News

Straddling the border of Cumbria and Northumberland like a dithering Geordie, the village of Gilsland is home to an famous ...
A team of researchers has managed to extract and sequence DNA from fish remains found in an ancient Roman salting factory in ...
Researchers from Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU), the University of Oxford, and the University of Innsbruck have ...
CNN’s Ben Wedeman dives deep underground in Rome to explore the Aqua Virgo, an ancient aqueduct that continues to supply ...
From aqueducts to surgical tools, Roman innovation shaped the world in ways most people don’t realize. This list showcases the top 10 technologies that prove how ahead of their time they truly were.
Underwater archaeologists found a Roman breakwater made from recycled architectural fragments off the coast of Bacoli in ...
WWE News: Roman Reigns has been spotted in public for the first time since WrestleMania 41, where he lost his match and was betrayed by Paul Heyman. Following a ...
A Roman army camp discovered in the Netherlands expands the knowledge of how far north the empire’s boundary extended. Located north of the Rhine River, the camp was found in the Veluwe region ...
When will the Red Sox call up Roman Anthony? The 21-year-old Anthony entered this season as one of the top prospects in all of baseball, but has remained in the minors for all of 2025 so far. He's ...
RTE Ireland reports that they recently made another remarkable discovery—an intact Roman pot. Although the Roman Empire’s boundaries enveloped much of Europe, they never reached Ireland.
The reason why the 2,000-year-old aqueducts throughout Italy don’t look a day over 500 is because Romans used “lime clasts” mixed in with concrete that essentially filled cracks before they ...