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Janis, you are most welcome to go dig a deep hole into your archives :-)
At a distance of some many hundreds of years, I think it is very hard to prove if the Romans did, or did not, introduce saffron and in what form. Since I find it hard most afternoons to remember what I did in the morning, such puzzles are no surprise to me!
To summarize, Romans did not introduce C. nudiflorus in GB but knights did, much later in history - it seems that this order existed from the end of the 12th century until the beginning of the 14th century - therefore introduction would be around this period.
Yes, I'm trying to make sense and see where the plausible possibilities are - keeping in mind that this is all speculations based on the inputs I got from the forum.I imagine that archaeological remains must be very difficult to find, and as you said, depending on the type of object discovered, it wouldn't be automatically a proof of local production.Is it possible that the dead plant can be preserved in the ground? I guess it should have to be 100% dry, or the plant tissues would decompose faster than empires rise and fall?But you are correct, archaeological archives of the GB Roman sites could be a significant source together with literature.I will keep that topic in a corner of my mind to be aware of it when I review docs. Thanks !
by chance, if you were in the field, do you still have the possibility to access knowledge on this topic ?