In the ruins of Rome’s opulent Domus Aurea palace, archaeologists have uncovered an array of ancient pigments used by ...
one in four people across the world lived under the Roman Empire. While commoners crammed into multi-story insulae (tenement blocks) members of the imperial elite kept a domus (large house ...
“The Domus Aurea once again moves [us] and restores the brilliance ... Scientists previously thought that the recipe for Egyptian blue was lost after the fall of the Roman Empire and only truly ...
Archaeologists working at Emperor Nero’s grand palace in Rome, known as Domus Aurea, uncovered a rare and rather big Egyptian ...
Despite these differences, almost all citizens carefully observed the same rituals at dinner time – the rituals that made them Roman ... lived in a domus. This was a house built around an ...
The colorful material weighed over 5 pounds and was likely made to decorate an emperor’s palace, Italian officials said.
Archaeologists sifted through the ruins of the Domus Aurea, also known as the ... 5,000 years to ancient Egypt and was popular in the Roman Empire. The block of blue pigment measured about 6 ...