A new discovery from the Roman empire outlines a juicy case of second-century crime. Containing an extraordinary 133 lines of ...
The document is the longest Greek document found in the Judean Desert, spanning over 133 lines of written text.
The world of the Roman Empire was not just one of legions, emperors, and conquests — it was also a world of legal disputes, ...
A breakthrough out of the Vesuvius Challenge builds on past efforts to virtually “unroll” fragile papyrus documents ...
The papyrus revealed how the imperial state dealt with financial crimes - specifically tax fraud involving slaves - in Judaea ...
Researchers used advanced technology to digitally "unroll" an ancient Greek text on carbonized papyrus, and now they're ...
"This is the best-documented Roman court case from Judea apart from the trial of Jesus." In the 1950s, an ancient papyrus ...
U.K. scientists say they have made a historic breakthrough by making the first image of the inside of a scroll carbonized by ...
A papyrus scroll carbonised by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius two millennia ago is slowly being read once again thanks to ...
X-rays and AI were used to read charred Roman scrolls untouched for 2,000 years.
The document details a case of forgery, tax evasion, fraudulent sale, and manumission of slaves in the Roman provinces of ...
A new discovery from the Roman empire outlines a juicy case of second-century crime. Containing an extraordinary 133 lines of text, an ancient piece of papyrus shows how even Roman government had to ...