With every aspect of Roman life having a specific deity to call upon, it can be tricky to make sense of the ancient pantheon ...
Barbarian warriors in ancient Roman times may have used stimulants to aid their performance in battle, a study has proposed.
Researchers in Poland have hypothesized that warriors used spoon-like artifacts to administer drugs during Roman-period wartime.
While the Ancient Romans waged battle across their empire, how exactly did they treat pain on the battlefield and what sort of medical equipment did they use? My next guest collects such equipment ...
Barbarian warriors in ancient Roman times may have used stimulants to aid their performance in battle, a study has proposed. The practice is suggested by small, spoon-like objects fitted to ...
The item was excavated from the ancient city of Dura-Europos in Syria almost a century ago and could have belonged to a Roman ...
Thousands of years ago, barbarians likely used stimulants during battle for enhanced performance in ancient warfare.
Ancient Greco-Roman ruins at Darazya near El Alamein are ... are interspersed with World War II structures, relics from the Battles of El-Alamein. Early travelers in the 19th and 20th centuries ...
Shane Kent's home is besieged by hundreds of soldiers all fully armed and ready for battle. But fear not, the armies are in ...
The widespread use of narcotics, such as opium, in ancient Greece and Rome is well-documented in ancient sources and supported by archaeological finds.However, this body of evidence is missing for ...
Archaeologists now suspect that these objects were worn at the end of a warrior’s belt in northern Europe and used to carry and dispense stimulants during battle. The use of narcotics like opium is ...