A small rock-cut sanctuary dedicated to Minerva has been identified in an ancient Roman quarry near Carrascosa del Campo in the Spanish province of Cuenca, offering a rare glimpse into how religion intersected with working life in Roman Hispania.Set within a landscape once famous for producing lapis specularis, a translucent gypsum prized throughout the Roman Empire, the shrine stands as an unexpected reminder that quarries were not solely places of extraction. They could also become places of worship, where labour, belief and local identity met in the same physical space.

El descubrimiento lo ha realizado el equipo de arqueólogos que lleva 12 años trabajando en el Cerro de la Muela de Carrascosa del Campo y ha provocado también cierta polémica por…

A small rock-cut sanctuary dedicated to Minerva has been identified in an ancient Roman quarry near Carrascosa del Campo in the Spanish province of Cuenca, offering a rare glimpse…