‘Extremely rare’ 2,000-year-old bread loaf unearthed at Roman legionary camp

Event overview

'Extremely rare' 2,000-year-old bread loaf unearthed at Roman legionary camp

Updated 3 days ago
Fox News
New York Post
2 articles2 sources
Summary

Switzerland's first Roman bread was found at the ancient Vindonissa site, a charred 2,000-year-old loaf that officials call an "extremely rare" discovery. This cluster currently includes 2 articles from 2 sources.

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This cluster currently includes 2 articles from 2 sources. Sources in this event include New York Post, Fox News.

Original reporting (2)
'Extremely rare' 2,000-year-old bread loaf unearthed at Roman legionary camp
Fox News
Fox News
Strongly right
5/17/2026

'Extremely rare' 2,000-year-old bread loaf unearthed at Roman legionary camp

Archaeologists uncovered a 150-year-old bottle of alcohol during a summer excavation at a former Wild West mining town in Alta, Utah. The rare find — the only intact bottle with liquid from that era ever discovered in the state — was later brought to High West Distillery. (Source: FOX 13) Officials recently uncovered.

‘Extremely rare’ 2,000-year-old bread loaf unearthed at Roman legionary camp
New York Post
New York Post
Leaning right
5/17/2026

‘Extremely rare’ 2,000-year-old bread loaf unearthed at Roman legionary camp

Officials recently uncovered a charred 2,000-year-old Roman bread loaf — the first of its kind ever found in Switzerland. The bread was found during an excavation in the Swiss town of Windisch, according to a translated release from the Canton of Aargau. The excavation, which took place ahead of a large residential.