The document is the longest Greek document found in the Judean Desert, spanning over 133 lines of written text.
Originating mainly from conquered regions like Messenia, the Helots were essential to the Spartan economy, allowing the Spartan citizens to dedicate ...
In the Roman Empire’s heyday, legal disputes and fiscal controversies were commonplace. While emperors paraded in marble-clad ...
Scientists have deciphered a 1,900-year-old papyrus describing a court process from the time of the Roman occupation of ...
A new discovery from the Roman empire outlines a juicy case of second-century crime. Containing an extraordinary 133 lines of ...
The papyrus revealed how the imperial state dealt with financial crimes - specifically tax fraud involving slaves - in Judaea ...
The Greek document details a court case in ancient Palestine involving tax fraud and provides insight into trial preparations in the Roman Empire ...
Explore the fascinating narrative of forgery and tax evasion in ancient Rome through the discovery of a remarkable Greek ...
Although some movies and media depict ancient people as unclean, that’s not entirely accurate. The ancients had hygiene ...
The scroll, found in the Judean desert, has been painstakingly translated from Nabataean, an ancient Arabic language.
Who would you invite to your ideal dinner party? Plato answered that question centuries ago with his sublime Symposium, a ...