A previously unknown Roman cemetery has been discovered by archaeologists in northeastern France.
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Credit: A. Ferat/20 Minutes |
Further excavations at the site - near the well-known Roman road close to the Koenigshoffen district of Strasbourg - as well as other areas along the proposed route are now being arranged before work commences in June.
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Credit: A. Ferat/20 Minutes |
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| Credit: A. Ferat/20 Minutes |
No skeletons have been found, as the bodies were cremated - but finding evidence of the pyres has surprised experts. "Generally, there are no cremation pyres," Mathias Higelin, the archaeologist responsible for the excavations told 20minutes.fr. "They are destroyed after the body is destroyed, but here some pyres have been used as graves.
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| Credit: A. Ferat/20 Minutes |
By 2020, the site will be a 320-place car park and a station on line F of the city's tram network.
Source: The Connexion [March 15, 2019]










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