SUMMARY Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus succeeded to power together in 161 CE, as the adopted heirs of Antonius Pius. At the ...
Court documents from an ancient tax fraud and forgery case show that tax evasion was an issue even 2,000 years ago.
Archaeologists in Luxembourg have discovered a lavish 1,700-year-old hoard of Roman gold coins that had been placed near the foundations of a small, tower-like Roman fort.
When our Gemara suggests that transcribers may not record arguments sufficiently well to recreate them later, it speaks to ...
an illegitimate emperor of the Western Roman Empire who reigned for only two years (392 to 394). This usurper, Eugenius, a rhetoric teacher and court official, was proclaimed emperor of the West ...
Eugenius, a teacher and a court official, came to power after Western Emperor ... Roman military general. However, Eugenius’ rule lasted for a mere two years (392 AD to 394 AD), and his ...
A rediscovered Greek papyrus details a Roman court case in Iudaea involving tax fraud, forgery, and possible rebellion on the ...
The Greek document details a court ... Roman soldier after he returned to the European continent Eli Wizevich Three of the coins are particularly rare: They portray Eugenius, an illegitimate ...
Explore the fascinating narrative of forgery and tax evasion in ancient Rome through the discovery of a remarkable Greek ...
The world of the Roman Empire was not just one of legions, emperors, and conquests — it was also a world of legal disputes, ...