Excavation of a Roman-era cemetery in France yielded nearly two dozen lead tablets inscribed in Latin and Gaulish.
Archaeologists working on the site of an old convent’s garden in Dijon, France, have discovered a strange group of Gallic graves and a children’s necropolis dating back over 2,000 years.
The remains of the deceased found in the burials may be more than 2,000 years old, according to archaeologists.
French archaeologists have discovered artifacts and sites spanning multiple centuries, from the Late Bronze Age to the ...
According to a Live Science report, Roman graves were discovered during the excavation of the site of an eighteenth-century ...
A popular archaeology programme is set to return to North West Norfolk to carry out new investigations into the site of a ...
Pierre-Yves Lambert, a French linguist and Celtic studies scholar at the National Centre for Scientific Research, suggested ...
Ahead of subdivision development in France, archaeologists found an ancient settlement site ... allow the archaeology team to better narrow down the timeline for when the Gallo-Roman farm was ...