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  1. 4 days ago · Four Roman roads fall wholly or partly within the area of the present volume: the main road from London to Exeter via Badbury Rings and Dorchester, the roads from Dorchester to Ilchester and Radipole (Weymouth), and the road from Hamworthy (Poole) to Badbury.

    • Roman Remains

      For the occasional use of ten-figure map references, see p....

  2. 2 days ago · From there, amphora-making first spread to the Egyptians (15th–14th century bce), and later to the Phoenicians (8th–7th century bce), the Greeks (late 8th–7th century bce, and through them Sicily and southern Italy in the 5th–4th century bce) (see amphorae and amphora stamps, Greek), the Etruscans (end 7th–6 th century bce), and eventually the Romans (3rd century bce) (see amphorae ...

  3. 3 days ago · Peacock, 'Roman Amphorae in Pre-Roman Britain', in D. Hill and M. Jesson (eds.), The Iron Age and its Hill-forts (1971), 180–1. The Dykes Dyke 'a' extends uphill for 3,900 ft. northwards from a point N.E. of area C.

  4. 2 days ago · (a) The O.S. map of Roman Britain (2nd ed., 1924), on the evidence of field-boundaries, marks a line of road leading northwards from Wood Eaton via Islip to near Bletchingdon. ( b ) Plot (fn. 70) describes a portion of road which he thought represented either a line of road from Alchester to Oxford or else a winter way on drier ground ...

  5. 5 days ago · Archaeologists conducted a geophysical survey using magnetometer research and uncovered two previously unknown Roman villas, a roadside cemetery, farmsteads, and a web of roads that all provide a ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Roman_EmpireRoman Empire - Wikipedia

    2 days ago · The Roman Empire was the state ruled by the Romans following Octavian's assumption of sole rule under the Principate in 27 BC, the post-Republican state of ancient Rome. It included territories in Europe, North Africa, and Western Asia and was ruled by emperors.

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  8. 2 days ago · Roman Caeserea The Roman double aqueduct that brought water from the foot of the Carmel range to Caesarea. When Judea became a Roman province in 6 CE, Caesarea replaced Jerusalem as its civilian and military capital and became the official residence of its governors, such as the Roman procurator Antonius Felix, and prefect Pontius Pilatus.

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