[align=center]<iframe width="640" height="480" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/MqMXIRwQniA" frameborder="0"></iframe>[/align]
This is a new feature in Google Earth - it looks pretty good and I'm sure it will make learning about it a lot more tangible.
Ancient Rome
Ancient Rome
Last edited by faceless on Sun Jun 16, 2013 2:39 am, edited 1 time in total.
This is the story of some intricately carved altar stones which have recently been discovered in Musselburgh (just east of Edinburgh). I'd have embedded, but STV are arseholes for things like that!
https://video.stv.tv/bc/news-20110317-altar/
https://video.stv.tv/bc/news-20110317-altar/
<center>
The Roman Limes – frontiers of the Empire
13 Jun 2013
thelocal.de</center>
The Upper-Germanic Roman Limes covers a total distance of 550 kilometres. Around 2,000 years ago its forts, watchtowers, walls and palisades protected the mighty Roman Empire from independent Germania. It is the longest and one of the most impressive archaeological monuments in Europe, marking the frontier where the highly developed civilisation of ancient Rome met 'barbaric' Germania.
The Limes run from Bad Hönningen/Rheinbrohl on the River Rhine to the Regensburg area on the River Danube. Alongside Roman remains preserved in their original condition, there are restored buildings, excavations and reconstructions. The course of the border wall can still be made out in places as it stretches in long, straight lines across forests and pastureland.
Special highlights along the route include the reconstructed Roman fort at Saalburg in Bad Homburg, the Roman museum in Osterburken, the Limes museum in Aalen with archaeology park, fort and Roman baths as well as the Roman museum and Limes information centre in Weissenburg. It has been a UNESCO-World Heritage site since 2005.
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I've never heard of this before. Cool.

The Roman Limes – frontiers of the Empire
13 Jun 2013
thelocal.de</center>
The Upper-Germanic Roman Limes covers a total distance of 550 kilometres. Around 2,000 years ago its forts, watchtowers, walls and palisades protected the mighty Roman Empire from independent Germania. It is the longest and one of the most impressive archaeological monuments in Europe, marking the frontier where the highly developed civilisation of ancient Rome met 'barbaric' Germania.
The Limes run from Bad Hönningen/Rheinbrohl on the River Rhine to the Regensburg area on the River Danube. Alongside Roman remains preserved in their original condition, there are restored buildings, excavations and reconstructions. The course of the border wall can still be made out in places as it stretches in long, straight lines across forests and pastureland.
Special highlights along the route include the reconstructed Roman fort at Saalburg in Bad Homburg, the Roman museum in Osterburken, the Limes museum in Aalen with archaeology park, fort and Roman baths as well as the Roman museum and Limes information centre in Weissenburg. It has been a UNESCO-World Heritage site since 2005.
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I've never heard of this before. Cool.