IFLScience on MSN
You can now play an ancient Roman board game called Ludus Latrunculorum, dating back at least 2,000 years
An ancient board game discovered at a Roman frontier fort near Hadrian’s Wall has been recreated using 3D scanning and ...
Until now, the earliest known instance of human interest in ichthyosaurs was in 1699, but a peculiar discovery pushes that ...
Myf Warhurst, voiceover: Thousands of years ago, on the continent of Europe, people lived their everyday lives in one of the ...
All That's Interesting on MSN
A scuba diver in Italy just discovered a massive treasure of tens of thousands of ancient Roman coins
A scuba diver off the coast of an Italian island just stumbled upon a massive hoard of tens of thousands of 1,700-year-old ...
Soldiers and civilians alike enjoyed strategy game Ludus Latrunculorum in the Roman Empire, especially in Roman Britain ...
Long before electricity, Roman engineers embedded reflective marble into Pompeii's basalt roads to safely guide nighttime ...
This early introduction to ancient history helps students learn about people, places and environments, as they explore how ...
Travel + Leisure on MSN
A Hidden Ancient Roman Villa Was Just Discovered Beneath a High School Near the Colosseum
The remarkably preserved domus, complete with vaulted ceilings and painted walls, is now the focus of an archaeological ...
The eruption of Mt. Vesuvius froze the ancient Roman city in time, giving modern-day humans a remarkable vision into the past ...
An 18th-century archaeological dig uncovered a library of intact but charred scrolls. Their contents have been unreadable ...
Ancient Rome had plenty of normal food, including bread, olives, beans, wine, fish, and fruit. Then there were the dishes ...
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