
Collapsed road in Cyprus reveals long-forgotten ancient tomb. See its treasures
Officials received a report of a collapsed road near the port of Famagusta on the evening of June 20 and immediately investigated, the Department of Antiquities and Museums of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus said in a June 24 news release.
Officials did not say how the road damage occurred, but photos show a mid-sized hole in the pavement. Very quickly, officials realized the collapse had exposed something historic: an ancient Greek tomb, the department said.
Follow-up excavations revealed more of the rock-cut tomb, which had a central room with three couch-like funeral beds, known as klinai. The grave's original entrance was covered with stone blocks, the department said.
Officials did not provide an exact age for the tomb but dated it to the Hellenistic period, which began in Cyprus around 300 B.C. and ended in 58 B.C. when the ancient Roman empire took control of the island, according to The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Archaeologists also found several artifacts inside the 2,000-year-old tomb. Photos show some of the pottery finds, which included bowls, jars for oil, lamps, cosmetic bottles and other pots.
Another photo shows the small gold leaf artifacts found in the tomb. Other finds included bones, glass jars, coins and needle fragments, officials said.
Excavations of the tomb in northeastern Cyprus were ongoing as of June 24. Turkish officials said they plan to clean, inventory, analyze and conserve the finds before putting them on display.
Cyprus is an island nation in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. The island is divided between the independent Republic of Cyprus and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, a disputed territory controlled and solely recognized by Turkey.
Google Translate was used to translate the news release from the Department of Antiquities and Museums of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.
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Atlantic
5 hours ago
- Atlantic
What Cicero Knew About Your Best Life
Want to stay current with Arthur's writing? Sign up to get an email every time a new column comes out. I do a lot of public speaking for business leaders about how using the science of happiness can improve their organization and make life easier for everyone. But there's one question I get very frequently: 'What about when I have to do hard things that make people un happy?' For example: having to fire someone, or asking people to make sacrifices. How do I think about this common scenario? This quandary is as old as time, and no one addressed it better than Marcus Tullius Cicero, the Roman philosopher and statesman who lived more than two millennia ago. For much of his career, Cicero lived a comfortable, uncontentious life of the mind, respected by all. But after Julius Caesar was assassinated in 44 B.C.E., he felt a civic duty to speak out about a threat to the republic in the person of Mark Antony, who was vying for power. Cicero denounced Antony as a tyrant in a series of speeches called the Philippics. It was a risky move, one that made a powerful enemy, but Cicero honestly believed that by doing the right thing as he understood it, he was making no sacrifice at all. In a book written around the same time as the Philippics, titled De Officiis ('On Duties'), Cicero explained exactly why he believed that doing what is difficult but morally correct is also what most reliably and enduringly brings the rewards we seek in life. Despite our flawed instinct to take the path of least resistance, he reasoned, we will always be better served by choosing to do the right thing. In this masterwork, Cicero created a guide for how to have a successful life through honorable behavior. Take that to heart, and you have a guide for living a happier life as well. 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Cicero's answer was unambiguous: Do your duty—even when doing so may harm your own and others' short-term happiness. In Cicero's case, this was not hypothetical. Mark Antony came to power in a three-man dictatorship and sought to eliminate all of the dictators' opponents, starting with Cicero. With a warrant out for his execution, Cicero attempted to flee his villa for Macedonia, but was captured by Roman soldiers. As legend has it, seeing that the arrestee was the famous, noble Cicero, a tribune named Popillius hesitated in carrying out the execution. Cicero, the man of honor, did not plead for his life, but rather schooled the centurion on his duty: 'Approach, veteran soldier,' he said, 'and, if you can at least do so much properly, sever this neck.'
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Campaign launches to protect endangered badgers being killed on roads in B.C.'s Interior
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Miami Herald
a day ago
- Miami Herald
‘Exceptionally large' shoe among more than 30 found preserved at Roman fort
Nearly 2,000 years ago, the Romans began their conquest of Britain. The time between when Roman boats landed on British shores in 43 A.D. to the establishment of their empire's northern border was less than a century, and by 122 A.D. Emperor Hadrian ordered the construction of a wall across modern-day England. Today, Hadrian's Wall spans 73 miles and teaches archaeologists and historians about the daily lives of soldiers, forts and trade centers of Roman-era Britain. One of these sites is Magna Fort, located along one of the most complete sections of the famed wall — and archaeologists have just made a 'large' discovery. Excavations of the northern defensive ditches of Magna Fort have revealed 32 shoes buried in the 'semi-anaerobic low oxygen deposits,' according to a July 2 news release from the Vindolanda Charitable Trust, which is in charge of the five-year project. The shoes were abnormally sized, including one 'exceptionally large' shoe first reported in the Magna Dig Diary in May, according to the release. The shoe is 12.6 inches long, roughly a UK size 13/14 or US size 15/16, archaeologists said. 'As news spread of this giant single shoe, the team continued to discover more ancient shoes, several more of them being of an exceptional size,' according to the release. 'Eight shoes from Magna are now recorded as (11.8 inches) or over in length and this includes one which holes the current record for being the Trust's largest shoe at (12.8 inches) long.' The shoes found at another Hadrian's Wall fort, Vinvolanda, have very few shoes that large, but one-fourth of the shoes found at Magna are classed as 'xx-large,' archaeologists said. 'I think there is something very different going on here at Magna, even from this small sample uncovered it is clear that these shoes are much larger on average than most of the Vindolanda collection,' Elizabeth Greene, shoe specialist and associate professor at the University of Western Ontario, said in the release. When the shoes go through the conservation process, like those at Vindolanda have, they have the possibility of shrinking up to 0.4 inches, but even with that shrinkage the Magna shoes would still be larger, Greene said. The other 75% of shoes found at Magna ranged in size, including shoes small enough to fit children, according to the trust. 'Organic finds like this are some of the most precious to come from our sites,' senior archaeologist for the Magna Project, Rachel Frame, said in the release, but officials are worried about how climate change will impact the well-preserved organic material yet to be found. Magna Fort is in Brampton, in northern England, just south of Scotland.