Small Roman pottery vessel with foliage and face (Photo: London Museum)
These artifacts, many of which have never been seen by the public, provide an incredible opportunity to learn more about daily life in ancient Roman London.
When the new London Museum opens its doors in 2026, it will be home to more than 14,000 Roman artifacts. This is thanks to Bloomberg, who decided to donate the haul found during the construction of its European headquarters. This exciting donation also includes £20 million (about $26.1 million) in funding to help transform a former Victorian-era meat market into a space that will help the story of London.
The incredible collection was uncovered between 2012 and 2014 by Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) archaeologists during the building of the Bloomberg headquarters. The media giant funded what was one of London’s most extensive archeological digs, which allowed archeologists to really dive into London’s past. The site was significant because there was a known third century CE temple to the Roman god Mithras, which had been spotted in the 1950s but never fully excavated. Still, archeologists could never have expected what they found. Discoveries included Britain’s largest—and earliest—collection of Roman writing tablets.
Aerial view of Smithfield markets (Photo: London Museum)
Since 2017, the temple and about 600 artifacts have been on display on-site at the London Mithraeum Bloomberg SPACE. But this donation to the London Museum opens up an opportunity for the public to learn even more about Roman London. According to the museum, the collection includes 81,000 animal bone fragments, over 73,000 pottery shards, 700 Roman leather shoes, and about 7,000 metal objects. These artifacts, many of which have never been seen by the public, provide an incredible opportunity to learn more about daily life in ancient Roman London. And by displaying them in the subterranean galleries, which are at Roman street level, the public will surely be transported back in time. […]
Fragments from Roman swords including carved bone grip and guard and iron tip (Photo: London Museum)
Roman wooden writing tablet and style (Photo: London Museum)
Roman leather shoes belonging to an adult and child (Photo: London Museum)
If we could fully map the inner workings of our brain, we could understand disease, consciousness, and what it is that makes us human. Only catch? There are more connections in the human brain than there are stars in the Milky Way. So, how close are we to fully mapping the brain?
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Domain of Science | The Chain of Life Poster
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You are the living ancestor of an unbroken chain of lives stretching from you, through your mother and your grandmother all the way back through the complete history of life on planet Earth to the very first life forms that appeared around four billion years ago.
And free downloadable versions of this and the other posters here. If you want to print them out for educational purposes please do! https://www.flickr.com/photos/9586967…
The following music performed by Kevin Macleod Available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.
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Midnight Tale
Celtic Impulse
Pippin the Hunchback
Moorland
Teller of the Tales
Skye Cuillin
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Works Cited
[1] Hollister, C. Warren. “The Making of England: 55 BC – 1399”. DC Heath and Publishing, 1966.
[2] Schama, Simon. “A History of Britain 1: 3000 BC – AD 1603: At the Edge of the World?” BBC Worldwide LTD, 2000.
[5] Higham, Nicholas J. and Martin J. Ryan. “The Anglo-Saxon World.” Yale University Press, 2013. Pp. 109-111.
[6] B Ward-Perkins. “Why did the Anglo-Saxons not become more British?”. The English Historical Review, Volume 115, Issue 462, June 2000, Pages 513–533,
[7] Charles-Edwards, Thomas M. “Wales and the Britons, 350-1064”. Oxford University Press, 2012. pg.75
By Own work, Andras Bereznay, 2005 – Own work, Andras Bereznay, 2005; Bereznay, András (2011) Erdély történetének atlasza [Atlas of the History of Transylvania], Méry Ratio, p. 63 ISBN: 978-80-89286-45-4., CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index…
In the desert of Peru, hundreds of enormous ancient drawings are carved into the dirt. They’re called the Nazca Lines, and archeologists are still arguing over what they mean.