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Your supermarket eggs can be up to 60 days old before you even buy them — washed in chemicals, stripped of their natural protection, and locked in refrigeration just to survive. Meanwhile, a Roman egg discovered in England in 2007 still had liquid inside after 1,700 years. No fridge. No chemicals. No expiration date. In this video, we investigate why Roman eggs lasted months without refrigeration, how the modern egg industry destroyed the egg's built-in defense system, and why Europe made it ILLEGAL to do what America requires by law. The Romans never washed their eggs. They preserved them in salt, brine, and oil — methods documented by Rome's greatest agricultural writers and deployed across an empire of 60 million people. Modern science confirms what they already knew: the egg's natural bloom is one of the most effective preservation systems in nature. And we scrub it off with chlorine before you ever see it. 🔔 Subscribe for more forgotten knowledge the modern food industry buried. 💬 Drop a comment: Have you ever compared a farm fresh egg to a store bought egg? Tell us below. SOURCES: Historical & Archaeological: Varro, "De Re Rustica" Book III (1st century BC) — Roman egg preservation methods using salt and brine Columella, "De Re Rustica" Book VIII (1st century AD) — Roman poultry management and egg handling Vindolanda Tablets — Roman military supply order requesting chickens and 100-200 eggs for garrison (c. 100 AD) Oxford Archaeology — Berryfields excavation (2007-2016), Buckinghamshire, England: 1,700-year-old intact Roman egg with liquid contents, dating to 270-300 AD University of Kent — Micro CT scan confirming liquid yolk, white, and air bubble inside the Berryfields egg Douglas Russell, Senior Curator, Natural History Museum London — confirmed the egg as the oldest unintentionally preserved avian egg in the world Eggshell analysis from Pompeii (PARP:PS excavations, University of Cincinnati) — chicken and partridge eggs in non-elite Roman diet Nutrition Studies: Mother Earth News Egg Testing Project (2007) — pastured eggs vs USDA conventional egg data across 14 flocks Penn State University, Karsten et al. — "Vitamins A, E and fatty acid composition of the eggs of caged hens and pastured hens," Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems (2003/2010) British Journal of Nutrition (1974) — pastured eggs contained 50% more folic acid and 70% more vitamin B12 than factory farm eggs Simopoulos, A. (1988) — pastured eggs in Greece contained 13x more omega-3 fatty acids than US commercial eggs Modern Egg Industry: USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service — Shell Eggs from Farm to Table (egg washing regulations, expiration dating rules) USDA egg handling regulations — 30 days from lay to pack, 30 days from pack to expiration (up to 60 days total) European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) — report on egg washing practices and EU prohibition on washing Grade A eggs FoodPrint.org — "The Foodprint of Eggs" (US vs European egg handling, bloom removal, salmonella policy) Poultry & Animal Science: University of Bournemouth — analysis of 10,400+ chicken bone elements from Roman and Anglo-Saxon archaeological sites in England "Different Perspectives on Why People Kept Chickens in Roman Britain: A Multi-Disciplinary Approach" — biometric analysis across 29 Roman sites PNAS — "Earliest economic exploitation of chicken outside East Asia" (Lex Faunia 161 BC, Varro and Columella references to poultry and egg production) Egg Preservation Methods: Water glassing / lime water preservation using food-grade calcium hydroxide (pickling lime) — documented shelf life of 12-18 months for unwashed farm-fresh eggs #RomanEmpire #Eggs #FoodHistory #AncientRome #RealFood #PasturedEggs #FoodIndustry #HealthyEating #ForgottenKnowledge