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Researchers believe the 47-centimeter-high sandstone relief, dating to around 213 AD, may symbolize the end of the Severan Wars and was part of a larger commemorative structure.
Believed to have been part of a much larger ornament, the pair found it during their 21st year of volunteer excavations.
A couple who have volunteered in numerous excavations over the years found a "highly revered" ancient artifact at a fort in ...
Amateur archaeologists uncovered a sandstone relief of the Roman goddess of victory in Northumberland. The find occurred in a pile of rubble at the famed Roman fort Vindolanda. Dated to about 213 A.D.
A relief of the goddess Victory was discovered at a Roman ... were built at the end of a tumultuous time for the Romans in Britain, in (213 A.D.), just after the end of the Severan wars ...
Goddess Victory, known in Latin as Victoria ... “Finds like this are increasingly rare these days from Roman Britain, but the beautifully carved figure vividly reminds us that Roman forts ...
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