Pula Roman Floor Mosaic

labyrinth Ley Line — Earth Grid TUNING CIRCUIT
44.8669°N, 13.8496°E Giza Bearing: 322.35° 2,242 km to Giza Power: 4/10

A Roman floor mosaic with mythological scene and labyrinth border pattern discovered in 1959 near the Chapel of St. Mary Formosa in Pula, Croatia. The 65-square-meter mosaic floor, preserved at its discovery site, testifies to Pula's importance as a Roman naval base (Colonia Pietas Iulia Pola). Pula's amphitheater, one of the six largest surviving Roman arenas, confirms the city's wealth during the Imperial period. The labyrinth border integrates the maze motif into a larger decorative program. At Giza bearing 322.35°, 2,242 km from the Great Pyramid.

Wikipedia

Ley Line — Earth Grid

Labyrinth Earth energy marker (bearing 322.35°)

Labyrinth Details
Pattern Roman Meander
Circuits 4 paths, 5 walls
Material mosaic
Age 3rd century CE
Condition intact
Country Croatia
Region Pula, Istria
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid