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How a 2,000-year-old Roman gravestone ended up in a New Orleans backyard

A backyard cleanup in New Orleans revealed a mystery that connects the modern city to ancient Rome.

October 11, 2025 / 12:17 IST
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The gravestone is part of a larger set of inscriptions documenting the lives of Roman sailors recruited across the empire.
The gravestone is part of a larger set of inscriptions documenting the lives of Roman sailors recruited across the empire.

In March, anthropologist Daniella Santoro and her husband were clearing vines in their backyard when they unearthed a marble slab with a Latin inscription. At first, it seemed like an odd tombstone out of place in Louisiana soil. It turned out to be a nearly 2,000-year-old Roman gravestone belonging to Sextus Congenius Verus, a sailor and soldier who lived in the second century, the New York Times reported.

A Roman life inscribed

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Experts at Tulane University confirmed the inscription. It stated that Verus had served in the Roman military for 22 years and died at age 42. His heirs commissioned the marker to preserve his memory. Originally found in 1864 in a Roman necropolis at Civitavecchia, Italy, the slab was once part of a museum collection that was destroyed during World War II. After that, the trail went cold.

From Italy to Louisiana