The household was likely to have been that of a wealthy farming family. The abandonment of the Antonine Wall earlier in the ...
Although there were no contemporary Roman forts nearby after the abandonment of the Antonine Wall earlier in the second ...
A 2,000-year-old Roman brooch discovered in Scotland may have been buried as a ritual offering for protection or taken as a ...
The household was likely to have been that of a wealthy farming family. The abandonment of the Antonine Wall earlier in the century meant there were no Roman forts nearby at the time the dwelling ...
The paper “Saint Patrick's birthplace & the names of the Roman forts along the Antonine Wall” states that new Roman period place names assigned to four places along the Antoinine Wall ...
The brooch was popular among Roman military figures - and was found buried deep in the foundations of an Iron Age settlement in south west Scotland.
Although there were no contemporary Roman forts nearby after the abandonment of the Antonine Wall earlier in the second century AD, an earlier first century AD Roman marching camp lies two ...
Archaeologists reveals how a rare enamelled Roman brooch provides insight into how the Britons of Ayrshire interacted with the Roman army ...
Researchers have found a Roman brooch in the foundation of an Iron Age house in Scotland, but what was it doing there?
The Kingdom of Scotland was founded in 843 AD when Kenneth MacAlpin unified the Picts and Scots, though its story stretches ...
It was ‘terrarum fine’ - the end of the world - and for around 20,000 soldiers who had marched north, crossing hills, swamps and rivers to ...