A Roman villa buried eight metres below an Italian church will open to the public this July. Photo: Vassili CasulaA Roman villa buried eight metres below an Italian church will open to the public this July. Photo: Vassili Casula
1 posted on
05/21/2016 5:39:43 PM PDT by
SunkenCiv
To: SunkenCiv
Awesome ...love the Amalfi Coast!
4 posted on
05/21/2016 5:55:41 PM PDT by
mancini
To: SunkenCiv
Set the countdown clock for the Amish to blow it up as an offense to Mennonism..
7 posted on
05/21/2016 6:15:58 PM PDT by
chrisser
To: SunkenCiv
To: SunkenCiv
Owned by Soros no doubt... /s
9 posted on
05/21/2016 6:25:45 PM PDT by
Stormy_2021
(... Pear Pimples for Hairy Fishnuts..!)
To: SunkenCiv
Wow.. Frozen in time ... and pyroplastic flow and stuff.. a Cecil B DeMille kind of day happened.. and not on a huge sound stage set.
Wished we had the time to see some of Amalfi last trip,, next time.
10 posted on
05/21/2016 6:51:30 PM PDT by
NormsRevenge
(SEMPER FI!! - Monthly Donors Rock!!)
To: SunkenCiv
What happened to the Church? Is it still there or been moved? I wonder what the history of the Church is?
12 posted on
05/21/2016 7:19:47 PM PDT by
Bellflower
(It's not that there isn't any evidence of God, it's that everything is evidence of God.)
To: SunkenCiv
Just returned from Italy. Spent four days on the Amalfi coast staying at a five star hotel in Positano. No idea this type of archeology work was underway until I read this article. They describe the Amalfi coast as being sun kissed ... couldn't prove it by my visit it rained a good portion of the time we visited. Nevertheless it is beautiful area. Great food as well, one family owned restaurant Costantino’s impressed us ... we had dinner there twice.
17 posted on
05/22/2016 2:51:59 AM PDT by
BluH2o
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