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This Month
Month Archive
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Friday, April 25
by
arltblogger
on Fri 25 Apr 2008 09:33 BST
Roman Britain is alive and popular, and being dug up or exhibited more »
Saturday, April 19
by
arltblogger
on Sat 19 Apr 2008 11:38 BST
Under the provocative title 'Is Stonehenge Roman?', Current Archaeology reports on a Time Team dig which really has found Roman stuff there. more »
Monday, April 7
by
arltblogger
on Mon 07 Apr 2008 21:34 BST
'The face of an emperor -- Hadrian inspects the wall' and 'Bede & Beijing' more »
Sunday, April 6
by
arltblogger
on Sun 06 Apr 2008 14:52 BST
A page with basic information about Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester), but, more interesting, an aerial view. more »
Saturday, April 5
by
arltblogger
on Sat 05 Apr 2008 10:00 BST
Various news items today more »
Thursday, April 3
by
arltblogger
on Thu 03 Apr 2008 10:46 BST
The retirement of the director of Fishbourne Roman Palace (blogged yesterday) is marked by an article in the Littlehampton Gazette linking to videos of various Fishbourne treasures. more »
Wednesday, April 2
by
arltblogger
on Wed 02 Apr 2008 14:00 BST
A team of archaeologists has been excavating a site between St Giles and Blackhall Road since mid January - and last week the diggers struck bone, uncovering what could be a mass grave. more »
by
arltblogger
on Wed 02 Apr 2008 13:55 BST
THIS week sees the retirement of David Rudkin, the director of Fishbourne Roman Palace.
David was director for 29 years, during which time the education department was expanded, a new wing for conservation, storage and visitor events was built and a new roof was put over the mosaics. more »
Thursday, March 27
by
arltblogger
on Thu 27 Mar 2008 14:09 GMT
The remains of a Roman roundhouse, thought to date back to the second century, were discovered as United Utilities were working on a new pipeline project, on grazing land near Garstang Road East. more »
Friday, March 21
by
arltblogger
on Fri 21 Mar 2008 17:56 GMT
AN historian has succeeded where Time Team failed... to prove a Cheshire village was once home to the Roman army. more »
Saturday, March 15
by
arltblogger
on Sat 15 Mar 2008 02:17 GMT
The Roman burial ground found in Gloucestershire is set to be revealed. More than 100 bodies, many with their heads placed at their feet, were found at the Hanson gravel quarry at Horcott, near Fairford, in May 2006. more »
Sunday, March 9
by
arltblogger
on Sun 09 Mar 2008 13:41 GMT
The remains of a 2,000-year-old Roman high street have been found beneath Cirencester's historic Corn Hall.
Archaeologists believe they have discovered shop walls, the remains of a baker's oven and numerous Roman artefacts. more »
by
arltblogger
on Sun 09 Mar 2008 00:42 GMT
What did the Romans ever do for us? They founded many of the towns and cities expected to weather the current market downturn, for a start more »
Friday, March 7
by
arltblogger
on Fri 07 Mar 2008 23:47 GMT
The site has produced large amounts of Roman finds over the last 100 years. We have just carried out excavations on the cemetery which has 400 graves from the early 1st Century to the early 4th. more »
by
arltblogger
on Fri 07 Mar 2008 23:42 GMT
Archaeologists have found what they describe as a remarkable Iron Age waterhole on the site of an extension to York University. The university's archaeology department plans more digs at the site, which also contains an important Roman building. more »
Sunday, March 2
by
arltblogger
on Sun 02 Mar 2008 17:12 GMT
An appeal by The Times apparently saved some mosaics on the Isle of Wight, and now Barry Cunliffe wants to excavate the villa. more »
Sunday, February 24
by
arltblogger
on Sun 24 Feb 2008 23:44 GMT
MEMBERS of Stow Youth Centre had a unique insight into their Roman ancestry when they took part in a mosaic workshop at the Corinium Museum in Cirencester recently. more »
Wednesday, February 13
by
arltblogger
on Wed 13 Feb 2008 11:22 GMT
After listening to local residents and community groups, South Tyneside councillors have decided not to go ahead with a proposal to develop the centre for Arbeia Roman fort on the Lawe Top at South Shields. more »
Saturday, February 9
by
arltblogger
on Sat 09 Feb 2008 10:12 GMT
Dr Nick Summerton, GP and advisor to the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has written a book "Medicine and Health in Roman Britain". more »
Saturday, February 2
by
arltblogger
on Sat 02 Feb 2008 00:55 GMT
