Over the centuries, history has seen sarcophagi in all shapes and sizes, and one would think we know them all.
Well, here is a
surprise. In today’s city of
Excavating the
necropolis of Durocortorum, as Reims
was known in the days of Caesar’s
conquest of
By 51 BC, the
city reached its heyday when it was enriched with many Roman monuments
including a Forum and several Bath Houses.
Outside the city wall, a vast necropolis was established. This surprised the archaeologists since the place was known as a swamp.
However, the
Roman engineers had managed to redirect the water to the
The sarcophagus contained the skeleton of a woman surrounded by her funerary gifts, such as two glass bottles, a jug, four oil lamps, an amber ring, a comb, and a mirror.
A further study of
the woman’s remains is currently underway, including a DNA sample that will be
compared with the 80 already existing ones. So far, some 5,000 tombs have been
excavated in the
We are not often
talking about the far-reaching impressions Caesar’s
conquest left in
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