The digital tool, called Itiner-e, allows people to virtually see a map of how the ancient Roman roads were once traveled in ...
It’s no secret that the Romans liked to build roads. But European researchers say they've discovered an extra 100,000 ...
At its zenith in the second century AD, the Roman Empire encompassed more than 55 million inhabitants stretching from Britain to Egypt and Syria. While historians have long recognized that an ...
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani tells Newsweek his vision of making his country a global trade, investment and ...
Rodman's Hollow is one of RI's most beautiful places, but it was almost lost to a luxury development. The fight to save it ...
The attention sparked by the heist is an opportunity, experts say, to pressure Europe’s great museums to explain their collections' origins more honestly, and it could trigger a broader reckoning over ...
Let’s face it – outlet shopping in Florida deserves its own category in the state’s tourism brochures. Between navigating ...
For those with an interest in prehistoric cultures, the Sainte Genevieve Museum Learning Center houses an impressive collection of Mississippian artifacts, offering insight into the peoples who ...
Experts say the robbery is an opportunity to pressure the Louvre and Europe’s other museums to explain their collections' ...
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Europe's Oldest Map

A 4,000-year-old stone slab, first discovered over a century ago in France, may be the oldest known map in Europe, according to a new study.
The Roman Empire had an impressive road network. A new dataset now visualizes the road map, adding over 100,000 kilometers of ...
By 150 CE, the Empire was carved up and maintained by a network of stone/gravel/sand highways stretching 180,000 miles.