Roman-Era Necropolis Discovered in Southern Spain

Glass jars of ointments, game tokens, a coin minted in the second century A.D., and some glass beads were also found in the first section of the double burial

A Roman necropolis dated to the first and second centuries A.D. have been found at a construction site in southern Spain, according to a report in The Olive Press. Traces of 24 cremations and 30 burials have been unearthed to date.

One of the graves held a lead sarcophagus containing two teenagers and a baby who died at about three months of age, and a second burial of an adolescent girl and a four-month-old infant.

Glass jars of ointments, game tokens, a coin minted in the second century A.D., and some glass beads were also found in the first section of the double burial. Tokens for the same game, glass beads, glass marbles, and a second-century A.D. oil lamp were recovered from the second.

source archaeology.org

image credit Paul VanDerWerf under CC Creative Commons license Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0)

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