Amateur archaeologists have made an exciting discovery at Vindolanda, a Roman fort site just south of Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland, England. Jim and Dilys Quinlan, unearthed a stone relief depicting the winged goddess of victory, Victoria, during a volunteer excavation. The find offers a glimpse into Roman religious practices and the cultural life of soldiers stationed at this frontier outpost nearly 2,000 years ago. Vindolanda, established in the late 1st century AD, was a key military base along Hadrian’s Wall, a defensive structure built by Emperor Hadrian in 122 AD to mark the northern boundary of Roman Britain. The site…