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Roman London, a large trading city filled with merchants ... you need reminders of the deeds of your god – the essential feature of every Mithraeum was a carving of Mithras sacrificing the ...
In 1954, builders clearing a World War II bombsite in central London unearthed the remains of a Roman temple honouring ...
The Roman writing tablets reveal the earliest ... has been on public display at the London Mithraeum Bloomberg SPACE since 2017. The writing tablets are wooden frames with an inset writing area ...
Roman wall ruins in a City of London car park ... Temple of Mithras was built in the third century AD and is in the London Mithraeum Bloomberg SPACE. It is free to visit but you have to book.
the recreated ruins of the Temple of Mithras and many Roman artifacts at the London Mithraeum Bloomberg SPACE; and the Roman ...
Hundreds of Roman leather shoes were also uncovered ... around 600 of the artefacts have been on public display at the London Mithraeum Bloomberg SPACE since 2017. Following closure of its London ...
Now, London's first Roman basilica has been finally found – hidden underneath the basement of an unassuming office block near Leadenhall Market. Originally two storeys high, the basilica ...
Archaeologists in London have uncovered a section of Roman masonry that belongs to a nearly 2,000-year-old town hall, in what historians say is one of the most significant discoveries in the ...
During excavations amid the early stages of expanding low carbon heating to thousands of homes along Old Kent Road in London, archaeologists found physical evidence of an ancient Roman road.
An office building from the 1930s in the heart of London was about to be demolished and redeveloped by its owners — until archaeologists unearthed remnants of the city’s first Roman basilica ...
“And we were amazed that there’s actually a really, really substantial piece of the first Roman basilica surviving.” After London and two other towns were destroyed during a revolt against ...
Archaeologists have uncovered the remnants of London's earliest-known ancient Roman basilica on the site of a planned 32-story skyscraper, right in the heart of what was once known as Londinium.
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