Roman Reigns Blasts Cm Punk For Embarrassing NSFW Rant
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Red Sox, Astros and Roman Anthony
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The gravy train has nothing on the treasure ship. Divers in a Swiss lake were gobsmacked after uncovering a 2,000-year-old Roman shipwreck filled with iconic Gladius swords, olive oil jugs and other perfectly-preserved artifacts.
Wrestling Inc. on MSN
WWE's Roman Reigns: Cody Rhodes Requested We Not Cross Paths On Street Fighter Set
WWE's Cody Rhodes recently said he and Roman Reigns only crossed paths once on the set of "Street Fighter," and according to Reigns, that was Rhodes' request.
A massive Roman burial site with 3,000 tombs, which was used for 500 years, has been uncovered beneath a city. It has revealed treasure like coins, jewels, and other artifacts while giving archaeologists new clues to centuries of history.
Archaeologists in the Netherlands recently discovered a sizable conversation starter tucked away in a forgotten storage box. Amid a long overdue archive cataloguing project at Valkhof Museum in Nijmegen southeast of Amsterdam, researchers identified a roughly 7.8-inch-long penis carved from bone dating back 1,800–2,000 years to ancient Rome.
A Roman cemetery in Romania with mass graves of children reveals burial practices, disease risks, and daily life in ancient Dacia.
TikTok users are asking their boyfriends, fathers or any other man how often they think about the Roman Empire—and surprisingly, some say they think about the fallen empire daily or even more often, sparking online confusion and launching a TikTok trend ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Is this 1,800-year-old mosaic the first known image of a woman fighting wild beasts in an ancient Roman arena?
A researcher may have identified a depiction of a female hunter—known as a venatrix—in an ancient Roman mosaic. According to a new study published in the International Journal of the History of Sport,
A slab of limestone excavated in 1984 from the ancient Coriovallum settlement in the Netherlands presented a puzzle for researchers of Roman history. Because of its distinct grooves and marks, the stone piece was believed to be some kind of board game – but obviously no rulebook was dug up