The first activity to take place during the school break is part of the Museum’s ‘Archaeology Seminars’, and will look at the Romans in the Cotswolds. It is aimed at 9-12 year olds more »
Friday, February 1
by
arltblogger
on Fri 01 Feb 2008 12:20 GMT
Volunteers from Wigan Archaeological Society performed a dig at St William's Catholic Primary School's playing field, in Ince Green Lane, to find evidence of a Roman road that linked Wigan and Manchester. more »
Wednesday, January 30
by
arltblogger
on Wed 30 Jan 2008 22:27 GMT
A previously unknown Roman fort has been found at Calstock in Cornwall, one of only a handful of sites giving evidence of Roman presence in the county, and the first found close to a silver mine. more »
Monday, January 21
by
arltblogger
on Mon 21 Jan 2008 23:03 GMT
"Our feedback since it was published shows that it has helped the Buried under Bidford project to reach young people which is the only way to safeguard its heritage long term." more »
Monday, January 14
by
arltblogger
on Mon 14 Jan 2008 16:17 GMT
Deputy town clerk Steve Newman said: "It's at an early stage but the idea is to raise the profile of the town's Roman sites by having a festival. more »
by
arltblogger
on Mon 14 Jan 2008 15:33 GMT
These glimpses into the life of a Roman soldier in Britain will form the central exhibit in a new British Museum show devoted to the Emperor Hadrian, who ruled from AD117 to 138 and visited Britain in 122. more »
Saturday, January 12
by
arltblogger
on Sat 12 Jan 2008 10:34 GMT
A nice video - good quality- of what happened between the finding of the coffin and the lifting of the lid, including explanation of the difficulties, infra-red photography of the inside, more »
Tuesday, January 8
by
arltblogger
on Tue 08 Jan 2008 12:11 GMT
Around 150 coins have so far been unearthed in the run-up to work on the new Gainsborough Hotel and Thermal Spa. more »
Saturday, January 5
by
arltblogger
on Sat 05 Jan 2008 23:17 GMT
An ancient Roman pan, which was made sometime after AD 122 but was only uncovered in 2003, is to go on display at Arbeia Roman Fort on Saturday January 5 2007. more »
by
arltblogger
on Sat 05 Jan 2008 00:38 GMT
Work is underway on a new Roman style garden at the museum, inspired by gardens from around the Roman Empire with traditional elements such as pergolas, ornate raised flower beds, box hedging and frescoes. more »
Tuesday, January 1
by
arltblogger
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 18:27 GMT
But part of precious hoard of Roman gold jewellery and silver spoons that was uncovered at a Thetford industrial site nearly 30 years ago is set to return to its home town for the first time this year. more »
Monday, December 24
by
arltblogger
on Mon 24 Dec 2007 22:24 GMT
I haven't watched it all through, but it looks worth investigation. What I've seen is a mix of battle scenes, and video of excavation going on. more »
Thursday, December 20
by
arltblogger
on Thu 20 Dec 2007 22:03 GMT
AFTER a lot of struggle, a Roman coffin discovered at Boscombe Down was moved to its new home at the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum on Monday. more »
Tuesday, December 18
by
arltblogger
on Tue 18 Dec 2007 11:24 GMT
Some 1,650 years ago someone was so comprehensively fed up with the state of the Roman empire that they committed an act of treason, blasphemy and probably criminal defacing of the coinage. They cursed the emperor Valens by hammering a coin with his image into lead, then folding the lead over his face. more »
Sunday, December 16
by
arltblogger
on Sun 16 Dec 2007 16:14 GMT
Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum is to take delivery of a spectacular Roman stone coffin unearthed by Wessex Archaeology in 2007. more »
Friday, December 14
by
arltblogger
on Fri 14 Dec 2007 12:54 GMT
THE first evidence of the earliest Londoners and Romans has been discovered in the Olympic Park in Stratford. more »
by
arltblogger
on Fri 14 Dec 2007 12:42 GMT
The important historical piece, discovered in the River Thames at London Bridge in 1834, will go on show as part of ‘The Face of an Emperor: Hadrian Inspects the Wall’ from Friday, February 8 until Sunday, April 13. more »
by
arltblogger
on Fri 14 Dec 2007 12:19 GMT
Now, new investigations at Caistor Roman town using the latest technology have revealed the plan of the buried town at an extraordinary level of detail which has never been seen before. The high-resolution geophysical survey used a Caesium Vapour magnetometer to map buried remains across the entire walled area of the Roman town. more »
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