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Rome's Newest Subway Line Continues to Unearth Archeological Marvels

From petrified peach pits to an entire military barracks, excavations for the Metro C subway line have brought Roman history to the surface.

By Richard Pallardy
May 26, 2021 2:15 PMMay 26, 2021 4:23 PM
Rome Metro line C
(Credit: Paola Leone/Shutterstock)

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Poet George Eliot called Rome “the city of visible history, where the past of a whole hemisphere seems moving in funeral procession.” 

Indeed, one can’t swing a she-wolf by the tail in the ancient Italian capital without clobbering an antiquity. The site has been occupied for around 10,000 years and the city itself was founded in 753 B.C. History is writ across its seven hills in brick and marble, with monuments, palaces, churches, and ruins at every turn. 

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