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Lost Trade Routes of Roman Spain Revealed by New Mellaria Study

A large collection of pottery recovered from the Roman city of Mellaria is providing archaeologists with new clues about the settlement’s economy and daily life. The material comes from excavations carried out at Cerro de Masatrigo in 2022 and 2023 as part of the University of Córdoba’s Ager Mellariensis project. Researchers studied 8,839 ceramic fragments, many of them broken pieces of vessels once used for cooking, storage and trade. Mellaria …

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A study of the Ager Mellariensis project of the University of Córdoba, published in the magazine Monographs of Prehistory and Archaeology of the UNED, provides new data on the role that the Roman city of Mellaria, located in the current municipal term of Fuente Obejuna (Córdoba), played in the distribution circuits of the Guadalquivir valley. [...]

Archaeologists recover luxury dishes, richly decorated lights and the remains of an aqueduct of ten kilometers Ategua, the Roman city hidden among hills, where to travel to the past of Córdoba

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El Día de Córdoba broke the news on Tuesday, May 26, 2026.
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