Results 131 to 140 of about 7,261 (186)
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On Roman Remains at Bath

Journal of the British Archeological Association
H M Scarth
exaly   +4 more sources

The Roman Bath

BMJ: British Medical Journal
H Ancell, Henry Ancell
exaly   +2 more sources

The Indirizzo Roman baths at Catania

Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2018
The Terme dell’Indirizzo (to give them their Italian name) stand near the centre of modern Catania (access today is from Piazza Currò) on Sicily's E coast (fig. 1). They are not a new discovery: the ancient structure remains as a standing building. It is not just the best-preserved Roman bath-building in Sicily; it is among the best-preserved examples ...
Giuseppe Margani   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Roman Baths at Bath: The Excavations 1969-75

Britannia, 1976
Excavation carried out between 1969 and 1970 before and during rebuilding work exposed most of the west end of the Roman bathing establishment. A new structural history (replacing Cunliffe 1969) was worked out involving five major periods with subsequent minor changes.
openaire   +2 more sources

Roman Baths

2007
Abstract The Roman baths and aqueducts cleansed and scoured more people in western Eurasia than any previous civilization—over 12 million bodies, if even only a quarter of the imperial population lived in cities and were regular bathers; and historians have rightly viewed them as one of the linchpins of Roman life.
openaire   +1 more source

Women In Roman Baths

Harvard Theological Review, 1992
In 177 CE Christians in Lugdunum and Vienna in Gaul were persecuted, and some were martyred. The survivors sent a letter by Irenaeus to the churches in Asia and Phrygia describing what happened. Among other things, they complained that they were excluded from the baths (βαλανεῖα). Later in hisAdversus haereses(ca.
openaire   +1 more source

The Roman Baths in Târgșoru Vechi

CaieteARA. Arhitectură. Restaurare. Arheologie, 2017
Started as an archaeological investigation of the medieval ruins from Targșoru Vechi, the research began gathering more and more data about the Roman epoch. At the end of the ‘70s of the 20th century, the excavation revealed a building placed at about 50m from the Roman fort limits: the Roman baths, which remained unpublished.
Andrei Măgureanu   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

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