Leftover food from the military officials remains intact for Polish archeologists to uncover in an ancient Roman military barrack in Bulgaria. The former military barrack was built in the 1st century CE by the Romans.
The wild animals have spared some leftovers for the scientists to satiate their thirst for more knowledge. Lead archeologist Professor Piotr Dyczek from the University of Warsaw’s Antiquity of Southeastern Europe Research Centre found this fridge built on ceramic plates, which contains pieces of dishes and animals’ bones. The team believes that the meat was stored after being cooked as traces of preserved bone fragments were found.
According to Dyczek, charcoal specks and a fragment of a small bowl were also found which could have been the remains of a censer used to ward off insects.
The military force can’t function at their optimum level without a full stomach and this is one proof that has lasted the test of time. This finding is regarded as a miracle since kitchen appliances rarely survive the reconstruction of buildings.