Court documents from an ancient tax fraud and forgery case show that tax evasion was an issue even 2,000 years ago.
The document details a case of forgery, tax evasion, fraudulent sale, and manumission of slaves in the Roman provinces of ...
Julia Sebutinde appeared to lift several sentences from an opinion piece by pro-Israel US official and Jewish Virtual Library ...
the document chronicles a financial crime involving tax evasion and the illicit sale and manumission of slaves in the Roman provinces of Judea and Arabia. Set against the backdrop of political ...
This document sheds light on how the Roman Empire combated financial crimes, specifically tax fraud involving slaves, in the provinces of Judea and Arabia during a tumultuous period marked by two ...
In an era where misinformation spreads faster than light and truth seems to wear many faces, the question asked over 2,000 years ago by one of the most divisive persons in history still reverberates ...
The acting president of the International Court of Justice, Julia Sebutinde, plagiarized large parts of her dissenting ...
Archaeologists discovered a rare Greek-language papyrus in Israel’s Judean Desert, shedding light on Roman legal practices.
Among the ruins they found a bronze helmet, with a circular brim, a griffin rising from its crest, and on its forehead, a palm tree — then a symbol tied to Jews in the Roman province of Judea.