A routine excavation in northern Israel has uncovered a breathtaking archaeological mystery: two perfectly preserved 1,700-year-old Roman marble statues deliberately buried beneath an ancient winepress and hidden from the world for centuries.The rare busts, believed to depict prominent figures from the Greco-Roman world, were found face-down in what archaeologists believe was a desperate attempt to save them from destruction as Christianity spread across the Roman Empire and pagan monuments were systematically destroyed. The statues were discovered on the very last day of excavations, leaving researchers stunned.Unearthed during work on Israel’s new high-speed railway near Binyamina, the statues may have once decorated an elite Roman villa near Caesarea before vanishing for more than a millennium. Their identities—and the reason they were hidden so carefully—remain unsolved, adding another layer of mystery to one of Israel’s most remarkable archaeological discoveries in years.The post Hidden for 1,700 years: Stunning Roman treasure uncovered in Israel appeared first on World Israel News.