Thank you for doing what you guys do. It's awesome to know and respect the work you do in order to preserve history. See you next year. Stay safe and blessed
Very interesting, as always! I'm curious about the shape of the building foundations, as they don't seem to jive with my understanding of Roman military perfectionism. What I mean is that with the Roman's famed surveying and building prowess, it seems so odd that the building foundations shown here are so irregular and not perfectly rectangular as one would expect. I really wonder if there is some kind of explanation for this?
Thank you for the update, always appreciated. The carved stone head was a super find. Intriguing that the Romans appear to keep infantry separated from cavalry; I wonder if this was a form of elitism within the military?
Wonderful report and what a tremendous find to wind up the season.
Always too short, could watch for hours! Thank you for posting! ❤😊
Thank you for doing what you guys do. It's awesome to know and respect the work you do in order to preserve history. See you next year. Stay safe and blessed
Really looking forward to next years amazing results 💯✨👏🏻
Great work guys, see you all again next year
I was there three weeks ago - worthy of an entire day - the museum is special too - go onto Magna as well
Very interesting, as always! I'm curious about the shape of the building foundations, as they don't seem to jive with my understanding of Roman military perfectionism. What I mean is that with the Roman's famed surveying and building prowess, it seems so odd that the building foundations shown here are so irregular and not perfectly rectangular as one would expect. I really wonder if there is some kind of explanation for this?
Thank you for the update, always appreciated. The carved stone head was a super find. Intriguing that the Romans appear to keep infantry separated from cavalry; I wonder if this was a form of elitism within the military?