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 | Archeological Site Pompeii, Roman City // Der Untergang von Pompeji, Archäologischie Ausgrabungen |  | 07/31/2005 | 811 | 



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 | A nice Roman Site at Bolonia in Spain, very near Tarifa.
See http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/cultura/museos/CABC/ |  | 08/15/2005 | 200 | 



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 | The Roman site of Ostia, near Rome. |  | 08/29/2005 | 249 | 



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 | The Roman Site of Glanum near Arles and St-Remy-de-Provence, in France. |  | 08/15/2005 | 289 | 



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 | Locations of Pompei and Herculaneum at the volcano Vesuvio near Naples. Both towns were destroyed at the famous eruption the year 79.
Link to excavations:
http://www.mediator.qub.ac.uk/ms/onlinepracticals/ad79/Slides/herculaneum.htm |  | 02/13/2006 | 297 | 



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 | Villa Rustica, Archeological Excavation of a Roman Villa in the Eifel // Ausgrabung einer römischen Villa in der Nähe von Holsthum in der Eifel. Eine typische ländliche Villa (Villa rustica) wie diese, hatte zahlreiche Wirtschaftsgebäude und schloss Gemüse-, Obst-, Oliven- und Weingärten in sich. |  | 03/28/2006 | 255 | 



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 | The site of the magnificent Roman ruins most of which is still standing. The Roman brought the marble to Beirut then rolled it over the hills to this site. |  | 08/15/2005 | 775 | 



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 | Lullingstone Roman Villa is a villa built during the Roman occupation of Britain, situated near the village of Eynsford in northwest Kent, south eastern England.
It is unknown which family lived in the villa and owned the large estate that would have surrounded it, though they would have had to be wealthy. They may have been Roman, though they could also have been native Britons ... |  | 10/21/2009 | 16 | 



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 | Fishbourne Roman Palace, in the village of Fishbourne in West Sussex, England is an important Roman archaeological site in Roman Britain. The large palace was built in the 1st century AD, around thirty years after the Roman conquest of Britain on the site of a Roman army supply base established at the Claudian invasion in 43 AD. The rectangular palace surrounded formal gardens, the northern hal... |  | 09/18/2009 | 27 | 



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 | Rutupiæ was the Roman name for Richborough near Sandwich, Kent, which they founded after they landed in England in AD 43. A major port of Roman Britain (with Dubris, it was one of the start-points for the Roman road of Watling Street, which ran on to Canterbury and London), it has many phases of Roman remains, collectively known as Richborough Fort or Richborough Roman Fort, still visible today... |  | 11/04/2009 | 21 | 



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 | Listed are 688 placemarks found so far with Roman amphitheatres, theatres, odeons (music theatres),circus and stadiums all over the Roman Empire.
The placemarks are placed in each cateory with name of the city in Roman and today. Some only have the name from totay, other the Roman name only. |  | 12/18/2008 | 525 | 



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 | Coria was a fort and town, located 2.5 miles (4.0 km) south of Hadrian's Wall, in the Roman province of Britannia. Its full Latin name is uncertain. Today it is known as Corchester or Corbridge Roman Site, adjoining Corbridge in the English county of Northumberland.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coria_(Corbridge) |  | 11/04/2009 | 16 | 



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