Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 1
Roman grave marker discovered in New Orleans is returned to Italy
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 1

Roman grave marker discovered in New Orleans is returned to Italy

11 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 1
  • The nearly 1,900-year-old marble epitaph was handed over in Rome on Wednesday in an FBI-led ceremony, alongside another antiquity recovered in the United States.
  • Found last year by Tulane anthropologist Danielle Santoro and Aaron Lorenz, the stone was identified as commemorating Sextus Congenius Verus and matched records of an item missing from Civitavecchia's museum.
  • Researchers linked its likely journey to New Orleans to a US soldier who served in Italy, while the FBI said the return was part of the long-running US-Italy cultural property agreement.
How did a Roman sailor's tombstone, looted in WWII, become a garden decoration in New Orleans?
With new laws cracking down on illicit trade, are more hidden historical treasures about to be uncovered?