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Home » Ancient Roman bust in pristine condition discovered during Spanish beach dig
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Ancient Roman bust in pristine condition discovered during Spanish beach dig

News RoomNews RoomMay 21, 2026No Comments
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Ancient Roman bust in pristine condition discovered during Spanish beach dig

It was supposed to be just another sunny beach refresh in Spain — until construction crews accidentally uncovered something a lot older than sunburn and sandcastles.

Workers digging along Almadraba beach in Alicante got more than they bargained for when a routine regeneration project unearthed what looked like a harmless chunk of stone — and turned out to be a 2,000-year-old marble Roman bust in shockingly pristine condition.

Not bad for something that’s been buried since before sunscreen was a thing.

The artifact, believed to date back to the first or second century, is thought to possibly depict the goddess Venus — because apparently even ancient Romans were committed to beach aesthetics.

Experts, as per The US Sun, say the piece is so well preserved that it could be one of the most significant Roman-era finds in the region.

Alicante officials have already flagged it as a major historical discovery, calling it “a Roman head of great artistic quality and in an excellent state of preservation.”

The local councillor for culture, Nayma Beldjilal, believes that this could be “one of the most important Roman sculpture finds in the history of Alicante and the province.”

Not exactly your average day at the beach.

According to officials, the bust likely dates to the High Imperial Roman period — a time when Roman influence stretched far and wide, and apparently so did their taste for dramatically windswept marble hair.

José Manuel Pérez Burgos, head of integral heritage, said that the bust presents a “hairstyle of Hellenistic influence, with wavy hair pulled back with a parting in the middle following the idealized model of representations of divinities such as the Greek Aphrodite or the Roman Venus.”

In other words: goddess-core, 2,000 years before Instagram.

The discovery has also thrown a wrench into local beach plans. 

The regeneration of La Almadraba beach — which was expected to reopen to tourists this summer — is now on hold while archaeologists carefully excavate the site.

Turns out “under construction” took on a very literal ancient meaning. And this isn’t even the area’s first brush with Rome. 

Archaeologists have been poking around since 2009, when remains of a Roman villa linked to Lucentum were first discovered nearby.

The region’s culture department said at the time: “This era was operational between the third century BC and the fourth century AD.”

“As a result of these works, foundations of houses and rooms belonging to a Roman villa of a maritime nature have been found, abundant remains of ceramics, some of them very well preserved, and coins of the time.”

Officials now suspect the seaside villa may have once belonged to a wealthy Roman bigwig — because, of course, even 2,000 years ago, the rich wanted ocean views.

For now, the newly unearthed marble head is undergoing further testing to confirm its authenticity — while beachgoers are left to wonder what other ancient secrets might be lurking beneath their sun loungers.

And if Spain’s latest seaside surprise weren’t enough proof that the Roman Empire still has a habit of turning up uninvited, it’s hardly an isolated case.

Archaeologists in Switzerland made a splash of their own earlier this year when divers in Lake Neuchâtel uncovered a 2,000-year-old Roman shipwreck packed with astonishingly well-preserved cargo — including ceramic vessels, tools, amphorae and even two Gladius swords.

“The richness and diversity of this collection of goods, in an excellent state of preservation, make this discovery exceptional,” archaeological officials said of the haul, which dates to between roughly 20 and 50 AD and is believed to have belonged to a Roman merchant vessel operating along ancient trade routes.

Researchers say the tightly clustered wreck — unusually intact compared to most underwater finds — offers a rare snapshot of how goods once moved across the Roman world, from olive oil transported in Spanish amphorae to everyday pottery and military-escort weaponry hinting at the risks of ancient commerce.

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