My system is not decent

Chapter 1492 Unique Path of Discovery

Chapter 1492 Unique Path of Discovery

Many inscriptions and printed posts are hidden in the innermost part. If you don’t come in, you won’t be able to see them if you don’t go into the innermost part.

Even Li Tianqiang doesn't think the stone tablets in front of him are genuine, right?

Is this afraid of embarrassment, so I hide in the innermost part?

Looking at the five ancient and interesting inscriptions on the stele, Chen Wenzhe didn't know what to say.

These are also foreign stone monuments, right?Even if these are genuine, it is troublesome.

"This is not a stele, but a stone pillar? Let me think about it, by the way, this is Philip's pillar!"

Chen Wenzhe was a little surprised, Li Tianqiang really dared to think about it!

He even dared to accept Philip's pillar.

Central Bulgaria, once home to several Roman fortresses.

The Sostra Fortress has been excavated by the National Historical Museum since 2002.

In 2016, the team investigated a nearby Roman Road station and came across a large artifact.

The 2.2-metre-tall object, previously unnoticed, was a roadside pillar dating back to AD 244.

Its face is inscribed with nineteen lines commemorating the Roman Emperor Philip and his son, Philip the Younger.

In the official prose, the local first chief, Plastina Messarinus, is also mentioned.

The emperor ruled the Balkans from 244–249 AD.

During his first year in power, he probably stopped at the fortress of Sostra, leading to the erection of the Inscription Monument.

Near the end of this precious stone column is a Roman signpost describing the distance of another way station discovered two years earlier.

There is no news of such a thing being stolen, what exactly is Li Tianqiang thinking?

If it's a known imitation, is it a celebrity imitation?
At the very least, the imitation is still similar, anyway, for a while, Chen Wenzhe couldn't see any flaws, so he just took it away.

In addition to this thing, there are other Comox Valley cobblestones, which are particularly abundant?So what they have here is also genuine?

Comox Valley cobblestones, if you don’t know it, it’s not uncommon to see it.

But I know, but I know that this thing is of great historical significance.

And the discovery process is also very interesting.

It can be said that the discovery process of this thing is a particularly unique path of discovery started through barbecue.

In 2015, the Comox Nation gathered in the Comox Valley.

While digging a barbecue pit, they discovered ancient shells, which they realized symbolized a place of historical importance.

Archaeologists moved in and identified large areas with more than just shells.

A year later, students of archeology discovered something that baffled their more experienced elders.

More than 80 mysterious flat stones and stelae among the bones, tools, and other remains of a long-ago village.

Each one is written in symbols, written on the side.

Their identities are not armor, but each symbol seems like a feather, tree, or fertility symbol.

Deciphering their exact meaning will prove difficult.

The 2000-year-old cobblestones are the first of their kind, and some of the patterns are not well understood.

If it is possible that this thing is real, then what follows is a mystery!

The mystery of Mikva has not yet been interpreted, because these are all words, or symbols.

Looking at the slate in front of him, Chen Wenzhe didn't know what to say.

Maybe there were Chinese people in the holy city when it was archaeological?

Or, someone secretly sold the things in the Holy City to Huaxia?
When a site in Jerusalem was designated as a nursery, antiquities officials arrived to ensure that construction work would not destroy something of archaeological interest.

Typically, after officials clear an area, construction can begin.

However, archaeologists stopped construction on its tracks.

The site is located in the area of ​​Anona and turned out to be a Mikva, an ancient Jewish ritual bath.

It is worth noting that the walls of the room are decorated with symbols and written script in Aramaic, a script that experts are still unable to decipher.

The images include palm trees, a boat, and most likely a menorah, a candlestick with seven branches.

The stucco-etched images and Hebrew writing are about 2000 years old.

It is unclear whether the markings have religious significance or were added by some graffiti artists.

Either way, the discovery is seen as one of the best of its kind.

It is unique in having so many symbols and letters from the Second Temple period in a single location.

If it is said that these slates with unique symbols and letters, it is impossible to come to China.

Then another lease agreement would make it even more impossible to come to China.

In another excavation, a total of nearly 400 ancient inscriptions were found.

This Turkish city, home to the most fascinating etchings, dates back to antiquity.

It was found on the stele of the temple of wine at the site.

Once deciphered, it proved to be the most detailed rental agreement in Anatolian history.

The 2200-year-old contract describes how a group of young men inherited land from donors.

They rented out the house, and the names of people who rented the area from them, as well as witnesses, are engraved on stone pillars 1.5 meters high.

The Neos were strict landowners, and nearly half the stele details the penalties that would be imposed on tenants if they evaded rent, mismanaged, or damaged the building.

Also included, the layout and content of the gymnasium, references to the altar.

On top of that, two unknown legal terms were discovered.

The artifact is the only such example from antiquity, and it has given researchers a glimpse into the laws and social dynamics of the ancient Greek period.

Looking at the last stone pillar, is this the Panagolia stone pillar?
Panagolia was founded in the 6th century BC as a Greek colony.

It became the first capital of Bulgaria, one of the largest cities in Greece, and the cultural and economic center of the Black Sea territory.

Today, its ruins lie dormant in Russia's Krasnodar region.

In 2016, among some interesting finds, archaeologists discovered a broken wall.

The stone pillar is the only building with a foreign flavor, it is carved with marble.

The material is not indigenous, but the object's age and inscriptions point to its original location.

The Old Persian script, created in the first half of the fifth century BC, praises the victories of kings.

His name was Darius.A previously unknown word identifies the city of Miletus, the leader of the Greek resistance against Persia.

Darius I put out the fire in 494 BC.

Archaeologists believe that the pillars were built at Miletus.

At one point, it landed, probably as ship ballast.

The discovery reveals a new connection between Finagoria and the ancient Greek world during one of the most influential uprisings in history.

(End of this chapter)

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