full article at The Scotsman
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Today we issued our second UNRV Roman History Newsletter. So check your inbox! If you haven' yet signed up to our Newsletter that keeps you up to date on the latest additions on UNRV.com and in the world of Roman Archaeology, you can do that here! If you missed it, no worries, all our newsletters will be available in the archive.
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The empty galleries are covered with dust. Broken statues are still lying on the floor and damaged showcases still bear witness to the vandalism that took place here. In fact, if it weren't for minor, hardly visible repair work, a visitor could not tell that over a year has gone by since the Iraq National Museum in Baghdad was looted. Just a few years ago, this museum was considered to be among the biggest and most important in the world. Sumerian jewelry, Babylonian steles, Assyrians reliefs, Abbasid walls covered with calligraphy and many other beautiful objects used to be on display here, in 32 galleries, testifying for 55 thousand years of history and civilization that existed in Iraq. full article at AINA
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send me the picture (admin@unrv.com) and i post it for you regards and welcome viggen
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An archaeologist from the University of Liverpool is uncovering the secrets of one of the world's oldest civilisations. Dr Alan Greaves is looking at the people of the lost society of Ionia, which was in ancient Greece, now within the borders of Turkey. He has been carrying out excavations in Turkey for the past decade and his findings have revealed new insights into the lives of the Ionian land workers. Previous studies have focused on Ionia's structures and literary texts, but little has been revealed about the day-to-day experiences of the Ionian people. full article at icLiverpool
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Archaeologists have unearthed the site of Genghis Khan's palace and believe the long-sought grave of the 13th century Mongolian warrior is somewhere nearby, the head of the excavation team says. A Japanese and Mongolian research team found the complex on a grassy steppe 150 miles east of the Mongolian capital of Ulan Bator, said Shinpei Kato, professor emeritus at Tokyo's Kokugakuin University. full article at China.org.cn
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Surgeons were carrying out complicated skull operations in medieval times, the remains of a body found at an archaeological dig show. A skull belonging to a 40-year-old peasant man, who lived between 960 and 1100AD, is the firmest evidence yet of cranial surgery, say its discoverers. full article at the BBC
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Dozens of coins from the tenth Roman Legion, uncovered during the last excavation season at the Herodian palace in Ramat Hanadiv, offer some insight on the demise of the glamorous palace. Prof. Yizhar Hirschfeld, a Hebrew University archeologist who has been managing the excavations at the site since the 1980s, says that it is possible to learn from the presence of the coins that that the palace was abandoned during the Great Rebellion that started in 66 CE not far away from there, in Caesarea. full article at Haaretz
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It is famed as a critical moment in code-breaking history. Using a piece of basalt carved with runes and words, scholars broke the secret of hieroglyphs, the written 'language' of the ancient Egyptians. A baffling, opaque language had been made comprehensible, and the secrets of one of the world's greatest civilisations revealed - thanks to the Rosetta Stone and the analytic prowess of 18th and 19th century European scholars. But now the supremacy of Western thinking has been challenged by a London researcher who claims that hieroglyphs had been decoded hundreds of years earlier - by an Arabic alchemist, Abu Bakr Ahmad Ibn Wahshiyah. full article at Guardian
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Byzantium would be the logic way to expand, as one is tight closely together with each other, however we are currently working on making UNRV the most complete Roman Empire Site so don't hold your breath till you see a Byzantium UNRV version.. cheers viggen
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A scientific dig has uncovered four pomegranates believed to be 2,500 years old preserved inside a woven basket nestled in a bronze vessel, a Greek archaeologist said Friday. The fruits were found at an archaeological dig in the area of Ancient Corinth, about 63 miles west of Athens. full article at Meta Religion
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Qumran is the ancient Israeli city where the Dead Sea Scrolls were originally discovered in 1947. However, a team of archaeologists several years ago believed that the scrolls, which contain the oldest known version of the Old Testament, were hidden at Qumran by the Jews 20 miles away to keep them from the Romans... full article at San Marcos Daily Record
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seems like you guys had lots of fun... if you have new photos, let us know.. cheers viggen