The Flickr Arqueológico Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

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1070 – Presbiterio - Ruinas Iglesia San Miguel – Sacramenia (Segovia) – Spain.- by ELCABALLOALVARO

© ELCABALLOALVARO, all rights reserved.

1070 – Presbiterio - Ruinas Iglesia San Miguel – Sacramenia (Segovia) – Spain.-

Ruinas de la iglesia de San Miguel en Sacramenia (Segovia) – Spain, construcción románica datada en los siglos XII y XIII, solo queda en pie la cabecera del ábside con su arco triunfal, columnas con restos de capiteles de iconografía variada y las ventanas que proporcionaban luz al interior del presbiterio.
También en la cabecera se han encontrado restos arqueológicos además de un cementerio rupestre.
Un incomparable paisaje se divisa desde el lugar que está emplazado estos restos del monumento.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Ruins of the church of San Miguel in Sacramenia (Segovia) – Spain, a Romanesque construction dating from the 12th and 13th centuries, only the apse with its triumphal arch, columns with remains of capitals of various iconography and the windows that provided light to the interior of the presbytery remain standing.
Archaeological remains have also been found in the apse as well as a rock cemetery.
An incomparable landscape can be seen from the place where these remains of the monument are located.

columns by David Ruiz Luna

© David Ruiz Luna, all rights reserved.

columns

The Capitoline Temple

The Roman Volubilis was one of the capitals of Mauritania Tingitana (one of the Roman provinces).

The Roman occupation was from the 1st century BC until the 3rd. After the decline of the Roman Empire it is believed to have been abandoned, but Volubilis continued to be inhabited. From the end of the 3rd century the Berbers lived and lived there in harmony together with Syrians and Jews.

The Arab conquest was in the 7th century. In the 8th century, after the foundation of Fez, Volubilis was abandoned and its total decline began and with it, its forgetfulness.

Morocco
November 2018

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October 1st, 2023. Roman-Germanic Museum of Cologne, temporarily housed in the "Belgium House" (Belgisches Haus). by vantcj1

© vantcj1, all rights reserved.

October 1st, 2023. Roman-Germanic Museum of Cologne, temporarily housed in the "Belgium House" (Belgisches Haus).

1° de Octubre (131) Museo Romano Germánico en Belgisches Haus editada, con marca

Gortyn (photo 16,000) by diffendale

Gortyn (photo 16,000)

A bit of surviving (barely) ancient Roman concrete masonry
Gortyn/Gortyna, Aghioi Dekoi, Crete (see on Pleiades)

Museo Arqueológico Nacional. Madrid by jovan.abreu

© jovan.abreu, all rights reserved.

Museo Arqueológico Nacional. Madrid

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 15 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 15

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 14 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 14

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 10 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 10

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 6 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 6

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 1 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 1

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 2 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 2

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 11 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 11

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 9, remains of the winepress by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 9, remains of the winepress

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 17 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 17

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 7 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 7

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 8 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 8

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 16 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 16

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 12, cistern by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 12, cistern

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 5 by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 5

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 13, cistern by diffendale

Quarto Flegreo: Villa Romana del Torchio 13, cistern

Quarto (in antiquity, the mansio at the fourth mile, Ad Quartum, along the via Campana from Puteoli to Capua, part of the hinterland of Puteoli), loc. Grotta del Sole
See Ad Quartum on Pleiades

The so-called Roman villa "of the wine press" (Villa Romana del Torchio, Latin torcularium) was discovered during archaeological investigation preliminary to the construction of a shopping center west of Naples in 2006. An example of a small villa rustica, or rural villa organized around agricultural production, it takes its name from the remains of a wine press in its southwest corner; there was space for some 18 dolia to contain and age the wine produced. Its first phase, in ashlar masonry of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, dates to the Roman Late Republican period, at the end of the 2nd c. BCE, and continued in use, with various interventions, until the 5th c. CE, when it was stripped of its valuables and a pair of burials was inserted.

The villa is formally part of the Parco Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei; it can be visited by contacting the Gruppo Archeologico dei Campi Flegrei.