A lesion on the foot of a 2,000-year-old skeleton discovered in a Roman burial site in northern Italy appears to constitute rare tangible evidence of execution by crucifixion, according to an interdisciplinary team of Italian researchers.  Although broadly attested to in historical writings — including the New Testament — it is only the second known archaeological proof of the particularly

cruel form of capital punishment practiced by the Romans against criminals, as well as revolutionaries such as Jesus Christ. The findings — published in the April 2018 edition of the peer-reviewed journal Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences under the title “A multidisciplinary study of calcaneal trauma in Roman Italy: a possible case of crucifixion?” — are based on new analysis of a skeleton that was discovered in 2007 during a salvage excavation of an isolated tomb. READ MORE


Advertisement