- by foxnews
- 16 Jul 2025
The find was announced by the Swiss canton of Solothurn on Facebook on May 20.
The "exciting" discovery was spotted at a highway construction site near Luterbach, 22 miles north of the city of Bern, the group said.
"It soon became clear: A Roman building is buried here."
Pictures of the site show the stone foundation shockingly close to the road.
"[T]he Roman foundation remains will be covered again in the preparatory work for the replacement of the bridge over the highway," the release added.
Interestingly, this is likely not the first time that archaeologists have excavated the building.
The canton noted that "as early as the 1860s, an old structure made of pebble and granite stones was excavated at this location."
"However, the exact location of the 'old structure' remained unknown. Until now."
The recent discovery is the latest addition to a long list of ancient finds made in Europe so far this year.
A recent archaeological dig in western Germany revealed a Roman-era settlement with 750 artifacts, including a unique burial with parts of a military belt dating to the 4th or 5th centuries.
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