Springs Eternal
The image of Roman Bath was the creation of 18th- and 19th-century archaeologists. Only now are new perspectives revealing a more complex and accurate history of the city.
The image of Roman Bath was the creation of 18th- and 19th-century archaeologists. Only now are new perspectives revealing a more complex and accurate history of the city.
The distinction between centre and periphery was vital to the Roman Empire’s conception of itself. For centuries a rugged frontier, the land north of the Danube would produce one of Rome’s greatest foes.
Contradictions in Roman law left incurable headaches for its judges.
Was Nero the Antichrist? The bestial image of the Roman emperor as the enemy of Christians persists, but the truth is more complex.
In the ancient world, statues were not symbols of virtue and could take revenge on those who attacked them.
As human populations expand and their exploitation of the globe increases, so does their vulnerability to certain diseases.
The Brothel of Pompeii: Sex, Class, and Gender at the Margins of Roman Society by Sarah Levin-Richardson lays bare the largest of Pompeii's legalised Lupanars.
The little-known republic was a short-lived experiment in constitutional democracy.
Antiquities were high stakes and high profit in 16th-century Rome, and no one was above breaking the law for loot.
Not content with bringing aqueducts, sanitation and roads, the Romans transformed Britain’s flora and fauna.