The Colosseum is the greatest and most visible wealth that has survived the Ancient Rome, but everyone is convinced that the "Eternal City" hides under other treasures.
The next one was recently discovered in the Italian capital by chance and thanks to the works for expanding the metering system.
Italian media say that what is known as the "C sector" of meters has come into contact with a 2000-year-old building believed to belong to a senior military chief of Praetorians, Roman elite troops defending consuls, emperors, and Senate .
Immediately the object was taken over by archaeologists and other scholars, who say it is a building with at least 14 rooms, a central giant lobby, time-honored decorations, and even a fountain, certainly not in working order.
Francesco Prosperetti, the head of the Italian government for the Colosseum and the Roman National Museum, considered the discovery that amazing.
The complex is located at a depth of 12 meters from the city's surface and from what they have discovered so far, archaeologists strongly believe that the building is of the second century BC and is buried by human hands.
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