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These Italian Teenagers Stayed Overnight at Their School. They Found Ancient Roman Ruins Hidden in the Basement
Key takeaways
- Meilan Solly | Senior Associate Digital Editor, History
- When the demonstration ended, participants told Claudia Marino, a history and Latin teacher at the school, that they’d stumbled upon something significant.
- “We found the key, entered, and we were in an old, disused boiler room,” Marino tells the London Times’ Tom Kington.
Meilan Solly | Senior Associate Digital Editor, History
Add as preferred source Graffiti spanning more than a century is scrawled on the walls of the Roman villa. Cantieri Narranti In January 2021, students at a high school across the street from the Colosseum came up with a bold plan. Angered by plans to extend remote learning to prevent the spread of Covid-19, the teenagers occupied their school, spending several nights camped out in the building in protest.
When the demonstration ended, participants told Claudia Marino, a history and Latin teacher at the school, that they’d stumbled upon something significant. Marino and her colleagues investigated the tip, following the students’ directions to a locked door in the basement.
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