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What Did the Roman Army Eat: Surviving on a Legionnaire's DietThe Roman army was spread across the entire globe, fighting huge campaigns that would require an enormous amount of supplies.
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSN1,800-Year-Old Horse Buried With Grave Goods Suggests Deep Bond Between a Roman Soldier and His SteedRoughly 1,800 years ago, a Roman cavalry horse died of unknown causes. The animal’s human rider, a Roman soldier, buried the ...
Archaeologists in Stuttgart, Germany, uncovered over 100 horse skeletons believed to have been part of a Roman cavalry unit.
Archeologists discovered a heavily handled penis pendant at a fort erected near northern England landmark Hadrian’s Wall and ...
Fortresses, soldier housing, and roads from Egypt’s Ptolemaic and Roman eras found in Sinai, revealing military life over ...
The site, which likely once housed a roman cavalry unit, shows evidence of the respect soldiers had for their mounts.
The horses in this burial site belonged to a Roman cavalry unit, or 'Ala,' stationed at Hallschlag in the 2nd century AD.
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ZME Science on MSNArchaeologists Discover 1,800-Year-Old Roman Cavalry Horse Cemetery in GermanyIn the summer of 2024, a team of archaeologists was called in at a housing project in Stuttgart’s Bad Cannstatt district and ...
The undated photo shows uncovered remains of military fortresses and residential units for soldiers dating back to the Ptolemaic and Roman periods, in the North Sinai Province, Egypt. (Photo ...
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