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New Orleans couple discovers ancient Roman grave marker in their yard​

Ramon Antonio Vargas
Tue, October 7, 2025 at 2:00 AM PDT
5 min read
<span>The translation of this grave marker, according to the Preservation Resource Center, is: ‘To the spirits of the dead for Sextus Congenius Verus, soldier of the praetorian fleet Misenensis, from the tribe (natio) of the Bessi, (who) lived 42 years (and) served 22 in the military, on the trireme Asclepius. Atilius Carus and Vettius Longinus, his heirs, made (this) for him well deserving.’</span><span>Photograph: Courtesy D Ryan Gray and Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans</span>

The translation of this grave marker, according to the Preservation Resource Center, is: ‘To the spirits of the dead for Sextus Congenius Verus, soldier of the praetorian fleet Misenensis, from the tribe (natio) of the Bessi, (who) lived 42 years (and) served 22 in the military, on the trireme Asclepius. Atilius Carus and Vettius Longinus, his heirs, made (this) for him well deserving.’Photograph: Courtesy D Ryan Gray and Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans
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couple clearing away undergrowth in their home’s yard unearthed a grave marker, setting off a quest for answers about how the roughly 1,900-year-old relic ended up there – and an effort to repatriate it to Italy.
The remarkable discovery was the work of Tulane University anthropologist Daniella Santoro and her husband, Aaron Lorenz, according to a
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published online Monday by the magazine of New Orleans’s Preservation Resource Center (PRC).
As the PRC put it, after finding the headstone in March, Santoro and Lorenz noted that an inscription carved on it appeared to be in Latin, the language of ancient Rome. Santoro contacted University of New Orleans archaeologist D Ryan Gray and to her Tulane colleague Susann Lusnia, an associate professor of classical studies.